- Bodo Muche
Transcription
- Bodo Muche
WILLIE’S WAG TALES Willie’s Family by Bodo Muche WILLIE’S WAG TALES Willie’s Family by Bodo Muche This book is dedicated my wife and partner Robyn, without whom it would not have come into existence. Our daughters Carley Walker and Tania Muche were a great help in providing photographs, proofreading and making all along sensible suggestions. A big “Thank you” to them and a big “Thank you” to Willie too for always being there. © Bodo Muche 2010 Introduction The Hare had challenged the Tortoise to a race and the Tortoise won the race. His look-alike wife waited for the Hare at the finish line! All Willies look alike too and we can be found anywhere in Australia and if there were a competition for Australia’s favourite bird, you’d look around and whom would you see and choose? I don’t want to sound presumptuous, but I bet you on your willy-nilly it would have to be a Willie, Willie. “Mount Glenhowden” Queensland Australia Hi, I'm Willie! I want to introduce you to my family. This is my better half. Isn’t she a beautiful Bird? She always wears white spots for jewels on her primary and greater wing coverts. We get on very well. Mind you, we have our disagreements and arguments, but it is ever so nice to make up. Well, the time has come. My Wife and I decided to have a family of our own again. We have not been too successful in the past two years in that setting up family and kid rearing business. One time one of those yellow-eyed Currawongs had come along and ate our children, then a Blue-faced Honeyeater ate our eggs. He punched holes into them and sucked them dry. The same happened to the eggs of Mr. and Mrs. Little Friarbird. We call him Blue-faced Egg-sucker now and hope that he doesn’t spread this mean streak among the other Bluefaced Honeyeaters. The next time a Night Tiger slid up to our nest at night. Fortunately, my wife heard the rustling of her scales and fled with a shriek or otherwise she would have been eaten like the three chicks. So we, or actually I, decided to build a nest at Bodo's studio-workshop. I thought this was a safe place and I was right. Bodo is a sculptor. He is an animal too; but he is not native. He flew in to Australia from a place called Europe, via Africa, and is what they call homo sapiens, or a modern human. Bodo is one of the “owners” of “Mount Glenhowden”, where we live. He models different species of animals and even people and he casts them in bronze in his studio. The foundry work, heating kilns, blazing furnaces, fettling of the bronzes and their finishing is very noisy with lots of huh hah. Firstly my wife and I got used to it and now we like all that commotion. It keeps intruders and unwanted visitors away. Another point in our consideration for our home was that Bodo and his wife Robyn are what one calls "naturalists". They have created over the past thirty years an environment, which we birds, marsupials, reptiles, frogs and insects really like because they like us too. They don’t allow feral cats into their place and Bubi, the German Shepherd dog who lives at “Mount Glenhowden”, makes sure that this law is rigorously upheld, but we don't understand how someone can like snakes or insects! Snakes want to eat us and we eat insects! Get eaten and eat, the way nature works, they say. The Peaceful Doves and a Bar-shouldered Dove were watching as I built the nest over Bodo's workbench. The Missus liked it and why shouldn’t she? I had taken great care. It was the finest nest I ever built. I wove it onto a deer antler, using the best wild cotton, spider webs, soft bark and even some of Bubi’s hair. I was very proud of this nest and my Lady laid three beautiful eggs into it. Mrs. Willie and I incubated the eggs in turns for seven days. Then they hatched! Bodo and Tony, the humans who work in the sculptor’s studio where I built our nest, were casting bronze sculptures on that day and it was a particularly hot day. Mother hovered over the nest to keep the heat from the sun