The Common Crane (L. Grus grus)

Aah, the Common Crane is not so common for us  up in the North!

 

Spring is here ... we think... we hope.. .

 

It was a lovely sunny afternoon and I decided to go to town taking the longer route through the countryside - a slow drive instead of the main motorway. Spring is hesitating... its palette is still of sombre browns and beige, the resplendent greens are way off yet but there are signs everywhere you look....The colts foot dot the ditches, the crocuses in the shaded corners light up the entire garden, the snowdrops are every where bringing such joy to the disarrayed winter soul...

 

While driving I was delighted to hear the sudden cacophonous honk-honk and the whirr-rr of huge wings above me.... Cranes! I thought. I stopped on the side of the road... (its a country road and almost no traffic...). And sure enough! There above me against the blue sky was a flock of cranes on their way to the breeding lake called HornborgarLake, a few kms from here.... every year we get nearly 10 to 12 000 cranes (unbelievable!) at the lake, en route to Russia and northern Sweden.

 

The cranes are smart! They go away to warmer places (these chaps have been in Spain since September!!) and return to their cold northern homes when the temperatures are friendlier! Its a delight seeing them in various fields as one drives back and forth doing ones errands ...

 

And so I stopped ...and took a few photos as you can see...


And then just as I started the car to drive on...  two of them decided to cross the road...And very smartly did so while I waited, the engine idling...

 

When they had all settled in the field I drove on.

At the edge of the forest were two deer lazily munching the first of the fresh green grass....

 

Signing off for now!

C.S

(Cresat Scientia)


Swan Lake - its spring in Sweden


Spring this year is rather astonishingly early in Sweden... I am, at the moment,  not contemplating its rather sombre connotation but just enjoying 'the blue blue sky' and the meagre warmth of a Scandinavian spring sun...
 
In January we drove past the little pond...it was still frozen ...
 
In February we drove past the little pond ... it was still frozen in parts ....but the swans had returned!!!
What joy indeed - the first veritable sign of spring and of hope.
 

 
 
In March we drove past the little pond....it was not frozen at all... but the vegetation around was still bleak  brown and beige. 
 
 
But Mr & Mrs Swan were there.
 
At first I was a bit perturbed as I saw only one of them...
 
 
...but stepping out of the car I was able to discern Mrs Swan beautifully camouflaged in the weeds and reeds and bullrushes.
 
 
As if reading my thoughts, she sailed elegantly out of the reeds and met up with Mr Swan... looking for food, seemingly enjoying each other's Company in the quiet and the beauty of Nature, re-awakening from a long cold slumber.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
With Dante I end my blog for today....
 

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia)

 
 

The "Clash of the Titans"

 
A poem written to my brave birds
 

Here in my garden

A battle is raging

For Olympian supremacy over

Tiny, nutty

Striped sunflower seed.

 

Green finches versus

Great tits versus

Sparrows versus

Blue tits versus

Nuthatches versus

Marsh tits versus

Magpies....

 

Versus

The monochrome cat

That lurks, eyeing dolefully

Licking his chops.

Prompted by his genes

To snap a finch.

 

Alas for him                 

He must dream on.

'My' titans fly at whirring speed

With a twitter and a chirp

Akin to the laughter and giggles

Of teenage girls.

 

They rage their wars

with beaks, claws, wings

Fulminating anathemas1

In ancient Chirp-language

Unknown to us.

 

I stand by my window

Bemused. My

Canon

Captures

Covertly, the

Clash of the Titans -

In my back garden.

-------------------------------------------------------

 

(In all fairness, although it is definitely Catch-22 of  "Si vis pacem fac bellum"2  in the birdhouse - my Canon has also captured delightful ante bellum birds as well...but that's for another time...)

 

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/

 

1. From Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

2.If you want peace, make war

 

 
 
 
 

 


Chasing a Rainbow....

  

E and I were on our way to town ....

It had rained but now the sun was shining ...

I looked out of the kitchen window to check the thermometer mounted on the window frame outside...

+6ºC  (42ºF)... oh great, I thought...a jacket will do then!

And then I looked up... a glorious rainbow filled the western sky. I grabbed my camera and as I clicked, 17 year old Judy Garland burst quietly in my head:

 

Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high
There's a land that I heard of once in a lullaby
Somewhere over the rainbow, Skies are blue,
And the dreams that you dare to dream, really do come true...

 

(From The Wizard of Oz, 1939)

 

It is a song that is automatically on Play mode on seeing a rainbow. I can see her in my mind's eye....Dorothy/Judy Garland and her dog Toto on the farm...she has her hair in plaits and is wearing a pinafore... Slowly the song fills my head... dreams that you dare to dream, really do come true.... it's full of hope and promise....as indeed rainbows are.

 

E and I were going out to town for our weekly shopping...

I also had an appointment to keep...

 

We jumped into the car and drove off... lo and behold! as we hit the motorway the rainbow lit up and "met" the end of the road... it was like I was driving straight into it ...far far away...and quite mesmerising. I decided, for the first time, to be "late" for my 2 o'clock appointment or just arrive by the skin of my teeth...I would have to make up an excuse - or tell the truth, of course: I was chasing the rainbow. This was too too amazing to miss...

 

I drove on the motorway towards the rainbow and of course it got further and further away...Rainbows are elusive things indeed! I wasn't looking for  the pot of gold at the end of it... rainbows are so beautiful that they are enough by themselves...I don't need to look for the gold.... but I wanted to see it. It was like I was being propelled by an inner force.

 

I turned right off the motorway and drove on the country road. Fields, (on either side of the road) were now barren and full of gulls chasing and squawking behind the tractor looking for insects and earthworms in the newly tilled land...a tiny pond lay still and serene and the new modern wind power stations, like a monolith from a science fiction, lazily turned its giant arms in the sudden bright sunlight.

 

And there, just behind the naked autumn trees was the rainbow in all its VIBGYOR-splendour. I parked the car by the pond and was most disappointed that I had not brought my Canon with me...but I had, thankfully my small pocket-camera in my handbag.


What grandeur, what brilliance...the rainbow flames leaping at me held me spellbound. Its sublime presence was reassuring - the rainbow tinted my the world in its many hues - after the rain, the hail and the storm.

And Judy Garland's dulcet voice continued to sing in my head...

