White-breasted water-hen is a
blackish grey, long-legged, stub-tailed marsh bird with white on breast and
face. This one loiters singly. There is moist ground along the path-side
bushes. I see it regularly and it seems a solitary wanderer like me. It carries
its stubby tail erect as it skulks around, jerking it time to time displaying
the chestnut color underneath. These birds are very noisy during the monsoon,
but for the rest of the time they are usually shy and silent.
During the monsoons, it hides
unseen in a bush and unleashes pretty noisy chuckles, croaks and grunts—krr-kwak-kwak, kook-kook-kook. It loves
croaking through cloudy nights. Its diet menu includes worms, insects, grains,
shoots and mollusks. It steps around slowly like a long-legged beauty. Its
long, yellow legs with long, spread out toes (three branched out forward and
one backward) enable the silent wader to leave a fine trail of its toe-marks on
the plain, soft sand. The pattern looks like a flowery motif, a fine
free-wheeling filigree, looping artistically, taking open, liberated turns. An
amazing regular pattern, open to uncertainty and vicissitudes of life. To any
solitary lounger it’s a treat to observe and muse over these marks on the
countryside path. They attract you like floral patterns in relief on Persian monuments.
You can feel the silent wader’s ease while walking on the soft, smooth sand.
The symmetry of its gait and toes is such that they fall in a double marked
line, so proportionally going along that only a beetle with its tiny legs
leaves a better patterned trail. This particular water-hen must be a singular
bird, cozily staying in the area, passing time in the moist fields and bushes
along the path. I see the delectable proofs of its walk preserved on the clear
canvas of sand in the evenings.
The temperature has plummeted
down very sharply, almost touching the freezing point in the first week of
January. As you grow old, the cold starts eating into your bones during the
winters. You pine for sunshine more than anything else. Like a frozen snake coming
back to life, I’m walking on the countryside cart track under pale sunrays this
afternoon. It’s dark green carpet of wheat on both sides with patches of bright
yellow mustard in between. This is mankind’s well-manicured lawn, striking in
its modernist monotony. The nature tamed to an extent that the will of man
seems the will of God. A few trees survive in the corners of the cropped fields
and on the embankments. They seem to hold their little root-hold as if on a
lease from the farmer. Then there are mushroom huts among the green and yellow of
the wheat and mustard.
Something comes crashing out of
the wayside bushes. It’s a black dog, quite well built for its breed. It is
running away for its life, its tail safely under legs as if the tail stands for
life and losing it or getting it harmed would mean losing the life itself. I
have never seen such a fast canine sprint. It simply vanished from my view
before I could even realize it. Then a huge Saint Bernard lumbered out onto the
path with its long-limbed bulk. The escaper had transgressed into its
territory, most probably a mushroom farm farther into the countryside. Well, it
helps to be a coward, as long as you have muscles in your legs to support the
chicken heart. The big dog stood almost clueless as to where the foe had gone.
The runner had safely escaped. Clueless about what to do, the pursuer sniffed
at the path-side grass forming the outer boundary of the ruts in the path. Then
something snarled at it. It’s a small, shriveled, itchy canine chit lying
coiled up in the grass. Well, you have to defend your territory even if it
means a square yard of frost-beaten grass by a dusty cart track. The big dog,
its face bigger than the little itchy imp, looked surprised and respecting the
little thing’s territorial rights moved away. It means really strong people
will allow you the satisfaction of punching above your weight.
Kala Tobhla is easefully waiting
for his drinking pals to assemble at the little farmhouse by the side. Last
year he was very busy in the mushroom farms. ‘No mushroom farming this year?’ I
ask as I come across the path. ‘No, no! It was total loss! I hate mushrooms so
much so that I even shouted at my wife when she asked me if she could cook
mushrooms for dinner. I warned her never to cook it. She is just not to even
touch them,’ he poured out his woes.
There is fine sand on the path.
It’s not dusty at this point of the season as dew and fog leave enough moisture
to keep the dust tamed. The soil bears the marks of farming life. It bears the
prints of agricultural endeavors. There are tyre marks. The tractors leave
quite authoritative ones. And smaller vehicles a bit lesser ones. Different
tyres leave their own patterns, a crazy monotony of designs. In between are the
marks of shoes and slippers. But very few people walk on foot these days. Then
comes the area of the white-breasted water-hen. Her toe marks stand out quite
exclusive among all the man-made markings. It looks like a signature of sanity
among all the rubbered and soled stampede.
As a gauzy veil of mist builds up
over the green and yellow in the farms, I leave the main cart track and move on
the little path going zigzag among the farms. It bears the marks of the
so-called lesser species. The peacocks, dogs, insects, birds and the casual
human foot among them. These are the little spaces at the margins of the board
of human activity where the so-called lesser species walk and leave their footmarks
to remind us of their existence.
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