Wednesday, 25 August 2010

Video Two-;A walk with O'D and an encounter with a mystery bird





We’ve had to open several paths through our little forest to make it quicker to get to our firebreaks when we hear the awful telltale crackling sound of flames.

These paths make for delightful shady walks, especially during the very hot, steamy summers we have here in Mozambique. And as well as that, we often come across some pretty interesting, scary or mysterious things during these walks.

On this particular walk that you’re about to see, O’D comes across Grumpy, our white cat that was kidnapped in 2002 by some locals and Spike, a furry bulk weighing over 20 kgs and who is eyeing a Kingfisher in an extremely predatory way. A Samango monkey, sitting in a most unladylike manner, is in a nearby tree.

Towards the end of his walk, O’D catches sight of an unusual bird high up in a tree above him. It’s making a purring sound and keeping its green back turned towards him. He’s unable to identify it and because of the way it’s sitting, he thinks it’s sick.

It was only very much later that we were able to identify it.

One afternoon, when Douglas, our cook, was busy making shortbread biscuits in the kitchen, he looked up from his rolling pin and saw the mystery bird. It was perched on a branch of the kapok tree right in front of our sitting room window and revealed itself to be none other than a Narina Trogon! (Apaloderma narina)

The Narina Trogon, we discovered, usually perches with its green back towards you in a forest and, as a result, is a very difficult bird to see. So, what a stroke of luck that Douglas just happened to look out of the kitchen window at that particular time!

Trogons make a low, slow ‘hoot hoot … hoot hoot’ sound during the breeding season (October) and also the purring sound you heard while O’D was standing underneath it and filming it.

Apparently, these birds are very delicate. Poor things, they have weak feet, their skin is easily torn and their feathers drop out if they’re handled!



To Watch Video Click The You tube link below-:



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ddOQYdKBGxE

Friday, 6 August 2010

Video One -: Our Forest



Hi everyone,

We thought we'd begin this first segment of our blog with brief clips of the Nhamacoa forest and some of its inhabitants, as well as showing you what it was like when we first came to live here.


It was rough living then, without a phone up to 2005 and with only a short wave radio and books to entertain us. Is living without a television for eighteen years a world record??


When people started invading the forest and setting fire to it to clear machambas (fields), life became wilder, especially when they waved their pangas (machetes) up in the air and threatened to cut us up into little pieces when O'D told them to control their fires.


It was all a big adventure for O'D and his Mozambican partner Caetano. As for me with drums sometimes drumming for days and nights and my new primitive lifestyle of cooking over a mud brick oven in a pole and grass cook hut and bathing with water from a hole we had to dig in the dry Nhamacoa river, i sometimes had the mad feeling that i had somehow and was living not in the 1990's but in the 1890's


Till Next Week,


Val

To watch Video click the You Tube Link Below -: