The thing about coming to the UK in March is that you get
two springs. At home, the snow still lies deep across the flower beds. The Bohemian
waxwings have been, and stripped the pin-cherry tree bare, and now the robins
cock their heads to one side and look like they’re listening for the sound of
the first insects. Spring is not in sight, and the pack ice still piles up on
the northern shore.
In North Wales there are already signs of spring. From the
front window of my mother’s house I look out towards the Irish Sea, now grey
and with a fret hanging low across the waves. The ocean holds on to the last
vestiges of winter. There are gulls riding the wind, wings outstretched as they
glide, heads peering downward as they seek a floating morsel of food.
But no gannets yet, those harbingers of the maritime spring,
in from the far reaches to chase the capelin and the herring closer in to
shore. I love gannets – huge birds, majestic and deadly, blindingly white
against the dull gunmetal sky but with the identifying black tips to their
wings visible long before the yellow rapier like beak. They soar above the
crests, looping up and down, then fold those massive wings and plunge
vertically on to the fish they have spotted. The fish is speared, the bird pops
to the surface, shakes its head and swallows, then rises from the waves to
resume the search.
We have watched the gannets from the shores of three
provinces, my daughters and I, lines of them curling along offshore. They spend
the winter far out to sea, beyond the pack ice, and in spring nest in great
colonies on steep cliffs bordering islands known only to mariners and
naturalists. But in the spring they grace we mortals with their presence.
It is not spring on the ocean, but closer to my mother’s
house I see the gorse, bright yellow flowers startling against the dark green
leaves. The gorse lines the hedgerows here, interspersed with gnarly hawthorn
and dense thickets of brambles, dead now but later in the year heavy with
blackberries. These plants are supported by rows of squared fence wire, topped
with barbed wire displaying tufts of wool. The wool is never the fresh white of
Mary’s fleece, but stained grey with dirt or blue by ram paint.
In the fields beyond the wire and the gorse and the brambles
are the sheep, dozens of them, accompanied by their lambs. Every so often a
certain type of spring madness overtakes the lambs, and they pack together in a
race to the end of the field and back, leaping stiff-legged over clumps of sedge
and other obstacles. Gambolling. Not walking purposefully, no Mr Sermon this,
but dancing with exuberance. Then back to their mothers, sometimes alone but often
a pair of twins, being sniffed by the ewe before she lets them access her milk.
On this side of the road which is lined with gorse bushes
lies my mother’s garden. The daffodils are out in all their glory. “Did you see
your daffodils?” was her greeting on our arrival, a reference to the massed
rows by the gate. I planted those the fall my father died, fifteen years ago,
and every year new flowers appear as the bulbs multiply and naturalize themselves.
In the front garden there are primroses, pale yellow against
the spring green grass, and mounds of pink heather. There are new leaves
showing on the buddleia, and the first shoots of tulips are starting to push
through the mulch. Around the side of the house there are buds on the holly,
and the camellia petals fall to the ground in all their pink glory.
Spring is coming here in North Wales, and soon it will make
its way westward to the gardens of the Gentle Island. When we get home I shall
continue to pace the sands of Brackley and Rustico, gazing seaward through the
sea mists, searching for the flash of brilliant white against the grey of sky
and sea, waiting for the gannets to come, and for my daffodils to bloom.
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