Authors: John Lewis-Stempel
Foxes have been doing this for a long time. Remains of the red fox have been found in Wolstonian glacial sediments from Warwickshire, meaning they were around between 330,000 and 135,000 years ago.
Something in the atmosphere changes, and the fox on the far bank looks up and sees me, and bounds off. Reynard disappears into the shadow of the thicket.
Then I go to my earth.
27 D
ECEMBER
At night the temperature dips below freezing. The pulse of life is stilling, slowing. Over the field sits the rusty-iron smell of the year’s finish. The field would be an almost empty scene if I could not see my memories superimposed upon it. This is the field I cut by hand, the field I was part of, where I learned the pleasure of simple things. If you want to know what happiness is, ask the fellow who cut the hay.
31 D
ECEMBER
New Year’s Eve. I put the sheep in the field, and a load of hay in their feeder. In a sort of virtuous circle the hay is from this field – the hay I made in the summer, pulled down on those now indispensable tarpaulins.
The sheep and hay are in. The raven croaks. I shut the gate and leave. This is how it is, has been, how it shall be evermore.
alder
apple
ash
autumn hawkbit
bird’s-foot trefoil
blackberry
blackthorn
bluebell
bracken
bramble
bryony
bugle
burdock
bush vetch
camomile
cleavers (goosegrass)
cock’s foot
common bent
common meadow rue
common vetch
cow parsley
cowslip
crab apple
crested dog’s tail
cuckoo pint
dandelion
deadly nightshade
devil’s bit scabious
dock
dog violet
dog’s mercury
dyer’s greenweed
elder
elm
eyebright
field forget-me-not
field maple
field scabious
fir
foxglove
goat willow
ground elder
ground ivy
hawthorn
hazel
hemlock
hogweed
holly
honeysuckle
ivy
Jack-by-the-hedge
Jew’s ear mushroom
knapweed
lady’s smock
lesser celandine
liberty cap mushroom
lords and ladies
marsh thistle
meadow buttercup
meadow cranesbill
meadow foxtail
meadow grass
meadow vetchling
mistletoe
mouse-ear
nettle
oak
pignut
primrose
quaking grass
ragged robin
red campion
red clover
red fescue
ribwort plantain
rosebay willow herb
rough meadow grass
rye grass
saxifrage
sedge
sloe
snowdrop
sorrel
St George’s mushroom
stitchwort
sweet vernal
thistle
timothy
tormentil
tufted hair-grass
turf mottlegill mushroom
velvet shank mushroom
white clover
white daisy
willow
wood anemone
woodrush
yarrow
yellow archangel
yellow rattle
aphid
backswimmer
badger
barn owl
bilberry tortrix moth
black slug
blackbird
blackcap
blackfly
blue tit
brimstone butterfly
brown-spot pinion moth
bullfinch
bullhead
bumblebee
buzzard
cabbage white
caddis fly
Canada goose
carrion crow
chaffinch
chalcid wasp
chalk hill blue butterfly
chameleon frog
chiffchaff
cockchafer
common blue butterfly
common partridge
crane fly/leatherjacket
cuckoo
curlew
damselfly
Daubenton’s bat
dipper
dor beetle
dragonfly
dungfly
dunnock (hedge sparrow)
earthworm
field mouse
field vole
fieldfare
fox
fox moth
frog
frog-hopper
gall midge
gall wasp
gatekeeper butterfly
glaucous shears moth
goldfinch
grass snake
great crested grebe
great spotted woodpecker
great tit
greater horseshoe bat
green bottle fly
green woodpecker
Hebrew character moth
hedgehog
heron
horsefly
house martin
house sparrow
hoverfly
jackdaw
jay
kestrel
kingfisher
ladybird
lapwing
large-jawed spider
leaf bug
least yellow underwing
lesser cream wave moth
little owl
loach
long-tailed tit
magpie
mallard
mandarin duck
marsh fritillary butterfly
mayfly
meadow ant
meadow brown butterfly
meadow grasshopper
meadow pipit
meadowsweet
merganser
merlin
midge
minnow
mole
money spider (5)
mosquito
newt
nightjar
noctule bat
nuthatch
orange-tip butterfly
otter
palmate newt
peacock butterfly
pheasant
pied wagtail
polecat
pond skater
powdered quaker moth
rabbit
rat
raven
red grouse
red kite
redwing
robin
rook
rove beetle
satyr pug moth
scarce vapourer moth
short-tailed vole
shrew
silk cell spider
six-spot burnet moth
skylark
slug
small copper butterfly
snipe
soldier beetle
sparrowhawk
spotted flycatcher
springtail
squirrel
starling
stoat
swallow
swift
tawny owl
thrush
toad
tortoiseshell butterfly
treecreeper
trout
violet ground beetle
water boatman
water vole
weasel
willow warbler
winged agate (flying ant)
winged meadow ant
wolf spider (2)
wood mouse
wood pigeon
woodlouse
wren
yellow wagtail
yellowhammer
You are what you read. So I offer the following in explanation.
