For the last few weeks a faint mist of green has been swirling through the branches of the wood. Today, from a distance, I can see that it is at last beginning to condense on the twigs; colour is taking on definition as leaves.
As I enter the wood I see a wren looking casual. I am suspicous – wrens don’t usually look casual; they look busy and scuttley. I pretend not to watch. I think the wren thinks that I’m not looking and when the wren darts into a crack in our boundary stone wall, I creep over, superior. I’d outsmarted the wren – it had inadvertently given away it’s nesting place. I peep through the gap. A beautiful nest tucked between stones is waiting for eggs. The thing is, this nest is not a wren’s nest. The sneaky wren has shown me a robins nest – it knew I was watching all along. An excellent tactic to stop a predator finding its own nest. One nil to the wren.
Not wanting to upset the robin or the wren, I move off quickly to look at the bluebells, now fully open at the edge of the wood.
Moving on I see violets,
and primroses.
Hazel with its delicate thin green leaves, still crumpled along their veins.
Hawthorn, darker leaves appearing as a small version of what they will be, but tinged red at the centres.
Beech, leaves opening up like fans from tightly concertinaed buds.
As I walk down the path, I see a flutter. A butterfly. A peacock butterfly. The first I’ve seen in the wood this year. I dump the kettle I’m carrying, soap, dishcloth, key, backpack; a tumbled heap in the path. I stalk the butterfly. I watch as it feeds on the bluebells, having to turn upside down to get it’s tongue up the nodding head of the flower. Then it basks in the sun.