 

Someday I'll wish upon a star
And wake up where the clouds are far behind me
Where troubles melt like lemon drops
Away above the chimney tops, that's where you'll find me

 

Somewhere over the rainbow, blue birds fly
Birds fly over the rainbow, why then, oh why can't I?
If happy little blue birds fly beyond the rainbow
Why, oh why can't I?

------- ◊ --------

 

And yes, I just made it for my 2 o'clock appointment....    

                                        

 The last rainbow photo is dedicated to all my friends...

 

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia)

 

 
 
TO ALL MY FRIENDS:
 

 

 


The Swan Family at Twilight

No, I do not have "nine-and-fifty swans" but I am deliriously happy for "my" Swan Family... I have not seen them for many weeks .... but yesterday, oh what joy... there they were in the quiet serene twilight, soundlessly floating on the ethereal pond - Quod magicae!

 

Here is a poem by Yeats (first and last verses only)

Here are some photos I took from the car yesterday...and lastly...

Here is my favourite cello recital - 3 minutes and 10 seconds of pure joy! Its Le Cygne (The Swan) by Camille Saint-Saëns played here by Aniko Illenyi... Beautiful!

  

The Wild Swans at Coole

By William Butler Yeats

 

1.The trees are in their autumn beauty,   

The woodland paths are dry,

Under the October twilight the water   

Mirrors a still sky;

Upon the brimming water among the stones   

Are nine-and-fifty swans.

--- --- ---

5. But now they drift on the still water,   

Mysterious, beautiful;   

Among what rushes will they build,

By what lake's edge or pool

Delight men's eyes when I awake some day   

To find they have flown away?

 

 
  

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia)
 

 

 

Apologies....


My town is ablaze....

       

Come ... !

Revel in God's palate and the extraordinary extravaganza of riotous colours!

Feast your eyes on the abundance of gold and yellow, the russet, the radiant red and crimson, the glowing brown and cinnamon, the rich purple and magenta, the muted, drowsy greens ....

"The falling leaves drift by the window
The autumn leaves of red and gold ..."
                                 - Nat King Cole

 

 
 
Signing off for now....
C.S
 
 

An Autumn Walk with E & J

“An early-morning walk is a blessing for the whole day.”
                                                                                     - Henry David Thoreau 

 

7.03a.m. Saturday morning.

The "children" have long been wanting to take me on "their" walking-route .... and finally we made it! 

We left the house and crossed the main highway - NO traffic at all at that hour - and crossed to the villages on the other side... we went past a beautiful lake with a host of seagulls peacefully bobbing on the surface - I am sure they were sleeping! 

There were delightful farmyards dotting the countryside - smelling pleasantly of newly threshed hay ..... but alas, NOT so pleasantly of other things ...haha...(like manure and so on!) 

It is so quiet and tranquil in the villages, a cat silently stalking whatever it happens to see in the undergrowth, a few deer lazily raising their heads to look at us and then continuing to munch on their breakfast , the early morning crows, a falcon swooping and soaring inaudibly - and us talking in low tones and the crunch of pebbles under our feet on the dirt-road. The cool morning sun threw long shadows as we walked lighting up the Bluebells of Sweden (not Scotland!) on the side of the road...

 

 
 
 
The migratory Canadian geese of course made a raucous, bursting into the serenity, honking as they flew overhead in their distinctive V-formation heading towards the warmth...... (smart birds!).
 
 

We went past a beautiful dam by a mansion house from the turn of the last century. The frothy gushing waters was a lovely sight. We know only too well that in four months time it will all freeze - that is beautiful too, "frozen motion" - but as of now, we enjoyed its 'vue et la son' as it was.

 

The fields were, in parts a lovely autumnal green and in parts an earthy russet gold. There was a sudden whirr of many tiny wings as we passed and a host of small birds flew out of the wheat - disturbed by the sound of human steps.

 
There were many fields of late potatoes still "un-harvested" and E wanted some fresh potatoes for breakfast!!! So we let her.... (not to worry, we know the farmer! And also taking nine potatoes from his thousands of acres and many many tons of potatoes I doubt if he would even notice....). E and J "washed" them (and their hands) in the early morning dew and they were clean enough to put in my jacket pocket!
 
 
 
 
 
The forest path was so quiet and serene .... just us and the many forest denizens.... frogs, deer, pheasants, wild boar, grass snakes and I am sure a whole lot of others that we didn't see... foxes, elks and so on. We came upon a clearing and there by a huge farmhouse was a pasture with two friendly horses who did not mind being fed with fresh grass and patted on their noses. We have named them Tina & Ike (after Tina Turner - as the mane looks similar to Tina's - and her ex husband, Ike Turner).
 
 
 
There were mushrooms everywhere but as we have not been on a Mushroom Picking Course (that is held every autumn in every town in Sweden), we did not pick any.... there is barely anything more dangerous than picking the wrong mushroom! The raspberry season is now over but there is an abundance of wild apples. In a few weeks they will ripen and glow reddish-orange and will be really sweet - but right now - E & J tasted them - they were sour and tangy ...but oh, they smelt heavenly!
 
 
 “Walk as if you are kissing the Earth with your feet.”  Thích Nhát Hanh 
We had walked 7 kilometres in a semi circle in the warm sunshine and headed home - this time we didn't have to cross the highway but went in the walking/cycling tunnel underneath it.

 

  

Once home, we boiled our potatoes and enjoyed the mini-dish with a knob of butter, some freshly plucked thyme from the herb-pots on my steps, a slice of ham and a mug of hot chai. It was a glorious breakfast to celebrate a glorious morning.

 "I thank God for this most amazing day, for the leaping ,spirits of trees and the blue dream of sky and for everything which is natural, which is infinite, which is Yes."      - e.e.cummings

Signing off for now.
C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/ May (my) knowledge grow)


Siberian Cranes

 
On Saturday, 7th Sept 2013, we drove to a town called Mariestad, approx 40 kms from here....
And there! On the fields right by the highway were these Siberian Cranes....
On their way south....to the sun.
 
C.S!
 
 
 
 

Thoughts of a Sparrow

 
 
 
Signing off for now!

C.S!
 
 

An Autumn Walk

Yes, autumn is certainly on its way....

I love the splendid array of colours in nature - it is breathtaking....the leaves have not yet started turning into all shades of orange and gold but there is certainly a nip in the air - that is the first sign of autumn....

