Friday, December 19, 2025

Christmas song #16

The Christmas pudding arrives from Bettys. It was supposed to get here on Tuesday of next week but the courier proved to be 'hyper-efficient'. DPD , who were uniformly atrocious last year ( and the year before ) seem to have got their act together. FedEx by contrast seem to have lost the plot. They text to say they're on the way then simply don't show up. There again we're always grateful for any driver who makes it to the end of our increasingly pot holed farm track.

This morning hundreds, maybe thousands , of geese heading south. Most birds migrate by following the contours of the coast. The geese seem to follow an internal compass and head in a straight line inland towards Edinburgh. They come over in four huge, sky filling, flocks. I don't think we've seen them do this before. Perhaps it's because the winter ( so far ) has been mild and frost free and they're only now heading somewhere warmer ?


It's the time of the year when the deer form family groups. There's a small group of four in the field outside the courtyard and eleven grazing amongst the straw bales in the field behind. Out here the deer have no natural predators apart from the cars speeding , well above the 50 mph limit , along the main road down towards Anstruther. There's something about having deer as neighbours that says the world remains on an even keel.


On the beach a crow picks up a whelk, flies vertically up to thirty or  so feet then drops it. The bird repeats this over and over until the shell cracks and it can get to the juicy mollusc inside. 


The bird repeats this trick over and over.


High cholesterol seasonal delights now filling the supermarket shelves.


Christmas song #16 from Goteborg. You couldn't get any more Scandinavian if you tried, The girls all seem happy but the boys look as if they're only doing this because it makes their grandmother happy :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uih9HRW_NT8


More Irish humour:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JHpwbVBeG0

Keeping your brain functioning :https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-invincible-brain/202512/5-powerful-ways-to-strengthen-your-brain-for-life

My grandmother lived to 104. Cold was something she ignored. She also refused to buy loo paper and instead cut up the previous days newspaper into small squares. This article explains a lot :https://phys.org/news/2025-12-ancient-hunter-dna-people-years.html

A story from my childhood :https://www.bbc.co.uk/culture/article/20251211-the-heist-to-reclaim-the-ancient-stone-of-destiny

A freebie Christmas tune from that busker guy in London  :https://youtu.be/bYJ6QCqq25M?list=RDFydDhuAYcOI&t=70

Some strategic thinking :https://phillipspobrien.substack.com/p/in-the-world-of-the-strategic-blind



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The geese are not migrating. They are moving from their night time roosts to say time feeding ground.

Take a wee trip inland to RSPB Loch Leven. There is fantastic interpretation of the story of geese.

Lisa in France said...

Crows are such wonderful birds. Actually, birds in general are wonderful. My husband is away in Japan this month, returning next week, so we've been teaching our African Grey to whistle "Jingle Bells" as a welcome-home surprise. She's joined this endeavor with great enthusiasm. I loved the Irish humour, and also the busker.

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari Om
The crows learned that trick by watching the Gulls, who, at some point in fairly recent times, worked out that dropping a closed mussel from a height would break it open. It's a phenomenon that has had papers written about it and seems to be an adaptive behaviour that has arisen in the last <>forty years. Crows have only been mimicking the act even more recently. (It may be longer, of course, be we are talking about the observation of...) YAM xx