Still, Silent, Sounds

Before the temperature soared, in the early morning of this, another hotter day, as I stayed inside working on my blogging comments and replies, a faint breeze entered through the French windows allowing admission to the occasional buzzing bluebottle while I listened to the gentle scraping of Jackie’s garden tools; the glinting tinkling of the wind chimes adjusted yesterday; the rattling clanking of the magpies which have wiped out our smaller songbirds whose eggs and chicks they have stolen; and the amorous cooing of mated wood pigeons whose size has protected them from the predators, despite their numbers being reduced by egg theft.

This afternoon I posted

This evening we dined on tender roast duck in orange sauce; firm carrots, cauliflower, broccoli, and very flavoursome Brussels sprouts, with which I drank more of the Tempranillo.

47 comments

  1. What a lovely description apart from the magpies. Horrid birds which used to scare the living daylights out of us kids when visiting Nana. She had a tamed one who used to follow her around her small farm.

  2. Do you have a guilty pleasure of hearing Jackie working outside? Sometimes I have that when my husband is doing something he has not yet requested my participation. Dinner sounds delightful. The heat dies noy.

    1. Thanks very much, Pat. I have felt guilty, but have adjusted to being able to do so little now

  3. A beautiful post with vivid descriptions of all that you heard. To sit and listen takes as much attention as it does to sit and look. Both are are a form of noticing, a kind of meditation really, and essential for writing.

    Sorry about those magpies. They have to make their living, but it would be better if it weren’t at the expense of the birds and your yard.

    Hope tomorrow is cooler!

  4. So well described, that I could hear all the lovely sounds just by reading it

    Today I hear sparrows, a cardinal, eagles way up above, and the rumble of a ride-on lawn mower.

  5. We have a number of magpie families living in the Domaine and we always know when they’re making mischief from the squarks from the other birds.

  6. I love the description of your afternoon and the breezes coming in the window, Derrick. Nothing like the wind playing about an open window and stopping by to tell you when it has been.

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