Fragments of lines from Keats' Ode to Autumn run through my mind as I walk -savouring in the autumnal air, the pungent smells, the sights... yes, indeed, Keats was right: 'conspiring with the sun to load and bless'... how apt....

"Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness,

Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun,

Conspiring with him how to load and bless...." (Ode to Autumn, Keats)

As I walk in the early morning (around 6.40) ... the mist has just lifted and the air is filled with the smell of wild apples and wood burning... the dew wets my shoes... I can hear the deer bark and if I am lucky I can see them on the fringe of the forest - it is a magical time of the day.

 

Autumn is very different from spring and summer but I love the changing of the seasons that I am blessed with here in Sweden...Autumn brings with it a sense of "slowing down" after the short hectic summer....

"Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they?

Think not of them, thou hast thy music too...."  (Ode to Autumn, Keats)

 

Two weeks ago I was delighted to find wild raspberries growing along my path... they are tiny and juicy and so sweet as to need a glass of water afterwards! So of course I helped myself to a first breakfast during my walk...

Sweden has a law called The Right to Common Access.....

 

(From the Internet:                                                                                                                        

Common Access: "the Right of Common Access" - in Swedish: "Allemansrätten")                     

Allemansrätten states that we can: move around freely in forest and field; pick berries, mushrooms and unprotected flowers; camp one night without permission from landowner, not, however, too close to a populated area; bathe, row, sail, paddle and drive motorboats on the lakes and rivers and archipelagos; light a fire but only in certain prepared places. In windy or very dry weather the lighting of fires is absolutely forbidden, everywhere.

It also states that we can NOT: damage growing trees or bushes; walk over fields in crop or through newly planted forest areas; take birds’ eggs or birds’ nests.)

 

...and I took some home for Elizabeth for her morning yoghurt... it was abs delicious!!!

 

I also had the pleasure of making acquaintance with two tiny grey-brown frogs that hopped hurriedly across my path...

The wild snapdragon-like flowers (I don't know their name unfortunately) were in full bloom and last of the lazy bumble bees were having their breakfast too....!

 

 

And ohhhhh..... the beautiful snails were in plentiful

.....and when the sun caught the leaves you could see their trail of silver ......like glitter-glue.

 

 
 

Parts of the forest also has wild rose-hip...they are beautiful to look at...In the spring and summer they have deep pink-magenta flowers which is rather astonishing as the fruits (the rosehip) is a deep orange - in keeping with the autumnal colours! I love both rosehip tea and rosehip sauce...and it is super high on vitamins A and C I am told....

 
Here are just a few more pictures.....
 
 

Signing off for now!

C.S! (Cresat Scientia/ May (my) knowledge grow)

 
 

Swan Lake Re-visited

 
Just a quick look at my Swan Family.
Yesterday we were driving home at dusk and I saw "MY" swan family in teh pond again..I have barely seen them all summer and Ohhhh Myyyyy Goooodness...how they have grown!
Have a look look-see!!
 
 

Signing off for now
 
CS!
 

The Market Square

Our neighbouring town ....yes... the same one where we always go....has a beautiful Square. It is said to be Scandinavia's largest town square. In the very centre of this large beautiful square is a hunting lodge from the early 1600s. It belonged to the local count - Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie. Well, it has the most fascinating architecture and looks nothing like what the words "hunting lodge" conjures up in my mind! Have a look...

 (I have taken this photo from the Internet)

Well it isn't really the hunting lodge I was going to write about... but the town square - own centre and surrounded by all the main buildings... shops, hotels, restaurants, cafés, the library, pharmacy, post office and so on...

On Wednesdays and Saturdays the town square metamorphoses into a wonderful bustling colourful Farmer's Market...and is called the Market Day. This is a common feature in Europe (not just Sweden). Its a lovely meeting place...and the sights and sounds and smells are just marvellous! What a profusion of colours!!

And being there on warm sunny days it is a pure and simple joy to enthral the most disconsolate of hearts.

Enjoy the pictures!

 
 
 
 
 

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/ May (my) knowledge grow/Må (min) kunskap(en) växa)


The Egg Van

Nope...I don't particularly enjoy shopping- (unless it is a book shop or  even better - a SHOE shop of course!). But a lot of exciting things happen en route to the shops and that is such a treat for the soul...

This time it is not about The Swan Family (they are happily swimming about I am glad to say...I just saw them today)..but today it is about our Egg Van!

 
I have seen this van parked in the same spot a couple of times in the past 2 summers on our drives to the neighbouring town. In fact it is quite close to the "SwanLake". I never paid any attention... until this summer.... ! I think I must have taken the blue van to be forest workers or a farmer. My visits to the neighbouring town is as erratic as the van standing there and I never really thought much more about it...

Three weeks ago I actually "saw" the yellow sign saying: The Egg Van. We stopped and would you believe it??

In the middle of nowhere...

out in the country side...

on a small dirt-road...

there is this blue van!

It has a fridge mounted at the back. The door to the van is always left open. You just open the fridge and take as many cartons of eggs you want, close the fridge, put the money in a little box just by the fridge and then leave.... it is as simple as that!! And it is as amazing as that!

There is no one to check ... there are no houses nearby...there are no CCTV's....

 
(THE TINY METAL BOX FOR THE MONEY)

No one pinches the money nor steals the eggs. And there are lots of people driving on that country lane since there are small villages and farmhouses all around. Well, of course, I do not know for sure whether there are any "thefts" or not....but simple logic says that the "egg-farmer" would not be leaving his van there if the money in the little metal box did not tally with the number of cartons gone. 

The farmhouse is further down that little dirt-track. The farmer owns fields where he grows wheat/corn and he also has a number of hens and chickens. They are of course free range... and there definitely is a difference in size, colour and most importantly- taste!

 


Now a days we stop by the blue van as often as we can and buy our farm eggs. Our omelettes and boiled-eggs-on-toast now are simply delicious! I always scratch a "Thank you" on the ground and make sure we return the empty carton. It is a tiny speck in the huge spectra of recycling... and I am very happy for my palatable breakfasts!
 
Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/ May (my) knowledge grow/Må (min) kunskap(en) växa)

 

 


Cygnet's Dance from The Swan Lake.... ENJOY!


A Meeting With SAI

 

 +39.6ºC.

