The owl
visits the street wires when we don’t think about him. Where does he live? In a
condemned building? Up in the nearby reserve? By the time we return from the
house with a camera, he is gone.
Winter is
when we notice any birds in the garden. They have gone away. They stay out of
sight. A few about. Sometimes a currawong, not much. Time to think about birds.
In winter
there is time to remember what will come again.
There is
almost nothing in life as assuring as the reappearance of blue wrens, hopping
in and out of the undergrowth in late winter.
Nor can
anything improve on the unexpected cackle of kookaburras in distant trees from
over the railway line. They come in this far from the hinterland maybe a dozen
times a year, but none have visited the garden itself, yet.
Spring
can turn violent. A nesting place under the bedroom eave will be invaded by
mynahs. These picture-book birds, brought from India in ornate cages during the
Victorian era, are a menace. For Melburnians their beauty is skin deep. They
bully, frighten, and disperse the native birds. Once I found a mynah torn and
killed in the front garden. It couldn’t have been the cat. My surprise was
tempered by an indifference I do not feel usually, such is the acuteness of
their vicious legend.
Could the
killer possibly have been a wattlebird? They mark the territory, wherever they
can hang from the curlicues of a grevillea or shout amidst cootamundra fronds.
They have a nest somewhere around the house, but I haven’t figured out where.
They seem to live in a bush near the water meter. I don’t want to know about
it.
Summer is
coming in when the magpies start loitering. They hop about in the she-oaks.
They inspect the path, they will be happy with a mouse. The novelist Gerald
Murnane lives in the same suburb. I cannot recall if he has written about
birds, though I can be sure he has spent a lifetime bemused by no-nonsense
magpies. The real Gerald Murnane, that is, not the Gerald Murnane who appears
in his fictions. Murnane the writer is interested in human moods, so birds must
feature somewhere.
Our
suburb is under the flight path some weekends, depending on the whims of the
controllers at Tullamarine. It is fun in our garden to spot a tail with a
flying kangaroo, or the dragon or phoenix of certain Asian airlines. They have
to be low. But other flight paths are also tracked, especially the occasional
screeching clouds of sulphur-crested cockatoos, or the zoom of, were they,
rosellas?
Fortunately
for us there is a pigeon house in the next street. This means quiet. It means
that in summer, but all year too, pigeons waddle down the side path, searching
for seed. They are a benign presence. Their claws scratch the corrugated
ripples of the tin shed, finding a footing. And when the heat rises they search
for shade, making the soft mournful cooing that is the best barometer of the
day moving inexorably into a heatwave. Bowls of cool water are left in the
shade.
The
French composer Olivier Messiaen visited Australia when he was in old age. He
is renowned for making music that includes bird songs and once said, "My
faith is the grand drama of my life. I'm a believer, so I sing words of God to
those who have no faith. I give bird songs to those who dwell in cities and
have never heard them, make rhythms for those who know only military marches or
jazz, and paint colours for those who see none."
I think it odd that when he was here he chose to go to
Sherbrooke Forest and copy out the calls of lyrebirds. Lyrebirds are mimics,
known to imitate other bird songs, but even sounds of the forest like chainsaws
and mobile phones. I keep looking out for Messiaen’s Australian compositions on
CD, but am more content still listening to the sounds of my own garden.
If all
artificial sounds in our world – radios, clocks, helicopters – went silent,
nature left alone with the sounds, what would we hear? Insects twittering,
leaves bristling, rain stopping, trees creaking, but mightily and most
wondrously, best of all, the shrieks of the lorikeets. They arrive early on
autumn mornings, when the gums flower. Climbing over the branches, their coat
of many colours and raucous attention to business is like some cosmic joke to
which even they don’t fully know the answer. Who cares? Something reconnects in
the brain.
Autumn
reminds us of rarity. We are captive to mortality. One day while washing up I
noticed through the kitchen window, a large grey and white bird. It was an
unknown, a stray maybe into these parts. It flapped along the top of the back
palings, taking a rest? Transfixed, I waited till it departed. The glossy bird
book, opened out on the table, rife with Latin names and feeding habits, said
it was probably a cuckoo-shrike, nomadic across Australia and the archipelago
to the North, though I couldn’t be completely sure. I measured the mystery of
its arrival and departure on the tiny map included.
But more
charmed than the drifter to my garden is the local who makes only rare
appearances. Of these certainly the prize moment is at night, quietly, a visit
from a wonder. It is a chunk of timber, a friend of the cold, and that shock of
recognition. “Oh, hello!” I say correctly, as one does to someone deeply
respected who suddenly enters vision. There is not a movement. Above the
rooftops the moon is bright already. It is a tawny frogmouth. He outstares me,
as if to say. “Who was here first?”