It starts
before we even wake—Kookaburras singing to us in our slumbers. A surreal mix of
laughter and gum trees superimposed on sailing dreams that were brought on by
our hulls rocking in the morning ferry wake. Then the cockatoos start screeching
and when our rig starts shaking, “let go of the wind instrument! you! freaking!
bird!” we know that morning has broken.
We live in
the city: strung between pilings in the fast moving, murky current. Part of a
floating community that’s not quite wild and not quite urban but dares not swim,
or fall in, because of the sharks.
Well we’re on
the edge of the city—a few hundred meters from high rises and pavement. Eleven
miles upstream from the ocean. But even here we have new and fantastical
creatures to amuse us. And not just the people. Though the Aussie people…
That’s a future post.
The urban
wildlife here is probably not unlike our wildlife at home. In Vancouver we had a family of racoons living
in our porch overhang, coyotes roaming the neighbourhood, and during mating
season sex-stupid skunks wandered willy-nilly until they found love or were
flattened. And we had squirrels. It always made me laugh how often the tourists
would photograph the squirrels.
Here we are
intrigued when the ibises try to steal lunch from us when we picnic in the
park. And we were awed when the Water Dragons fight the ibises for a bite of
whatever they managed to steal. And we’re captivated by the Brush Turkeys, and
spiders. No, we’re scared of the spiders.
And as the
sun sets the Flying Foxes fill the sky overhead. Improbable in their great size-and
in their bat-ness. Improbable as they take roost in the trees beside the city.
And when we walk—quietly on the paths that line both sides of the river and
wind around the bends to the suburbs—the Brushtail Possums startle me with
their cuteness.
I like the
animals here. I like the way their strange names role off my tongue, conjuring
up childhood songs. I like the way they shift from something that was make
believe and imagined into something real.
2 comments:
oh, that last line is poetry, gracias!
Thank-you!!
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