Hyderabad (in southern India) was scorching. The dry heat (RH is barely 28%) is the only thing that makes it ever so slightly bearable... had it been a coastal town I would have re-booked my tickets or just stayed indoors 24/7. However, the evenings turn relatively pleasant here  - remember, I said, relatively....which means that the temps come down to a less-scorching 34ºC or so... The pollution in the old city area is appalling. Albeit that, I like my forays into the milling, bustling, teeming street life that opens up in the glaring naked bulbs of the myriad shops noisily hugging street after street....spilling out on to the pavements. Its my own gratis Son et lumière show - a treat for the senses!

 

Parvez(our driver) and I went to Abids- a shopping area in the OldCity to do some shopping. The pollution...hmmm.... literally took my breath away :-/ But there were other 'treats' awaiting that far out weighed the momentary discomfort of rickety buses and auto rickshaws belching out diesel fumes - the unfortunate bane of urban India.

 

F.D Khan  - my favourite cloth shop - has a collection of cloths that anyone can just dream of. I of course immediately bought a beautiful piece. What is it that Oscar Wilde has so sensibly put? "The only way to be rid of a temptation is to fall for it"... How right he was. And keeping that in mind I bought that beautiful piece that would put a male peacock in dance-mode to shame.  It is, what my American friends would call: AWESOME! Yes, there were some other pretty awesome bales of cloths but I have a personal rule about falling for just ONE temptation a day :-) and so, my daily quota was up!

 

As is the tradition for Parvez and I - we always stop to have coconut water on our way back home. It is my all time favourite drink. It has just the right balance of sweet and salt, it is always cool no matter how hot it is outside, it is readily available in every street-road-alley corner in India, it is high on minerals and low on fat and carbohydrates  - and the best of all - it comes in its own sterile packaging. What more could one wish for?

 

I have learnt a lot about coconut water from Parvez.... where the best ones come from (Bangalore) and why (because of the soil and the temperate climate) and thereby most expensive but also having the most water in them... they cost a "whopping" INR 20.00 each (25 pence) as compared to the ten rupee coconuts. I have also learnt where they get the coconuts from (Rythuu-mandi which is Telegu- the local language- for Farmers market) and how much profit they make per day - it isn't really too bad as far as daily earnings go... but the discomfort of standing all day in the hot tropical sun is a tough working environment indeed... if they are lucky they might find a spot under the shade of a tree.... and the top luxury is to have a plastic chair to sit on...

 

One usually finds the coconut-wallahs (street-vendors) under the shade of a tree with a mound of coconuts on his cart or on the ground. Its a simple business and does not require any paraphernalia... We stopped by the coconut-wallah near the local hospital there was a tiny face with sparkling eyes and teeth looking at me and smiling from under the cart!

 

He said: Amandee! (Hello in Telegu).

 

And that was how I met Sai...!

 

Sai is a charming young fellow! It was a pleasure talking to him.

 

He asked me how many coconuts I wanted. I saw his father behind him and told him I would like two please.

But, to my astonishment, this young boy jumped up and replied he would get them for me. His father smiled benignly...

Sai could certainly wield the heavy snarling sickle-knife with great dexterity... this was clearly not the first time he was doing this!  He served it to me with a flourish and a grin on his face that seemed to say:

Oh ye of little faith! See! I could fix it, couldn't I?

 

 We conversed while I sipped the cool liquid that trickled down and soothed my parched throat. Sai is 12 years old. He studies in the VIII standard. And he goes to the small local school everyday except Sundays... what was most amazing was, that his school hours were 9 am to 8pm. I had no idea. It included everything... lunch, snacks, studies, exams, cricket games, playing in the courtyard - and homework for the next day! But he came every night to help his father before bed-time!

He spoke good enough English. I asked him what his favourite subjects were and pat came the reply:

Social studies: that included Geography, History and Civics! After a split second he said with a broad grin:

No...actually the best subject is Cricket! :-)

Boys will be boys!

He told me about his friends... he told me about the innings he had made...he told me about the bigger boys who were stronger and faster... he told me about how he had caught the ball once and the other team was out!... he told me how good he was at "spinning the ball"...he spoke animatedly in cricket-speak that I have long since forgotten... arm ball/spin off/hat trick/LBW/innings...and so on. He jolted memories and sent me spinning 45 years back in time when these words too came naturally to me... when running out into the field, or the cantonment park or the street outside the house meant a few hours of cricket-fun with friends before it was time for home work... I went reeling back all those years as I saw myself in his eyes... it was a run down memory lane - cricket bat, ball, shin pads and stumps in hand.

 

I remember seeing a cricket cartoon from the July 1920 issue of Punch:

 

Young Cricketer. "Yes, I cocked one off the splice in the gully and the blighter gathered it."
Father. "Yes, but how did you get out? Were you caught, stumped, bowled, or what?"

I smiled into the warm night in misty nostalgic remembrance....

And what did he want to be when he grew up? He didn't really know he said. Maybe a cricketer! Then he changed his mind and said that would not be possible... so he would settle for being a police.

 

And then he thought for a while again and said... Nooo, actually what he really wanted to be was to be a teacher in Social studies. He would like to go to the nearby villages and teach them Geography. He would tell them of all the beautiful places there were in the world (=Itna sab sundar sundar jagha hai, he explained in Hindi)...of maps and capitals and rivers and mountains and villages and towns and the people and transportation and clouds and lakes ... and then he would teach them Civics - our duties as a citizen, the government and politics.

 

There was so much compassion in his voice.

There was Will. There was Hope. There was Determination. There was Idealism.

 

In young voices like his resides the future of India. From humble beginnings to wanting to teach others to be better - not to hunger just for monetary gains and riches. Education is the key to many of our problems that fester and corrode the very structure of our society - any society.

 

That evening, leaning against the car, sipping cool coconut water in the dark hot tropical night, I found Hope. Maybe a lot will change in young Sai's life - maybe he won't be able to realise his dreams and ambitions. I don't know. I may never meet him again. I can but hope and pray that Sai and other young people like Sai in India and elsewhere will be able to lead a rich and fulfilling life - educating others and getting educated themselves in the process. Of having their dreams come true.

 

(I met him once more before I left India)

 

I wished my coconut water would have lasted even longer...He smiled and waved as he carted away the old coconuts on his trolley - and disappeared into the velvety night in the bustling alley by our flat....