off the just hatched baby chicks and it was I, who kept an eye on the situation. I didn’t like Bodo and Tony fussing over us, because this was not the first time we had kids and we know what we are doing. There is the first hatched holding her head up, you can see that, can't you? She is hungry already! Now we had a great time, catching Lacewings, Termite alates, Robber Flies and many other delicious goodies. Our offspring grew by the hour and everyone was very happy. That is, until Kingi, the King Parrot, came to sticky beak. He just sat there on the lawn mower handle, my perch! Hah, not for long. I told him in no uncertain terms, that this is trespassing and this time I took the law into my own wings. He left in a huff, giving me the evil eye and the lawn mower handle was mine again! He sat on the Ibis sculpture in the sculpture garden instead until Bodo gave him sunflower seeds. Cleanliness is number one for us. All babies appear to pooh more then they eat and our kids were no different. Their pooh fortunately comes in a little bag and we take it away after every meal. We are very careful not to drop the parcel until we are out of the workshop, because Bodo may not like baby birdie poohie on his tools. It was still pretty hot in our nest in the studio foundry, just underneath the roof, so the kids had to hold the heads up and stretch their necks to get rid of their excess body heat. We didn't need to tell them, they KNEW. The chicks grew feathers! I was worried that they would get a fright and bolt from their nest prematurely if someone were to startle them, so I hopped around, pretending to be injured to keep the attention of everyone on me. It worked! I even fooled Bodo and Tony! And now the nest was getting too small for our three cuties. The Brown Honeyeater came to see for himself and he agreed. Next morning all three children departed and found different hiding places. They soon got hungry, chirped and there they were, one on an old ice cream container, the other one underneath some unfinished sculptures and number three next to a rubber floor mat. Eight days had passed since they crawled out of their eggs and they just couldn't wait to fly and be on their own. Kingi came again but was very civil this time and congratulated us for having such a fine brood. He brought Queenie along and they both got stuck into sunflower seed tucker as usual. Our fledgeling chicks became more and more adventurous and hopped about outside Bodo’s studio for the very first time. They were mottled in their appearance and fitted well into the surroundings. One could hardly see them against the rocks of my water fountain, they were so well camouflaged. And then, on this special day when our children were taking their first steps out into the world, a good luck charm appeared... ...two Rainbow Birds came to wish them well. They sat on the fence... And then a rainbow appeared. Our littlies had fluttered and scrambled up a Bottlebrush bush to see this for the first time in their lives and there they spent the night away from the nest. Dusk started, the sun was setting, turning the firmament into an array of beautiful colours. The moon rose and was still there at dawn. Above soared the Bold Eagle, too early for the Torresian Crows to chase him, too early for the Magpies to chase the Crows, too early for the Peewees to chase the Magpies and too early for me too, to chase the Peewees. In the following days we showed our children around our neighborhood. We went everywhere, even to the creek nearby. On the creek bank we found the Brush Turkey on his huge leafy compost nest. His nest is really an egg incubator and he had just checked the temperature by pushing his head into the compost. You can see his second eyelid covering his eye for extra protection. We showed our children some Brown and Green Tree Frogs and the caterpillar of the Tailed Emperor, the eagle of Australia's butterflies. The Happy Family was having a bath and a huddle in the puddle, then a peep into the window at Bodo’s studio. Our babies were nearly as big as us now. They enjoyed life so much, exploring, meeting other birds and eventually catching insects and eating them too. The Black Beans came into flower and nectar eaters were in abundance. Leatherheads, Little Friarbirds, Brown Honeyeaters, Blue-faced Honeyeaters, Micky Birds, Blueies and Greenies all dipped bills into the delicious nectar the Black Beans provided. Now the Aloes started to flower and I expected another visitor would arrive soon. There he was, Mr. Eastern Spinebill, extracting nectar like a Hummingbird. He’ll stay until the Aloes have stopped flowering. The kids found a knot of Bag Shelter Moth caterpillars. They look so soft and cuddly, but they are not. Don’t touch them, I said, because you might get very itchy. Then they found Spitfire Grubs, but they are not palatable either. And after all that, the kids didn't want to come back with us. We expected this would happen. It had happened before with our other children; it happens each time. In all fairness, we brought them up well and gave them a jolly good education by teaching them everything we know. We were sad and happy for them, we wished them very well and hopefully they'll come back one day and show us our grandchildren. I managed to look through the gauze at the big house and there was Bodo with HIS first grandchild Saxony, feeding Puff, the Alexandria Parrot. Carley and Tania, Robyn’s and Bodo’s daughters were there too, with Elsa, their second grand daughter. Autumn has arrived, leaves fall from the deciduous trees, the days get shorter and a chill is in the air: amphibians and reptiles prepare to hibernate and my wife and I sleep every night in the big Hibiscus after a chat and a song. A cluster of Jewel Bug larvae enjoys the last rays of the sun for the day and a Monarch Butterfly has his sun-downer. You can see me sitting on a Fiddle-leaved Fig leaf next to the Hibiscus. The Hibiscus is right in front of the Jack and Jill where Robyn, Bodo and Bubi sit every evening and chat too. Oh well, next Spring, maybe, we'll do it all over again... ...and so maybe will they. Ciao for now! Willie. It gives me great pleasure to watch and observe what ever lives in nature’s diorama. Robyn and I visit many places on this planet, looking, absorbing, thinking and in the aircraft, flying back home, we always seem to be desperate to see our family and then the conversation perambulates “Mount Glenhowden” and how much we look forward to being amongst “our” animals again. Bodo “Mount Glenhowden” Queensland Australia GLOSSARY OF ANIMALS IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE: WILLIE - WILLIE WAGTAIL - RHIPIDURA LEUCOPHRIS MRS WILLIE - WILLIE WAGTAIL - RHIPIDURA LEUCOPHRIS BODO - HOMO SAPIENS BUBI - GERMAN SHEPHERD DOG - CANIS FAMILIARIS TONY - HOMO SAPIENS LACEWING - CHRYOPIDAE ROBBER FLY - ASILIDAE KINGI - AUSTRALIAN KING PARROT - ALISTERUS SCAPULARIS BROWN HONEYEATER - LICHMERA INDISTINCTA QUEENIE - AUSTRALIAN KING PARROT - ALISTERUS SCAPULARIS RAINBOW BIRDS - RAINBOW BEE EATERS - MEROPS ORNATUS BOLD EAGLE - WEDGE TAILED EAGLE - WEDGIE - AQUILA AUDAX BRUSH TURKEY - ALECTURA LATHAMI BROWN TREE FROG LITORIA EWINGI GREEN TREE FROG - LITORIA CAERULEA TAILED EMPEROR - POLYURA SEMPRONIUS HAPPY FAMILY - BABBLERS - POMATOSTOPUS TEMPORALIS LEATHERHEAD -NOISY FRIARBIRD - PHILEMON CORNICULATUS LITTLE FRIARBIRD - PHILEMON CITREOGULARIS BLUE-FACED HONEY EATER - ENTOMYZON CYANOTIS MICKY - NOISY MINER - MANORINA MELANOCEPHALA BLUEIE - RAINBOW LORIKEET - TRICHOGLOSSUS HEAMATODUS GREENIE - TRICHOGLOSSUS CHLOROLEPIDOTUS EASTERN SPINEBILL - ACANTHORHYNCHUS TENUIROSTRIS BAG SHELTER MOTH - OCHROGASTER LUNIFER SPITFIRE GRUBS - LARVAE OF SAWFLIES - PERGIDAE SAXONY - HOMO SAPIENS CARLEY - HOMO SAPIENS TANIA - HOMO SAPIENS PUFF - ALEXANDRIA PARROT - POLYTELIS ALEXANDRAE ELSA - HOMO SAPIENS JEWEL BUG - TECTOCORIS DIOPHTALMUS MONARCH BUTTERFLY - DANAUS PLEXIPPUS ROBYN - HOMO SAPIENS WILLIE’S WAG TALES Willie’s Family by Bodo Muche