This week, for Monochrome Madness, Leanne asks us to stay in our home patch and show us what we can find within 10 km of our home. Well. I’m sorry Leanne, but frankly, one kilometre is as far as I can stretch today, and I may not even go that far. Let’s see. Have you met our next door neighbours? They’re in the featured photo.
We’re a bit light on neighbours generally. You might find these characters:


They’re from the local ponds – quite honestly the heron and egret come from just a little further up the road- but not much more distant.
Even nearer than the ponds is the River Ure.

Go the other way from the house, and it’s fields and crops…



… and more sheep …

But please don’t think our life lacks drama. On Monday evening we were unexpectedly treated to a starling murmuration at the bottom of the garden. At dusk, starlings in their hundreds – perhaps thousands – swirled above us, eddying back and forth, cacophanously landing as one on the trees, which bowed under their weight, before they took off again to wheel and turn above us. Then some signal, known only to them, indicated that they should disappear and roost in the nearby reed beds. They never seem to come to the same place twice, so they weren’t here on Tuesday, and they won’t come tonight.

So that was our drama for the week. Just an everyday story of country folk.
There are some lovely images here, Margaret. I’m loving the reflected tree, the wheat (corn? I’m not a country mouse) and the sheep with clouds. And what an amazing number of starlings! xx
LikeLiked by 1 person
Seeing a starling murmuration is one of life’s unforgettable dramas. And we have no idea where they go during the day. We never see even one. Wheat. You were right first time xx
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love that final shot, and what a treat. All the more so for being unpredictable I imagine. I saw no ducklings at all last year on our daily walks. I’ve begun to wonder if hens have been more affected by bird flu than drakes as they seem a bit thin on the ground.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It WAS a treat. And last year, our ducks in the villaage raised not a single duckling beyong the first few days of life. We blame the invading greylag geese.
LikeLike
Love your sheeply neighbours! And that Starling murmuration is Marvellous, all the better for not being anticipated. I think I’ve only ever seen one in my life…. And no photos
LikeLiked by 1 person
Photos are hard to come by. I’ll show you a few this afternoon.
LikeLike
Ba, Quack,,Coo 🐾🐦
LikeLike
So beautiful and ideal in monochrome. I’m envious of that murmuration.
LikeLike
There is nothing more amazing than a starling murmuration! A great shot. I love the country photos, especially the sheep.
LikeLike