Country diary: The air carries the faint fragrance of spring awakening | Claire Stares

River Itchen, Eastleigh, Hampshire: As we take our monthly swim, goat willows dip towards the water, and red-tailed bumblebees ping-pong between daffodils

During the winter months, we suspend our monthly river swim to avoid disturbing the spawning Atlantic salmon and brown trout, which deposit their eggs in redds – shallow, bowl-like depressions excavated in the chalk streambed. Though the breeding season typically ends in February, we’re mindful that there may still be newly hatched alevins hidden in the gravel. At some points during the year, the water level drops so low that it’s knee-scrapingly shallow in places but this morning the river is running high and fast after several days of heavy rain, so there’s no chance of any accidental contact.

The sky is overcast and the mature trees flanking the river are still bare, their branches adorned with orbs of mistletoe, some a metre or more in diameter. But the air carries the faint fragrance of spring awakening – the sweet marzipan scent of blackthorn bursting into flower. Goat willows dip gracefully towards the water, smothered in yellow, pollen-laden catkins. They have attracted several red-tailed bumblebees, while a rotund buff-tailed queen is ping-ponging between a clump of spring snowflakes and a swathe of daffodils.

As we head upstream towards our entry point – the furthest of two sets of wooden “dog dip” steps installed to prevent riverbank erosion – the ground softens underfoot, water lapping over the bank. I peer into the depths and glimpse a shoal of trout fry navigating the swirling eddies as they seek shelter beneath a tangle of vegetative debris snagged by overhanging branches. Further along, the river has burst its banks, swallowing the path, and by the time we reach the submerged steps, we’re wading shin-deep.

We slip into the water, serenaded by duetting wrens and lone chiffchaff – my first of the year. But there’s no opportunity to pause and enjoy this joyful harbinger of spring, as I’m immediately swept along with the current. One of my companions calls over her shoulder, asking if I can identify an orange-breasted bird she’s seen lurking in the riverside scrub. “Too big to be a robin,” she exclaims. As I glide past, I spot it perched amid a froth of blackthorn blossom – a plump, coral-plumaged male bullfinch greedily nipping off unopened buds with its stubby black bill.

• Country diary is on Twitter at @gdncountrydiary

Contributor

Claire Stares

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Country diary: a glimpse of spring down by the river Ystwyth
Aberystwyth, Ceredigion: From the depths of dormant bramble thickets, tangled and moribund, robins called and chased defiantly as they reinforced their territories

John Gilbey

24, Feb, 2018 @5:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: iridescent beauties, pavilioned in splendour
Buxton, Derbyshire: The drake mandarin duck ranks among the Earth’s most beautiful birds

Mark Cocker

19, Mar, 2019 @5:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: an exhalation in the alder carr
Purwell Ninesprings, Hertfordshire: I’m often drawn back to this swampy woodland in search of solace and inspiration

Nic Wilson

09, Oct, 2020 @4:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: long-tailed tits swirl high like leaves
Harlech, Gwynedd: They rank by weight as the tiniest of British birds, though that disproportionate tail gives a slightly false impression of their size

Jim Perrin

14, Mar, 2020 @5:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: walking the wild expanse of Teifi Marshes
Aberteifi/Cardigan, Ceredigion: Ducks doze on the mud-banks, while Canada geese argumentatively cruise the creeks of the main channel

John Gilbey

27, Aug, 2018 @4:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: vanished giants of the age of coal
Ironbridge Gorge, Shropshire: There was something monumental about these terracotta-coloured funnels, these magical vessels of rain-river-cloud

Paul Evans

02, Jan, 2020 @5:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: burning question raised by the Fishlake floods
Snailsden Edge, South Yorkshire: The landscape looks wild, but for years it has been managed for the benefit of grouse

Ed Douglas

22, Nov, 2019 @5:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: a swan builds a fortress for a nest
River Tern, Shropshire: Despite their size and aggression, swans are very vulnerable to egg thieves such as fox, mink or raven

Paul Evans

23, May, 2019 @4:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: going with the flow of the dipper's song
Wye Dale, Derbyshire: By one of the bridges, two dippers have built a nest: a football-sized ball of moss layered with a sense of time and season

Mark Cocker

16, Mar, 2021 @5:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: The kingfisher allows me to get astoundingly close
Otley, West Yorkshire: I am expecting this hunter to get spooked, but I can easily make out the finest details of its plumage

Carey Davies

23, Aug, 2022 @4:30 AM