Tuesday, 20 April 2021

Still Praising Ruperts, 10 Years On - Joan Lennon

Since I posted In Praise of Ruperts here ten years ago, a lot of things have changed - one of which is I have a much better camera now than I did then.  But some things have stayed the same ...  


I have just returned from a remarkable experience. I spent March as the Jessie Kesson Fellow at Moniack Mhor Writers' Centre. I lived in a cottage on a hill (1000 feet up), with its very own micro-climate - everything from thigh-high snow, to sitting out in the sun watching the daftness of lambs, to the foggiest fogs I have ever seen - and I wrote. When I wasn't writing, I thought about writing. When I went to sleep, I dreamed about writing. I did a day a week in the schools talking about writing and getting the kids to write. I worked with the Highland Literary Salon on their Writers' Retreat Weekend. I was obsessed. I was, in fact, a deleriously happy Rupert.

Let me explain.

Rupert is a crow. He also lives at Moniack Mhor. He sees life differently from other crows. I know this because Rupert throws himself at buildings. Now, many birds will occasionally be confused by the glass in a window and bump into it. Having done so, they will either a) drop down dead or b) give themselves an embarrassed shake and fly away. Not Rupert. Rupert seeks out windows with intent, and when he finds them he throws himself at them like a feathery grenade, bounces off, and does it again.

Bam. Bam. Bam.

If you interrupt Rupert in mid-attack by, say, opening the door and yelling, he'll only go a little way off and then squat on a fence post and swear at you. You just know he's going to be back. He is on a mission - his tiny demented mind is full of conquest ...

Bam. Bam.

At first he specialised in subduing the windows of my cottage. By the time my residency was over, he had transferred his attention to the big house and was attacking that. There are A LOT of windows in the main building, but Rupert is a bird obsessed. I'm convinced he's happy in his work. I like to think we have things in common.

So here's to Ruperts everywhere. Here's to slant vision, quixotic pursuits, perseverance and a hard head.

Here's to obsession.

Bam.


Joan Lennon Instagram

7 comments:

Susan Price said...

Bam! indeed.

Rowena House said...

Fantastic blog! And what a month. Green with envy. We all need to be more Rupert, methinks.

Joan Lennon said...

Thanks Susan and Rowena - bam on!

Lynne Benton said...

Lovely post, Joan, and how very true of writers! Keep going, Rupert!

Anne Booth said...

Brilliant. That residency sounds wonderful, and I must be more Rupert.

Sue Purkiss said...

I wonder if Rupert's still at it?

Joan Lennon said...

There's every chance - the crow family can live for a couple of decades. If age has slowed him down a little, I like to think he remembers the wild days and has a bam or two in the spring.