Saturday 1 May 2010

BIRD-WATCHING IN YEMEN



















Excerpt from Chapter 5: No Mocha in Mocha


That evening I found two tourists in the hotel restaurant. The first I had seen on either visit to Yemen, they were male, middle aged and sipping soup.

‘We're from the Suffolk Birdwatchers Club,’ said one, his broad grin revealing a gap in his teeth.

‘I’m Herb and this is Norman,’ he indicated his sandy haired companion.

‘We`ve been doing avifauna checks on the Tihama,’ said Norman. ‘The rest of our group has left, but we want to do some spotting on the plateau. You’re welcome to come.’

I met Herb and Norm in the lobby next morning. They were wearing khaki safari gear, multi-pocketed gilets, and canvas hats. I was in brown linen trousers and a cream high necked shirt, as worn by Meryl Streep in Out of Africa. The taxi-driver had on jeans with a sleeveless sheep’s wool jacket and a black baseball cap with Baltimore Orioles on it.

‘Siddiq, friend America,’ he said clearly pleased I had noticed.

The rugged central plateau of Yemen abounds in birdlife. Creeping about the giant euphorbias with expensive Luger binoculars, Herb identified Arabian babblers, amethyst starlings, rollers, shrikes, warblers and weavers for Norm to record in a log-book.

The driver looked on as though they were mad. A task for small country boys in Yemen is to scare birds off the crops. Beginning at dawn, they spend all day seated in the fields firing stones at them from homemade catapults. The iridescent throat of the grey rock pigeon makes it an easy target.

‘Look!` said Herb, whistling through his teeth as a beautiful bird alighted on a fig tree. It was a shimmering paradise fly-catcher which our driver, deftly miming the action, explained will nip off its tail in order to confuse a predator.

After an hour’s bird-watching, Herb and Norm spread out a tartan blanket and sat down with a thermos of tea. It was still too soon after breakfast for me and I wandered off along a track where a tall woman was climbing up from the ravine.

She wore a smock over black harem trousers embroidered at the ankles, gold bracelets and a piece of muslin wound around her head securing a bunch of marigolds. A goddess of the coffee terraces, showing no sign of astonishment at our meeting, she walked up and kissed my hand all in a single movement, and continued striding up the hill.

Travels With my Hat for publication 2012.

10 comments:

  1. One man's meat is another man's poison!
    A lovely tale...

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  2. A charming ,gentle story- just wish I could have been there with you- if only that country could have retained that peace and tranquillityI felt from reading the piece!

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  3. I`m mad about birds (feathered ones)
    Is central Yemen safe to visit?

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  4. Pleasant story to read, given that we hear little of peaceful tales from this area.

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  5. Yemen like many countries has its share of problems but the emerald plateau around Ibb with its unique vegetation and beautiful birdlife is far removed from regional disturbances. So too is the Tihama, the Red Sea coastal plain. Both are easily visited from the capital Sana'a and have good if not 'luxurious' accommodation. Yemen as a matter of interest, is my own pick of countries to visit on the Arabian penisula. Birdlife apart, the architecture is unique - the Old City of Sana`a is a World Heritage. site.

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  6. happy to hear of birds instead of terrorists, for a change! Many thanks....

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  7. Lovely balanced view of a countries complexity, would make one want to visit there, in these troubled times it is so easy to overlook such simple and pleasant joys, that observation of the consistency of nature can bring.....charming.

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  8. Nice little vignette. And very vividly written - I can just see it, almost like watching a film

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  9. A fascinating insight into a country not always thought of for its natural attractions. Told with humour and sensitivity, one can almost hear the birdsong

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  10. What a great story - I loved it. The photos are wonderful too.Can't wait to read your book. I think Travels With My Hat will be in great demand. I hope it all goes well for you.

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