HISTORY
OF ATHENRY Jackdaws in the Roof - A Nature Walk by 5th. And 6th Classes, Carnaun School 1990 I STARTED off the Nature Walk by talking about all the ordinary everyday
Carnaun School birds. The goldfinch at the front door, the pied wagtail
on the wall beside the fuchsia, the jackdaw on the roof, the magpies flying
low along the stone walls, the snail hammering thrushes and the yellow
beaked blackbird on the front lawn. The robin on the handle of Tommy's
spade, the swallows and the martins under the eaves, the blue tit with
its nest in Rabbitt's wall, the hedge sparrows and of course the crows
and sea gulls gathering the left-over lunches as we moved out the front
door.
I picked out five wild flowers to show the class. The daisy is
a very common flower and can be found in grassy places. The leaf
of the daisy cures mouth ulcers. The dandelion can be found in almost
any kind of grassland, from dry hills to water meadows. The roots
are used in some countries as a coffee substitute and the flowers make
a good wine.
Every school, in fact every house has its family of animals and Carnaun
School is no exception. If you inspect carefully you can see the
sights of rats and mice drawn by the left-over lunches in the school yard.
We have a few trees in our playground. My favourite is the ash
at the end of the front lawn. A stately graceful tree with its winged
fruit called Samaras. I like to sit and eat my lunch in its shade.
It's so peaceful there I forget school for a while. Another one of
my favourites is the beech tree at the back of the school. Standing
among the pines in Autumn its russet leaves are a beautiful contrast.
Of all the shrubs in the school yard my favourite is the Fuchsia.
It is in flower now. It has beautiful white flowers now but before
our teacher transplanted it, it had red flowers. The climbing rose
next to it will soon be in bloom. The lilac and
Listen-I hear a birds song. It is singing its own name, chiff-chaff,
chiff-chaff. It is olive brown on its back and yellowish white underneath
with dark legs (4½ inches long). Some people say the chiff-chaffs
song is monotonous but I like it.
As we went around the corner of the school, two jackdaws watching us
made a grumbling sound, a swallow flew off on silent wings and a blue tit
called in alarm. We also heard the call of a cuckoo from the direction
of William's or Walsh's land but just as we stopped to listen it also stopped
and all we heard was the sound of Coen's tractor in the distance.
It was lovely to see the lambs gambling in Fahy's field. A wren bobbed
up and down on a bramble bush and sang a few notes.
The rock in Carnaun is mostly limestone, although some old red sandstone
may be found. This may have been brought here by glaciers during
the ice-ages. Chert may also be found mixed through the limestone.
It is easy to tell the difference because chert is darker, harder and when
broken, it breaks into cube shapes. Long ago it was used as axe heads
because of its hardness.
The birch is a hardier tree than the oak. The slender trunk has smooth
silvery bark which peels off in thin needles. The native conifer
scotspine has bluishy green needles arranged in pairs. Single needles
are only found on saplings. The male flower produces a lot of pollen
in May. They die and fall off leaving a bare patch.
Dectective work on the foor of a dried up pond revealed signs of night
prowlers. Two sets of footprints were plain to be seen, one a hunting
fox, the other a field mouse. We could get the scent of the fox on
the herb roberts growing on the banks of the pond so we knew he was a recent
visitor. We wondered about the fate of the field mouse.
News flashes on the way home....
Lichens occupy some of the most forbidding regions of the earth establishing
themselves in environments where few other species of living things are
able to survive. They are found farther south and farther north than any
other type of plant. In the Himalalyas they have been found at altitudes
of more than 5,600 metres (18,460 ft.).
After hearing a bird sing, I spotted it with my field glasses in a prominent
position
Later Lheard a tsee-tsee-tsee sound and then ending in a flourish steeng-steeng-stichioi-steeng.
The call note is very similar to that of the coal tit. So I realised
that it must be a goldcrest. The goldcrest is the smallest bird in Ireland
so I found it difficult to see but with patience, quietness and my field
glasses I spied it on a branch some distance away. The goldcrest
has an olive-green beak and its underparts are a pale olive-buff.
Scott's Wood is a larch wood. The larch can grow to a height of
50 metres. The bark is a greyish brown. The mature cones are
produced in September and can remain on the trees for some years.
Introduced from the Alps and Carpathians, it has grown as a forestry tree
and gives a pleasant variation to the large otherwise evergreen planatations.
Scott's wood is especially nice because there are decidious trees growing
through the larch. There are some elms, alder, beech, ash and some
sycamore growing there. With whitethorn and blackthorn mixed in,
it makes a very pleasant place.
My favourite tree is the oak. Even though we did not see one in
Scott's wood I was able to tell the class all about it. It grows
in Ireland. It is found in woods and parks. When the tree is
young it has a shiny, smooth, greyish bark but with age it becomes rough,
furrowed and rugged. The buds are short and plump. Leaves begin
to appear in April and are out by mid May. They are pinnately lobed.
Male flowers are enclosed in long hanging catkins, one to a number of five
female catkins grow on a fairly long stalk. The fruit is an acorn
enclosed in a cup at the base. We intend to plant an oak in our playground
during our school's Centenary Celebrations.
I learned about a tree called Elder. Elder is a common plant of
wood, scrub, hedgerows and wasteground. It is one of the first shrubs
to colonise stable sand dunes and is particularly abundant around the coast.
It is characteristic of disturbed ground and fertile base rich or calcareos
soils particularly where there has been some nitrogen enrichment.
A decidious shrub or small tree, growing to a height of about 20 ft., it
flowers during June and July and is pollinated by small flies. The
black berries ripen during August and September. Elder has featured
prominently in both folklore and medicine and much superstition still surrounds
the plant in country areas.
We did not see our friends the red squirrels during our field trip as
I suppose they hid when they saw us coming. On our own we have often
spied them moving about. We love the way they make their way through
the twisting branches of the beech tree, running down the bark, searching
among the fallen leaves on the wood floor for beech nuts and chestnuts.
At the slightest hint of danger they freeze their bodies, then quickly
scurry up the nearest tree to the safety of their prey. An untidy
lot, they all sleep together for warmth and sleep for long periods during
the winter. When they wake and feel hungry they scamper about trying
to remember where they have hidden their store of nuts.
We saw many wild flowers during our nature walk. We saw ordinary
thistles, creeping thistles, ordinary nettles and red dead nettles, ordinary
daisies and ox-eye daisies. We found out names of plants we did not
know before such as Marsh Marigold, Toadflax, Rough Hawkbit, Meadow Vetchling,
Ribworth and Willowherb.
"A little bit of bread and no cheese", that's the sound of the yellow
hammer, my favourite bird, singing in a prominent position. Its head
is yellow marked with dark grey lines above the eye and outlining the ear
covets. The back is brown streaked with black and the wing feathers
are broadly edged with rufous. The underparts are yellow, streaked
with chestnut on breast and flanks. I hear a kok-kok, it's a male pheasant.
The male is marked by a long pointed tail making up half its length.
It is a rich chestnut boldly barred with black. The head is a bottle
green usually separated from the body by a white neck ring that gives him
his name, the ring-necked. The female is similarly long-tailed but
paler and creamier and streaked in cryptic colours. Once when I was
riding a pony a pheasant flew out of the undergrowth, the pony reared and
I fell off.
Footprints showing the badgers long claws were clearly seen on muddy
ground and in another part of the woods. The prints of the fore paws
are larger than those of the hind paws and the toes of the hind paws are
turned inwards. A badger is very careful about having clean materials
such as bracken, leaves and grass for bedding and is always careful to
keep the set clean. On fine days he throws it out to air. The
poor badger is in danger at the moment because many people think he carries
TB. At night you knon if he is about as you can hear him grunt.
Published in "Carnaun School, Athenry, 1891 -
1991"
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