The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

ENJOYING RICHNESS OF AUTUMN AT RIVERSIDE

Soaking in simple joys of wonderful colours and scents of nature as birds make the most of the season’s bounty before winter sets in

- With Keith Broomfield

Autumn down by the river and the ground was heavy wit h fallen leaves, a multi-coloured carpet that rustled and yielded under my gentle footfall.

A small group of redwings chattered to one another in nearby hawthorns as they feasted upon the glistening red bounty of haws and a wren churred excitedly from a tangle of brambles.

The leaves were still golden and true, but rather than on the trees, most had now fallen, and their burnished beauty lit up the ground like smoulderin­g embers.

Anne Bronte, in her poem Lines Composed in a Wood on a Windy Day, wrote: “The long withered grass in the sunshine is glancing, The bare trees are tossing their branches on high: The dead leaves beneath them are merrily dancing, The white clouds are scudding across the blue sky.”

Somewhere in the distance, the honking of greylag geese drifted across the dank air as they sought out fields and pastures to graze upon.

I headed away from the riverbank and out on to a partially flooded meadow on the haugh where I inadverten­tly flushed a snipe that had been hiding deep in among the rushes.

It took to the air like a missile and spiralled away into the distance in a blur of fast-beating wings.

From the haugh, I ventured into a thick stand of birch woodland where a rich, heady aroma of leaf mould enveloped my senses like a life-enhancing elixir, filling my lungs with the essence of nature’s wild being.

This was autumn at its most honest – the colour and the smell, the cool damp air, and the gurgle of a nearby rushing burn.

The weak calls of a mixed party of blue, great and coal tits came and went as they worked their way through the tree branches.

I walked on some more, and in a clearing, a gean (wild cherry) stood out like a lone sentinel.

Unlike the surroundin­g trees, this gean was still partially in leaf in a rich blaze of reds and ochres.

The gean is among the most spectacula­r trees for autumn colour while others such as the ash are rather underwhelm­ing.

Yet, ash trees shine in other ways, with their striking pale trunks radiating an enveloping soft luminescen­ce under the weak autumnal sun.

After working through the wood, I followed a loop path back to the river, where a weak warbling song rose above the tumbled churn of water by a nearby riffle.

It was a dipper proclaimin­g his territory and marking out his stretch of river for the breeding season next spring.

In-between now and then lies the unpredicta­bility of winter – will it be harsh and cold, or gentle and benign?

If the former, then the dipper need not worry.

When the ground is frosted hard, and other songbirds such as blackbirds and thrushes struggle to find food, the miraculous dipper can forage under flowing waters that never ice over, making good the rich bounty of mayfly and caddisfly larvae that abound on the riverbed.

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 ?? ?? Beech leaves show the full gamut of autumn’s colours, and right, a dazzling dipper eyes the water for tasty prey beneath.
Beech leaves show the full gamut of autumn’s colours, and right, a dazzling dipper eyes the water for tasty prey beneath.

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