LT COL NOEL ELLIS
26/VI/2025
A garden at home generates so
many tales. The greenery, the flowers, the frolicking of birds, insects, and
reptiles brings smiles, the moment you walkout of the door. There is someone
ever so happy to greet you. You greet back and the day is made. The other way
round is also true.
As I stepped out of the house the
other day, I peeped into the neighbours compound where we keep our ‘out of
season pots’. There was something amiss. One half of their Neem tree had dried
up.
One portion was green as green
could be but from the other half crisp green leaves came flying to the ground.
The whole garden floor was littered with neem leaves. This got me thinking.
More leaves have turned yellow
and are continuously falling leaving half the tree with just bare branches. I
don’t mind as neem leaves make good manure. But, why was only half the tree
drying?
On close inspection, I found that
there was a ficus tree adjacent to it and growing parallel. Over the years that
tree had been infested by white ants deep down in its roots. White ants love to
chew on bark and must have shifted base. Places where the white ants had
crawled had dried those neem branches.
White ants provide good
proteinaceous snacks for birds. This automatically prevents their spread and
keeps them under check. Birds peel off the bark or peck on the finger like
protrusions the white ants make with soil hugging the trunk. I let them enjoy it.
Why fight nature!
Talking about birds. Since the
last few days, a pair of crows have been visiting that neem tree regularly.
They sit there and crow in a grotesque voice, not at all pleasing to the ears.
Moment I point my camera towards them, they scamper.
The mystery got resolved this
morning. There was commotion in an almond tree right opposite our lane. There
was a fight between birds. I thought pigeons or sparrows had been attacked by
these crows but it was doves instead.
The army tactics of one force
engaging the enemy and the other manoeuvring was seen. One crow was gaining
attention and moved into the tree. While the other would engage the second dove
outside and they would interchange positions. Now I know how the Army evolved
its tactics.
One of the crows would enter the
tree and peck mama dove, while the other one would entice papa dove into a duel
and take him away from the scene. Moment mama dove would chase this crow, the
other one would dive into their nest, while papa dove sat confused. In the next
move the roles were reversed.
Finally, one crow got the better
of both and stole an egg from their nest. One egg gone yesterday and the second
one today. That’s the cycle of life.
I followed the crows who flew to
the parapet. With one flip of his beak, it hit the egg on the brick wall. Out
flowed the juicy contents of the egg. From the side of their beaks they slurped
it up. Raw eggs were served for breakfast.
The third story was of a storm
that had visited us recently. It was nasty and took away a lot of trees in our
colony. At one corner of our lane there were huge climbers like the
bougainvillaea and morning glory creepers which had engulfed the whole wire mesh
and barbed wire fence. They were flowering profusely and adding so much colour
to the colony.
The force of the storm was so
much that this thicket became a’ sail’ of sorts and must have bellowed
gathering all the wind. It not only uprooted the plants but took down the
boundary wall along with the barricades on which the creepers were resting. Now
about a hundred feet of wall is lying on the ground.
To reconstruct it, all vegetation
had to be uprooted. It will take a lot of time to get to its original state.
What I was concerned about was that it also took away a lot of bird nests,
especially of Partridges which used to return to these bushes in the evening.
Their early morning and evening calls have gone afar now.
They used roost for the night in
those dense bushes. Today, I saw them on the adjacent wall. I could make out
they were coming back to check if their homes were still there. A JCB which is
now after encroachments was used to level the area. It did not matter if a few
homes were lost. Food for thought!
Nature gives mixed feelings. It
is survival of the fittest. These three stories caught my attention. Will there
be more? I wonder!!!!!!
JAI HIND
©® NOEL ELLIS
Excellent show 👏 👌 👍
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DeleteNicely covered Noel...thanks dear
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