Farewell O Sun! Disappear O radiant Orb!
So spoke Captain Nemo as he watched the sun vanish under the
horizon at the South Pole on the day of the Equinox. Whilst we don’t have 6 months of 24 hour
darkness to cope with as they do at the poles, it is however Longest Night and
the Winter Solstice tomorrow – which means that once this is over we are oh so
slowly and inexorably creeping out the other side and towards the distant
glimmer of earlier dawns and later sunsets….
But not yet! I get ahead of myself; in fact it has only really
felt properly wintery in the last few days with the frost on the ground and the
ice on the windscreen of a morning.
These last few weeks have felt slightly detached to me as we
have all been fitting in our allotted holiday days before the end of the year
(use it or lose it) and so there has been a lot of us in and out of work. Whilst nice to have the time off, it does
make trying to fit all the tasks in around our schedules a bit
challenging. We have also had absences
for other positive and negative reasons; Our New forest estate rangers Dave and
Mike each have their own news – Dave has recently welcomed the birth of his son
and has consequently been on paternity leave, whilst poor Mike managed to
dislocate his shoulder cliff jumping and so won’t be back with us for a few
weeks.
However in between such frivolities work has gone on and we
are making good progress towards our winter targets.
Now I want to tell you about a certain tree we had, a tree
that bore a rather fabulous prize….in our Wood Yard there is a tree where, in
previous years, the deer stalkers would hang the heads of deer they had culled
to allow nature to dispose of the flesh naturally. This does sound gross and when I first found
this tree last year it looked like something out of a horror film. However all the skulls that were hanging in
it were clean of flesh and seemed too good to leave hidden in the woods. I found good homes for two of them – one went
into a room in Mottisfont House as part of an exhibit, one went to a very
talented taxidermist friend in return for her taxidermy services….and the finest
specimen, a magnificent Fallow Stag skull with antlers about 3 feet across, I took
into my humble care.
I have in the
office, an educational ‘shelf of Death’.
On this shelf is a collection of skulls I have acquired through my time
here (all natural deaths) and I use them in bushcraft sessions to educate
children about different types of teeth, why a barn owl has smaller eye sockets
than a tawny (barn owls hunt at dusk when there is more light, hence smaller
eyes) and other things. This mighty
Fallow skull would not fit on the shelf and I thought it too fine to leave
hidden in the loft space. So with the
begrudging agreement from Dylan I decided to have it mounted on the wall of our
office – the only condition being that I cleaned it first. The volunteer DIY man Ken set to work
designing and making a wooden bracket for it whilst I set to work making it
more presentable.
Not wanting to use up work time in such a manner (I was
pushing my luck already with the skull thing!) I took it home to clean. A big bottle of bleach was acquired, having
chosen one with a ‘spring meadow’ scent, in the hope of somehow transferring this
scent to the skull, and a large pair of marigold gloves. Unfortunately, there is only one container in
my house big enough to soak a skull of this size….and so it was with great
reluctance and mild disgust on my part that I lowered the skull into a big
bleach-bubbled bath tub. Trying to
console myself with the thought that the great naturalists like Gerald Durrell
and David Attenborough must surely have suffered for the cause in similar ways;
I took an old toothbrush and started scrubbing.
I then left it to soak for a few hours whilst trying not to think of
what my landlord would say if he could see the use to which I was putting his
bathroom.
After hours of soaking, and some scrubbing and topping up
with bleach, I took it out and left it to dry on a bin bag overnight. I will spare you the details of how I had to
try and detach the last bits of nose skin and clean out the head cavity and
instead cut to the chase – cleaned and smelling of roses, I gave it back to Ken
and one fine winter morning I walked into the office to see it adorning our
doorway and looking magnificent!
I will leave you with the festive feeling that I felt
walking round the grounds first thing this morning. Mottisfont gardens were wreathed in a fine
mist and the sun shone bright and clear through it, making everything glisten
and sparkle – from the hoarfrost on the trees to the droplets of water on this swan’s
beak.
I walked past Visitor Reception where the wreaths for sale were looking beautiful in the sun and made my way to the Duck Grounds, our area of wet peat woodland. The light coming through the trees here, the mist rising off the ponds and the frost gleaming on the plants made this a breathtakingly stunning stroll and made me again appreciate how lucky I am to be in a job where I can take in such sights all in a day’s work.
I walked past Visitor Reception where the wreaths for sale were looking beautiful in the sun and made my way to the Duck Grounds, our area of wet peat woodland. The light coming through the trees here, the mist rising off the ponds and the frost gleaming on the plants made this a breathtakingly stunning stroll and made me again appreciate how lucky I am to be in a job where I can take in such sights all in a day’s work.
Misty Duck Grounds |
And so, with Longest Night looming tomorrow and with the final few sleeps until Christmas beckoning, let me wish you a very Merry Christmas and an inspiring New Year. 2014 will be our first full year with a fully staffed countryside team for us and so I personally think this will be our year to really shine, grow and show people what we are about – bring it on!
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