Turtle Dove (C) |
When the UK economy decided that extremely high interest
rates and impossible mortgages and rents were the way to go, we had no option
but to move.
We had to leave our beloved garden behind and moved ‘over the border’ into Norfolk. We’re still fairly rural, but we can now hear traffic, and neighbours, which we rarely heard before. I’m not saying it was quiet in the forest – the muntjacs barking, the foxes grumbling, the owls and randy hedgehogs created a cacophony some evenings. But then the harsh night sounds would be sprinkled with the song of the nightingale – as sparkling as the stars of the milky way that would lie like a cloud above us.
Long Tailed Tit (C) |
So here we are in Norfolk, and we have a new environment to
explore. There’s a field next to us and I am sure it will have some stories to
share over the coming months. We are building a pond and filling the bird
feeder which has already been visited by goldfinch and greenfinch (and a family of mice). Our garden is small in comparison to what we
had, but we can make it our own and transform it from a mostly green and brown
blank canvas – a new challenge. We also have ducks who visit and have taken on
the peacock’s mantle of dog teasing.
As well as new wildlife, we have a new Landlord. He and his
father still require access via our house to the field next door and one
afternoon I came out to find my landlord’s father (who is nearly 90) in his
daughter’s car – stuck. He couldn’t get the automatic out of Park to go through
the gates and up to the field. We both tried, and failed, so he decided to go
and ask a neighbour for help. In the meantime, I figured out how to get it
going, and moved it in from the automatic gates that we had to keep pressing
the button for to stop them closing mercilessly on the car. Everyone then
arrived at once, my wife, the neighbour and the driver, so we all had tea and a
good chat in the kitchen. The East Anglians (I was born in London, it’s not my
fault!) discussed local landed gentry and ‘country pursuits’.
My wife drives to Beccles for her work, so it’s not too bad.
I have to drive further to see my mother in Southwold (92 and still going
strong), but my London commute is definitely a little more challenging. But we
are looking forward to our future here, and we need to do more exploring!
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