The Green Bough.

It’s mid December, a bright cold day, and I’m back at Wakehurst to collect the written messages tied to the wattled walls of the timber-framed building where my Meadow Weave sculpture is installed.
Memories, comments and reflections about meadows have been contributed by visitors to Wakehurst through the summer and autumn. I plan to collate and document them as part of the project.
The sculpture is coming down this month… we head into the open-sided buildings ot have a look at it.
Wisps of the hay are moving rhythmically above our heads in the cold winter breeze, reminiscent of the fur of an animal.
The local robin is around and announcing its presence. We hear it in a nearby tree, singing its recognisable melodic song. Male and female robins are indistinguishable from each other and both sing through the year.
It comes into the timber framed building, and we stand unmoving as it hops around at our feet, picking up tiny insects where the sun has warmed the wooden floor.
It looks up at us as it does so… and then a curious thing happens.
The robin starts singing, but it’s a song neither of us has ever heard from a robin before. A soft, gurgling, conversational type of song. It goes on for some time, its beady eyes fixed on us. Then it hops up onto the cross beam and does it some more. I’m inexplicably moved.


Keep a green bough in your heart and a singing bird will come. Lao Tzu
Up on the edge of the beam I notice a slightly dodgy-looking little pile. I think it may be rodent entrails. But it’s too high to reach so we can’t get a good look at it.
Instinctively I look directly down from the beam for clues. And there I see a couple of large owl pellets.

They’re about as big as my thumb. One has a couple of little bones poking through that are visible on the outside. They’re a rare find.
They must be from one of the local barn owls, which nest in the big oak in the meadow behind the Millennium Seed Bank here at Wakehurst. The species-rich meadows here are a haven for small mammals which the owls prey on.
In the course of a year, a breeding pair of barn owls needs roughly 4,000 prey items to feed themselves and their young.

Later I take apart one of the pellets and amongst the matted, grey, rodent fur are many tiny bones, including what look like ribs. Judging by the jaw bone, with teeth intact, it looks like last night’s dinner was a field vole or two.
Later still, I’m looking through the written messages that were tied, by visitors, to the wattled walls of the timber-framed building where my piece is installed.
There are many lovely memories of meadows, wishes for the the future health of meadows. And many words of appreciation for the important ecosystems meadows provide.
A couple stand out; one by Noah and Zach, perhaps showing what else the barn owls might have hunted here and eaten.
Another simply says:
Meadows are wonderlands, mini worlds, places where dreams and tiny creatures live.
Read more about my Meadow Weave residency at Wakehurst here