 

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/ May knowledge grow/Må kunskapen växa)

 

 
 
 
 
 

My Very Own "Lebedinoye ozero" - Swan Lake

 
Yes! This certainly is "MY" SwanLake... and I hope Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky won't mind....  :-)
 
 
 
On the way to our neighbouring town (where we go weekly, mainly for shopping or to the town square for the open air market held there twice a week or sometimes just to a cafeteria...) there is a pond. It is quite a "new" pond... and it is a beautiful pond. Just about 5-6 years ago there was only a stream running through the field. There were marshy lands around the stream and beautiful reeds and tall grasses surrounding it. There was an abundance of dragonflies and damselflies flitting about and their shimmering wings on sunny days were like pieces of prisms hanging in midair... there were plenty of other insects as well... lacewings, various moths and other insects that I do not know the names of. I am sure there were (are) numerous fishes, frogs, salamanders...and so on in the stream. It was teeming with life...

 

The stone bridge across the stream is so beautiful. A work of art in its own right... Most of these stone bridges in Sweden are from 1600-something.

(Notice the pheasant in the background...)

Who built these beautiful small bridges? They conjure up images of life in the 17th century. Families crossing on carts, wives bringing food to the men during harvesting season, young children playing and throwing stones, cows coming home lowing in the sunset, geese squawking in seemingly constant trepidation, hunters returning in the late evenings and tired farmers trudging home to the pale candlelight coming from the cottage in the gathering dusk... And this link to the past is more than just a stone bridge in the middle of a field...

A few years ago we found that the marshy area was getting filled with water...The local farmer had slowly let it "happen naturally" over the years creating an amazing ecological balance and just look at it now! It is replete with fish-insect-and bird-life. On the other side there is a picnic table and one may cut across his field to have a picnic and enjoy the tranquillity of this rural boon.

 

A month or so ago we were on our way to shop in the neighbouring town and we saw a lone swan on a slab of stone. The most common swans in Sweden are the Mute Swans.He was a very proud young man and simply refused to look into my camera - we tried all the tricks like banging the car door and making squawking noises but he was certainly made of sterner stuff - he kept his head turned away from the paparazzi no matter how hard I tried to catch his attention. It was a male swan. (They are called cob, from Middle English cobbewhich means leader of a group). Well...little did I know that he was a soon-Daddy-to-be Swan keeping vigil...

 

 

I found that out two weeks later when we were returning from our shopping spree - I just saw a flash of white among the reeds. We turned the car around and headed back to see what it was that I had seen...and there she was!! A Mummy Swan (they are called pens). And she was breeding her eggs, nicely hidden away in the reeds. I took many photos of Mrs. Swan placidly sitting unperturbed on her nest. Mr. Swan was swimming close by quietly and stoically keeping watch. I wish I knew how many eggs she was hatching! Oh what joy!! Soon there would be a few cute fluffy little things to look at on the pond!!!

 

(We just call them Mr & Mrs Swan. Swans mate for life spend their lives together - how many years had they been 'married'? How had they met? How did they decide to get together?)

 

I was delighted to see Mr & Mrs Swan again... the pond was so beautiful with the sky reflecting blue and the reeds making such pretty patterns...there were a few gulls making a raucous and ducks swimming around. They made us all laugh by diving into the water, doing "somersaults" with their backside wriggling in the air!

 And then on Wednesday two weeks later we went shopping again...past the same fields, the same pond, the same bridge, and of course, Mr and Mrs Swan - and lo and behold!

THE LITTLE SWANLINGS had come!!!!! (or cygnets as they are actually called) ....Wowwwwww...eight fluffy grey wonders to cheer me up on my drive....going shopping now is suddenly such unadulterated pleasure.

AND...here of course are a few "family photos" of Mr & Mrs Swan and their eight cygnets......

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/ May knowledge grow/Må kunskapen växa)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


My Veggie Day in New Delhi

 

Today I ditched fancy-nancy Khan Market. I went instead to the tiny “un-glamorous” vegetable shop behind the house thru a picturesque gully on to a road with life tumbling out of every corner… entrepreneurship and one-man/family businesses to shame any European country… The gully (alley) is teeming with life. People live there in tiny brick-cement houses painted in garish greens and loud blues with paint spilling over on to the ground in great gashes. Fairy lights adorn the walls that I am sure blink in various hues when darkness falls.  

A few little girls of 5 or 6 years play in the front between the “houses” in the gully. They have a worn skipping rope and seem to have loads of fun with it, jumping in and hopping out with squeals of delight - or sighs as they get caught in the twirling rope.

Good Moooornning Aunty they cry in unison when they see me coming.

Good morning girls! I say. Have you been to school today?

Yes Aunty they say again in unison.

Very good girls, I say. Have you done your homework?

No Aunty, all of them in same high pitched voices.

Ok I say, play for a bit now but then do your home work Ok?

Yes Aunty ok! A

nd I say Bye now!

And they all say Byeeee Aunty and wave.

I go on walking with a smile on my lips and their voices ringing in my ears. 

The dhobi walla (washerman) in the corner is busy washing clothes, thrashing them nearly threadbare on a slab of stone…dare any germ stay alive after that vicious beating? A young boy with a cycle cart peels oranges. He has an ancient “juicer” with a hand crank which I am sure is a legacy from the British Raj. As he peels the oranges for fresh juice and waits for his customers he hums a tune to himself. I am sure it’s from the latest Bollywood SRK-film. (Shah Rukh Khan is known as SRK in India). The warm sunny tranquil morning is filled with the tangy smell of oranges and my mouth involuntarily starts to water… 

Then I meet Sushila.

She is sitting on a very low rough wooden stool wearing a lovely bright blue sari embroidered with gold, her back to the sun, her face shielded from the rays. She has a charpoy (the traditional rope bed woven on four wooden legs) by her side. A moss-green satin cloth covers it and on top of it is strewn wheat. Golden dusky yellow wheat. The explosion of colours takes my breath away.

I stop and smile at her. I ask her what she is doing. She has got a whole sack of wheat delivered to her, she says. She spreads them on the charpoy to “kill the germs” in the warm sunshine. She takes a handful at a time on a stainless steel plate and cleans them – sorting sorting sorting with great dexterity. She throws away the tiny stones that I can barely see, that get in the wheat when threshed. When she has cleaned it, it is re-packed and sent away “somewhere” (she didn’t know where) to be ground into flour, put in packets and sold in the shops.

I told her I had never seen this. And she said You don’t live in Hindusthan (India). How will you see such things? I have not seen anything of your outside-country (bahar ka desh/foreign country).We talked amiably and laughed. Where are you going, she asked me? I said I was going to buy some vegetables in the shop on the road. Yes he is good she said. We parted. 

In the “compound” next to her, under shady trees and a lovely clean courtyard are two young women sitting on their haunches. They are sisters-in-law.

They have a similar charpoy of wheat warming in the sun but they are sitting and sorting methi and coriander leaves talking in low tones and laughing.

I greet them and they tell me what they are doing, how to preserve the herbs, how long it will last and so on. We talk a bit. They laugh (very kindly) at my coriander-ignorance and astonishment. How can an Indian woman NOT know about such things, I am sure they are musing. We part company. 

I went past the barber in the corner waiting for customers, the gruesome tools of his trade neatly put on a rickety ledge on the wall, a plywood chair cushioned in white plastic. A pock marked mirror that has surely seen better days hangs lopsided on a rusty nail on the wall. He half smiled in greeting, a bit unsure.

By the vegetable shop is a husband-and-wife team. They were making daal (lentil soup), cabbage and rice. Later she will also make fried noodles. There will be quite a crowd in this street-side restaurant in a couple of hours. I have seen it. It smells tantalizingly good…How I wish I could taste...I would love to… but with a clinically squeaky-clean Swedish stomach this would be disastrous. Alas…

The vegetable shop owner greeted me with familiarity. I have been there thrice before… so he knows me.

Good Morning Memsahab! Good morning I say… What do you need today Memsahab? He gives me a cane tray so I may choose my veggies from his racks. I really don’t have that much to buy today but I take 500gm onions, 500 gms tomatoes, a packet of mushrooms, a small head of cauliflower, a papaya (approx 950 gms) and say Thank you, that’s all for today. And he counts…it is easy maths as they are all Rs10/ kg or Rs 20/kg and so on (even I could do it) …The grand total comes to INR 88.00 He puts in (for FREE!!) a few bundles of coriander leaves and a huge handful of chillies. I protest saying I don’t eat chillies, no point giving me chillies! He lessens the amount to half and says, Take a little bit with you memsahab! It will make your daal taste very good. I say, Oh, ok then….thank you!

I pop in at his neighbours’ – Darshan Store. It is a mini store with mega things. Every inch of his shelves are crammed with the most astonishing things. I buy, on an impulse Haldiram’s Khatta Meetha snacks, a small packet for INR 10.00 for my afternoon tea and a loaf of Britannia bread.

On my way back the barber has a customer in the chair and one waiting on the dusty ground. He is busy shaving his customer with a dreadful looking scalpel… I shudder, glad to be a woman.

Sushila sees me coming and smiles a beautiful smile of pearly white teeth.

So what did you buy? Did you get all you needed?

Yes I said, I did! I bought onions and cauliflower and tomatoes! Shall I get you a chair, do you want to sit in the sun? I have a “proper chair” inside. You dont have to sit on a low stool.

I felt a lump in my throat… I would have loved to sit there and talk to this kind young woman laboriously happily working with minute particles of stones in the comfortable sun. But I told her I had to go as my Uncle would get worried if I didn’t come home on time (which was the absolute truth) and how will lunch get ready, Sushila, if all the onions are in my bag here? We laughed. I said Bye and that she should remain safe and happy. I would see her again in 3 months I said. You come anytime. I am right here, she said.

It was like a blessing. 

Next time I buy a gaily coloured packet of rye flour (atta) in the super market I will think of Sushila in a bright blue sari who kindly and painstakingly cleaned it, sitting in the delightful winter sun in an old forgotten alley in Delhi, laughing and talking. Sharing her life with me...

Today I got more than just a string bag full of vegetables. 

I got blessed.

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/ May knowledge grow/Må kunskapen växa)

 


OH DEER! (…and I say that with a warm smile)


According to our meteorologists this last winter has been the coldest and most severe since 1947. Days and days of darkness, heavy snowfall,  dangerous roads like icy black ribbons snaked its way in the white landscape, bitter cold temperatures, icicles from roofs - and no signs of intermittent thaw to let up the dismal gloom of a long hard winter. It is with a smile of reminiscence that I, today, write of this – as today is undoubtedly the hottest day of our long awaited summer with temperatures around +30°C. It is a strange phenomenon of the mind that remembers the good times even in the midst of disconsolation – be it personal, global or indeed meteorological!

Oh dear deer, I digress – as always.

It isn’t meteorology I want to write about here but rather - Deer! The Scandinavian winter is indeed like a Christmas card or a picture postcard but not all living creatures appreciate its foudroyant beauty.

Three of them were Harriet and her two kids Herbert and Hilda.

They were foraging for food. The permafrost and knee-deep snow made it almost impossible for them to find anything to eat. The earth was too hard with ice to enable them to dig with their hooves to find last year’s grass and shoots. Newspapers wrote of starving birds and animals that no longer could fend for themselves in the inhospitable climate and wildlife researchers were speculating on the decrease in various animal species due to the uncommon cold. Hunters and wildlife enthusiasts and many many people made sure there was “food” in certain feeding areas in forests and gardens. Birdseeds, lard, hay, corn, carrots, potatoes, apples and so on…..

I found Harriet, Herbert and Hilda one late evening under the birdhouse - busy eating the shells (or as it is correctly called – the hulls) of the sunflower seeds that were on the ground.


SUNFLOWEWR SEEDS (picture from the Internet)

(Birds have the most dreadful table manners! Once they have eaten (dehulled) the kernel they just drop the hulls all over the place. No matter how often I chided them for this from the window, like recalcitrant children, they never listened!) But of course that proved to be a boon for my trio - Harriet and Herbert and Hilma!

Yes they are my dear deer. European Roe Deer to be absolutely correct and Carl von Linné (1700s, Swedish botanist, physician adn zoologist who laid the foundations for the modern scheme of binominal nomenclature) gave them the grand name of Capreolus capreolus. It is however interesting to note how it got its English name. According to etymologists it could have be derived from raha (O.E) or ra (Old Norse) or reh (German) or even further back rei (proto-Indo-European, meaning streaked or spotted). In Sweden they are called Rådjur (directly translated - roe-animal). They are said to be native to Britain, having been present since before the Mesolithic period (6000 to 10000 years b.p !!!) and have been close to extinct in the 1800s! (Perish the thought! Can you imagine a world without Salten’s Bambi??) Fortunately they are in abundance now and in Sweden alone there are about a million roe deer.

