An absolutely dazzling morning gives me a wholesome smile. The sunrays are golden. How kind he is! The sky is pristine blue. How happy it looks! The wispy, scattered fluffs of clouds a dazzling white. How playful they are! There is cool gentle breeze that carries swarms of dragonflies like insect drones. How confident and coquettish is the breeze!
There is a groofy, rumbling and scratchily drawn series of notes
sent out by a bird. The Himalayan barbet, it strikes me. The barbet is the one
that has played symphony with my solitude in valleys when I move around the
lone trails among the hills. Now here in the plains, the rains have broken all
previous records for the month of September. I suppose all the dispirited,
famished countryside from the Himalayan foothills to the dusty plains in the
Delhi NCR has turned pretty luxuriant to keep the spirits of some lone
Himalayan barbet to keep flying, carried by the wanderlust spirits and here it
reaches the village to remind of those beautiful days in the valleys, where its
call droned over the lazy slopes in misty vales. Well, I run out in the yard to
find that dreams are dreams only, at least in this instance. The reality is a separate
entity. But it’s only our dreams that provide a kind of lease to our reality.
So keep your dreams alive. The reality here is a spotted dove that has slightly
modified its notes to sound like a barbet. Hope he isn’t trying to woo a barbet
girl in case there is one around.
Too much of rains definitely carry lots of inconvenience. It
isn’t good for the crop. Not good for old houses either. They get more cracks.
More plaster and paint gets peeled off to turn walls and yards mossy. The
leeches crawl in abundance. Tiny frog scatter like tiny dumplings from your
path as you move around. You have to be careful not to trample too many and add
to your quota of sins here on earth. But then tiny frogs are visible at least.
We hardly can take enough caution not to trample upon ants. They are too small.
In that case, I realize we are standing on our own mounds of sins. That’s why
it’s so important to lead a meaningful life because it comes at the cost of so
many little sins. Coming to the issue of too much of rains, the bricks in the
yard cave in. Too much of rain isn’t good for the snakes either. Their holes
get filled up and they crawl out to claim residency in houses, especially the
unkempt yards of lazy bachelors.
The old country house may have more cracks giving me a
little frown of discomfort. But that is very easily overpowered by a smile
caused by the vastly improved shape of the chapattis. They look more
presentable, and more importantly are nicely digestible. Graying men in their
forties need to be bothered more about stomach and less about tongue. Taste is
a secondary take off.
A couple of dozen black kites glide down in circles over the
village skies. The black kite is a carnivorous scavenger. They basically fly
over the Ghazipur area in New Delhi. There they are a common sight, scavenging
muddy trash from the mountainous garbage dump site and the banks of the stinking
rivers of sewage. They kind of symbolize the urban slums and sleaze. They are
wrongly named, I suppose. The black kite is dark brown in color. But it does a
yeomen help to the municipal cleaners as the scavenging raptor, with its white-speckled
feathers, deep-set eyes and a sharply curved beak, does a nice clean job of the
leftovers of urban table of carousel and craze. They are opportunistic hunters who
just love to scavenge. Most of their time is spent in gliding and soaring among
the thermals looking for food.
So here they float with their buoyant flight, gliding
effortlessly, diving, uplifting and changing directions with perfect ease, just
a few seconds of flapping of wings and minutes long glide. You have to be very
stable to spot the hunt below on the ground. Once the radar catches the prey,
the raptors swoop down with legs lowered, snatching the garbage, fish,
household refuse or carrion. In the British military slang they are known as
the shite-hawk. They are known to be very opportunist hunters. The lazy fliers
with big motives are attracted to fires and smoke because they know that lots
of prey would be running to escape the fire. According to the native Australian
beliefs, the kites are witty enough to spread fires. They pick up burning twigs
and drop them among the bushes to start a fire so that there is a stampede of
little rodents running away from the burning house. That’s a pretty criminal
act even as per the laws of raw nature. It smells of human conspiracy. In the
crowded Indian cities, they soar in thermals in large numbers and sometimes
even swoop down and snatch pizzas from human hands. They have become taste
conscious in human company, I think.
Black kites hovering in the village skies is not a usual
sight. I haven’t seen many. Well, it proves the scale of changing times. Even the
villages have lots of garbage dumped at many sites these days. So may be these
are the colonizer kites who have left the congested Delhi skies and are
migrating to seek fresher, sorry filthier, pastures. In any case, birds always
look better, even if they are hawkish, scavenging raptors. The sky looks
healthy with their winged ruffles in its ribs. And more birds, of any sort,
give a feeling that not everything is lost yet.
One of the kittens has turned very lazy, the one who loves
sleeping on the doormat in the verandah. The extrovert spends time in the barn.
They are turning into handsome lads. The extrovert one takes the pain to hunt
beyond the walls and enjoys the freedom. The lazy one is going to realize its
mistake once the time for wooing ladies comes. Girl cats won’t give him too
much of attention. When he isn’t sleeping, he is staring at me, his eyes
pleading to fill the bowl once more. It’s very irritating. If the stomach is
full by default, thanks to the bowl, why would one take the trouble of learning
to hunt? A boy cat that doesn’t hunt rats in its adolescence hardly stands a
chance to hunt the love of a cat girl after coming of age. It’s committing a
fatal mistake, I tell you.
The dining table in the verandah is piled high with the things
that I need now and then. That’s pretty convenient. I usually take out my plate
in the unkempt yard and eat among the flowers, and in the company of the snakes
hidden somewhere nearby. With things piled high on it, the dining table won’t
complain of idleness. I keep a corner free to set my laptop there and write.
The switchboard just above my head has an abandoned fan regulator whose speed
knob has come off, leaving a circular opening into the rectangular plastic
case. It’s the favorite house of fun for the lizards and stinging yellow wasps.
The lizards have fun but then they get burn also. I have found skeletons of
them inside. Was it electrocution or they love this site to go dying during
their last days, I am not sure. As of now the lizards have abandoned their
tenancy on the property. It’s now leased to the yellow stinging wasps. No
problem with that. Just that my head is direct in the line of their aerial
route as they land home. A crash-landing would mean a painful fire on my face.
We humans carry a lot of caution in our genes. Most of this is unnecessary fear
that we pride ourselves with being cautious. I am no different. I plug the
opening with a piece of clothing. The house is shut. They then peep across the narrow
air slits, craning out their necks, probably staring at me, taking a vow to
take revenge. I am not yet ready to allow a house of dead wasps right over my
head. Their insect souls may interfere my chain of thoughts while writing, so I
look for alternatives. I sprinkle a very mild dose of mosquito repellent, just
enough to give them cough perhaps, wear my helmet, drape my chador around like
an Afghan woman and take out the cloth. They troop out hurriedly, buzz around
angrily like anyone who has been forcibly evicted from his house. They are
justified in their anger. They don’t carry its remnants like we humans. They
will soon forget and make a nice nest somewhere else. It’s always easy to start
anew with unbruised feelings.
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