NOTES ON 7 WEEKS OF LOCKDOWN



Amidst the regular chatter of the birds outside are three, clear descending notes: a song so smooth, so distinct, that it stands out from all the rest. After some online sleuthing, we’ve deduced that our solo-singing feathered friend is a white-throated sparrow. I haven’t spied him in the wild of the urban jungle yet, but I look, every time I hear his song drift in through the open window.

In Lewis, I was used to hearing the birds from the garden: the cuckoo, the corncrake, and the stonechat. (Whenever you hear the cuckoo, my Granny used to say, rain isn’t far away.) At home in the Outer Hebrides I take the natural world for granted, whether that’s a seal in Stornoway harbour, an eagle above the Harris hills, or a hedgehog outside the kitchen door in Point. It’s taken lockdown and confinement in a 600-square foot apartment for me to learn to listen for the birds and find some of that joy in nature here in the city.

When I lean out of our living room window here to watch the birds, I see a pear blossom tree to my left, and Manhattan to my right. From this vantage point, the city looks unchanged. The skyscrapers still glint as the sun rises and sets; the lights of apartment buildings still twinkle in the twilight, when we leave the curtains open for as long as possible to admire the view |||READ MORE ….


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