On the day I found all three under our birch tree outside Elizabeth’s window I had no camera close by. Any slight movement to go fetch one would mean that all three would bolt in fright to our birch-pine forest just across the road. So I waited… I would get the opportunity – one day. And then I would be ready! And sure enough, a few says later WHO do I see in the garden? Yes, Harriet!
(They are solitary animals once the fawns are old enough to fend for themselves)


HARRIET IN THE GARDEN!









Roe deer are supposed to be active mostly in the twilight hours/dawn/dusk but I think, in the cold dark winters they mistake midday for dusk. Such is the paucity of light during the winter in the Scandinavian countries! They change colours from reddish brown in the summer to a dull grey brown in the winter and a “rump patch” of bright white – thus in the wintry forests here they are aptly camouflaged!



On my daily forest walks I have heard them barking and if I stand still for a few minutes, I see something rustle in the foliage and a graceful head lifts up from the constant hunt for shrubs, berries, grass and tender shoots to “size me up”. Then I am thankfully given a silent certificate stamped Not A Threat, valid for the rest of my walk while it resumes its constant grazing…. Sometimes in the early summer I have been lucky to see a fawn hidden in the long grass, its ears just barely discernable. The white rump patch with the tail up flashes as a warning signal during eminent danger and can be clearly seen. It never ceases to amaze me how Mom Nature has provided and taken care of all its living creatures.

This winter I put out food for Harriet and her two kids twice a night – once at 8 pm and once before bedtime, 11 pm-ish. Every week our shopping list would have “Roe Deer Food” on it. That meant apples, carrots and potatoes that we bought in 2-3 kilo packs. Leftover overripe pears, a few grapes, cabbage stock and leaves were also part of the fare.

Silently, they would come from the forest across the road, lithely jump over the ditch, gracefully leap over the masses of snow and into the garden knowing that there would be food on the ground (or more rightly on the snow.) And every night it was a moment of complete peace and harmony, an enormous sense of gratification to stand by the window and watch them eat. Harriet would munch away. Hilda would join in after a while, sometimes she would miss out unfortunately because she was too late!


 

SWEET GRACEFUL HILDA







And Herbert would trustingly look up and see me at the window as if to say: Ah, the meal was abs deli, Missus! And for me, that was Thank You enough.


HERBERT


(When the male's antlers begin to regrow, they are covered in a thin
layer of velvet-like fur which disappears later) 




Once the meal was over they would saunter away into the back garden or to the front of the house past the sun-deck, past my Volvo in search of more food or sunflower seed shells.


HILDA WALKING PAST THE SUN-DECK - TAKEN FROM MY KITCHEN WINDOW


HILDA GOING PAST MY VOLVO!!

Sometimes the sweeping headlights of a car or something else beyond the grasp of the human ear or sight would startle them and they would bound sure-footed, in a flash to the safety of the forest.

After many days of feeding them I was finally “rewarded” – for the first time there were deer spilling in the garden on the snow! That was a clue that they were not starving any longer. They would make it through the winter!


CRISS CROSSING TRACKS IN THE GARDEN




DEER HOOVES AND SPILLING

And then spring came, slowly, hesitantly, almost reluctantly… but Spring nevertheless with its aeonian promise of
Rebirth
    Renewal
        Rejuvenation...

For a few days I still kept giving them food. But one day they stopped coming. There was enough in the forest, nearby grasslands and woodlands to sustain them.

Antler-duels were waiting to be fought…
Warm resting places were waiting to be discovered...
Fresh tender grass were waiting to be munched…
And
Little fawns were waiting to be born…

Photo by Jan Bo Kristensen, Denmark, May 2006 - FROM THE INTERNET

Signing off for now.

C.S!
(Cresat Scientia/ May knowledge grow/Må kunskapen växa)

(It was rather difficult to take night photos through the window with the aid of just one street light nearby hence the poor quality of the photos... I cannot take photos with the flash either as it will frighten them)


A Musical at 6.20 a.m



Saturday. First it was the alarm clock at 6 a.m. I slammed it down (hard!) and then twenty mins later piik piiiik piiik … A sharp persistent almost metallic ‘pik-pik-pik’ sound. On and on and on. I groaned, turned around and snuggled down to sleep but piiiik piik piiiiik…. And then piiiiiiiiik piiiik…. I got up and decided to “investigate” this new sound in my garden just outside the window… armed with my Canon of course, bleary eyed from sleep and barely able to focus. (Thank god for autofocus).

To my amazement it was the same bird I had seen the day before and had been wondering what it was…The New Bird on the Block. I had never seen one before and certainly not in my garden…. Down came my bird book from the book shelf and the search for Blackie started… He looks COOL! Like an undercover FBI agent in black suit, white double breasted shirt and groovy sunglasses…

Agent Seeley Booth move over, here comes Agent Blackie. Yeeeah, piiiik piik piiiik….








Agent Blackie as it turned out is a Pied flycatcher (L: Ficedula hypoleuca/ Swedish: svartvit flugsnappare).

Blackie continued with his high pitched call all thru my morning coffee. Little did I realise I was in the midst of a veritable Musical stage performance that would put Andrew Lloyd Weber to shame… it had all the ingredients necessary for a box office hit. Beautiful and varied settings, perfect lighting, comedy, drama, action, jealousy, fights, social problems, tragedy in true Shakespearean style, enchanting music by the great Maestro himself and of course, a love story…. And I got the best stall tickets for this performance. Front row!

The scene opened with Blackie doing his hysterical wing-flapping piik piiiik piiik call shattering the quiet morning – which, in all fairness, turned into a melodious high-pitched warble when he smartly sailed into the apple tree in the late morning.