I wish I could remember which master at school read
The Little Grey Men
to us (stories about gnomes for twelve-year-olds, absurd!), though I think it must have been the keen, young Mr David, who wore the bottle-green cord jacket. While BB’s gnomes amused me, they did not interest me as much as the book’s subtext: the natural history of the British countryside.
I was not a stranger to that countryside; it was outside the door of my house, it was what my grandparents farmed, it was what my family had lived in (the Herefordshire variant) for around nine hundred years. What BB did was make me see interconnectedness. If gnomes could communicate with wild animals, then why not me? It was a way of thinking about nature which is not Us and Them, but We together. It was the natural world from the inside out, not from the outside in.
I was already a ‘nature boy’, given to rambles with my black Labrador dog, Rover (of course), usually alone, though sometimes with cousins or friends. My standard equipment, aside from the dog, was an outsize pair of Boots Empire 10 x 50 binoculars, which always swung hurtingly when I climbed trees to peer into birds’ nests, especially the twig shanties of wood pigeons in the tops of the elms. I still have my
Observer’s Book of British Birds’ Eggs
, given to me at seven, just as I have the
Observer’s Book of British Birds
, of
Wild Animals
, of
Pond Life
. Plus the
AA Book of Birds
which was my tenth birthday present from Auntie Eileen and Uncle George, which sits on the bookshelves next to those other indispensable bird-identification guides from the 1970s:
The Hamlyn Guide to the Birds of Britain and Europe
and the
Collins Pocket Guide to British Birds
. The latter was a school prize, won in a surprising and never equalled moment of scholarly success.
No sooner was I introduced to BB than I was off to Hereford Library, to come home with my school briefcase fat with
Down the Bright Stream, The Wild Lone
and
Brendon Chase
. It is the last two of these books, really, which means that BB is the author to have most influenced me.
The Wild Lone
is still, to my money, the best attempt to get inside an animal’s head and life, while
Brendon Chase
is the classic of boy’s adventuring in the British countryside, the story of the Hensman boys living wild in the woods. (I admit Arthur Ransome’s
Great Northern?
runs it close.) As a very big boy in my forties I finally got my chance to live wild, spending a year surviving on what I could forage and shoot, an experience recounted in
The Wild Life
. Being outside should never be anorak-dull. Being a bird watcher should not mean one is predestined to be a character in a Mike Leigh play. The outside should always be an ecstatic experience.
If BB (properly Denys Watkins-Pitchford) remains the nature writer I most admire, others have stuck to me over the passage of time, rather like goose grass sticks to the coats of sheep as they pass along hedges. The inherent anarchist in me loves William Cobbett’s self-sufficiency classic
Cottage Economy
, the middle-aged conservative shooter adores Brian Vesey-Fitzgerald’s
British Game
. (The latter book was Number 2 in the New Naturalist series, any and all of which deserve a place on a nature lover’s bookshelf.) I have made both my children read Barry Hines’s
A Kestrel for a Knave
– I read it too as a child – to make them understand the privilege of having a pet. You are never lonely if you have the love of an animal.
George Orwell once wrote to the effect that autobiography should never be trusted unless it reveals something outrageous. My small confession is that I distrust science, and in my science-free A levels I discovered English pastoral poetry: Thomas Hardy, John Clare, Edward Thomas and the honorary Briton, Robert Frost.
(Thomas and Frost had lived as part of the circle of Dymock Poets, only miles from where I grew up.) Don’t they all communicate truths about nature too?
You read what you are. I have the bad habit of reading books about farming from another world: Britain before DDT. George Ewart Evans’s
Ask the Fellows Who Cut the Hay
, John Stewart Collis’s
The Worm Forgives the Plough
, George Henderson’s
The Farming Ladder
are always reassuringly close.
The full list of meadowland books to be found on my own shelf is:
Richard Adams,
Watership Down
, 1972: the lapin
Aeneid
.
J. A. Baker,
The Peregrine
, 1966: Baker’s account of a year spent following peregrine falcons, in which he elides the distinctions between man and bird, won the Duff Cooper prize for 1967.
BB (Denys Watkins-Pitchford),
The Wild Lone
, 1938;
Manka the Sky Gypsy
, 1939;
The Little Grey Men
, 1942;
Brendon Chase
, 1944;
Down the Bright Stream
, 1948
Ronald Blythe,
Akenfield
, 1969: the last days of traditional agriculture in Suffolk.
Maurice Burton,
The Observer’s Book of Wild Animals
, 1971
Geoffrey Chaucer,
Parlement of Foules
(trans. C. M. Drennan), 1914