(In the coniferous bush)

Blackie’s loud, melodious song is characteristic of oak woods in spring and altho we don’t have any oaks here in our village he was quite content with my apple tree (just in bloom, buzzing with bees, the pink and white flowers that never cease to amaze me) and the coniferous trees. And he flew back and forth from the coniferous trees to the nest box to the apple tree to the charcoal grill to the white garden seat and all the way back again and again and again…piik piik pik

(MY APPLE TREE IN BLOOM)


(Blackie in the nest box)


(Blackie in the apple tree)


(Blackie on the grill)



(Blackie in his daft sunglasses on the white garden chair)

Now here comes the “drama, action, jealousy, fights”-part. Just sitting in the Sun Lounge, camera in hand I learn a lot about the denizens of the Kingdom of Aves as the years roll by and the shifting seasons. Yesterday, I tell you, was no exception.

As you will remember from my blog - Cottage for Rent….it was rented out to Mr and Mrs Blau. We kept seeing Mr Blau going back and forth and we were thrilled that they had returned!


(Mr Blau in the Nest box, guarding...)

And now Blackie turned up one morning and turned the world of Aves upside down in my little corner of the garden with this spectacular Musical-show.

As I watched an entire story slowly came to life.

Mr Blau and Blackie were at loggerheads with one another. I thought they were just cute puffy little things flying about in the beautiful Swedish spring… but oh no! A grim tale of tragedy and territorial jealousy was to unfold right before my eyes and Canon lens.

Blackie would piiiiiik piik piiiiiiiiik and the quiet owlish looking Mr Blau would go to attack protecting his cottage. And for nearly six hours they fought. And then I saw Blackie actually go IN to the Cottage. Oh my goodness I thought! How did he dare? What ever would Mrs Blau have to say about strange men visiting her unannounced? And then the fighting (Mr Blau and Blackie) would start again….and I finally realised that Blackie too was looking for a HOME! And he had found one! In our garden! And HE WANTED IT! And he wanted it badly…!

   

  
(Do you hear the drum rolls? Do you hear the grim eerie music from Jaws?
Mr Blau is keeping a stern eye on the intruder))

I had my morning coffee in my front row seat.

I had my breakfast sandwiches there

I had my mid morning coffee there

I had my lunch of cold meats and olives there….

And I watched – enthralled at the drama unfolding before me.

Blackie has returned to Sweden with his other mates after wintering in Africa. According to what I have read, flycatchers migrate to the Gulf of Guinea (September to April) making stopovers in northern Italy and in Spain! (Smart birds huh? Escaping the Scandinavian winter….) I even had to look up Google Earth to see the exact location of this gulf...it is surrounded by exotic countries like Ghana, Nigeria, Congo Gabon and so on…Imagine! From there to my garden! And now he needed a summer home….that was the entire thing. And unfortunately the house he wanted was “occupied”. Now the “social aspect” of this Musical comes… now I can understand how it is for young students (for example) who move to university towns to study and there is a paucity of housing and no where to live! How one “hunts and fights”.
But I sincerely hope our young students don’t barge into someone’s house scaring the Missus and demanding rooms!!!

  




Well our young Agent Blackie was not about to give up. His forays into the cottage and his subsequent aerial and ground fights with Mr Blau gave me a clear picture of the extent of his liking for Cranberry cottage. Mr Blau jealously guarded his cottage and would fight aggressively at every chance he got. I sat bemused at his strong male instincts and feelings.

To protect and to serve.

It was at once beautiful, absolutely amusing and comical to see two tiny fluffy male birds squabbling quarrelling garrulously fighting for a house! A domain.


And Blackie still didn’t give up…! His high pitched piiik piiiiik piiiiiiiiiik and his beautiful warble, Mr Blau’s rather deeper si si siiii sisi filled the world with beauty. I can understand how Shelley was charmed by the skylark, “Hail to thee, blithe Spirit”….how Beethoven, Vivaldi, Wagner were all inspired by birdsong and have used it in their compositions.

And then the full impact of a tragedy hit me straight between the eyes…

WHERE WAS MRS BLAU?

Mr Blau had not once flown inside/into the nestbox…. Mrs Blau had never come out… I had once heard noises inside the box just a few weeks ago… but where was she? Were their baby birds inside? Why wasn’t Mr Blau bringing food like last year? Why were there no sounds? Why was he just flying there and keeping a cautious vigilant eye on the nest box? I felt a strange sense of sad panic.

In the Interval I rushed in and got my stethoscope and tried to listen from outside the walls but not a sound! WHAT HAS HAPPENED? Has Mrs Blau flown away? Has she fallen prey to a cat? Has she died? Are there eggs inside? Is Mr Blau waiting for her not knowing what uncertain fate has befallen her? WHERE IS SHE?

I still don’t know ….Nature is not to be interfered with. Unless in dire need like giving food to wild animals during harsh winters or water in the hot summers. There are “rules” in Nature that is beyond our comprehension…. It is best left alone….

Like all dramas/plays/stories/sagas/musicals and indeed in life itself there is a sense of tragedy. Grief to be endured, tears to be shed… And yes, just like in the paradox of Life itself - whether it is in the avian world or ours – life has a tendency to go on even after abrupt ends. We the protagonists of our lives are in despair and yet circumstances force us to carry on even after tragic calamities and disasters pounce. Over and over again.

Was (is) the nest box now empty? Is that why Blackie dared to fly in/enter?

His warble had attracted Belinda a beautiful young female flycatcher, pale brown and soft eyes, she is a beauty! The music hits a crescendo.

(The birch tree in the garden)



Answering his persistent mating call she came, sailing thru the gossamer-green birch trees and sat on the branches of the coniferous bush for a long time along with Blackie. Were they discussing the new cottage?


    


Finally she decided to fly into the box for an inspection.

 



Ohhhh…..Would she like the décor? Would she be happy with the wallpaper? Will she settle here with her young’uns? Was the residential area good enough to raise her kids? Was it a safe place? (Yeah, women are kinda funny about such things….) Any way Blackie must have liked what he saw considering all the fights he had to endure…

---------------------

And so the Musical came to an end with a love story of Blackie and Beautiful Belinda…. And like all good musicals (Ask Messrs Benny Anderson, Andrew Lloyd Weber et al.) this had all the ingredients for a box office hit. Tears Laughter Dialogue Music. And…. Love.
A new day will come and we will see where and how this saga will end.

As of now, Hello, Micheal Bublé:

Birds flying high
You know how I feel
Sun in the sky
You know how I feel
Breeze  driftin' on by
You know how I feel
It's a new dawn
It's a new day
It's a new life
For me
And I'm feeling good

 Please click on the link below or copy/paste

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYe6tmrFxbw&feature=related


Signing off for now....
CS

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