There is something deeply soporific about the river. It moves with a
nonchalant ease, the surface silky smooth and the presence of a current only
betrayed by the steady underwater ripple of waterweed. Spared from the
immediate effects of recent rain, the water is clear, the gravel bed visible
for the first time in weeks. Such is the clarity of the water that the
strengthening sun casts shadows within the water column itself, such that those
cast by waterweed dance and toy with the stones on the river’s bed.
The air above the river is crowded with tiny flies, each catching in the
sun’s rays which stream down through gaps in the overhanging trees. The trees
themselves cast deep shadows, combining cool and heavy shade with the dry
brightness of the sun and making it difficult for my eyes to adjust as I scan
from one to the other. Here and there, patrolling dragonflies cruise in level
flight before returning to a favoured perch to watch for rivals or a passing
female.
Standing on the bridge, one of my favourite viewpoints from which to
watch the river and the life that surrounds it, I can see a shoal of small
fish. They seem to favour the shallows, or is it that they are easier for me to
spot there? I can make out the red of their fins, suggesting they are rudd or,
possibly, roach. It has been a while since I have seen any larger fish in this
stretch of the river. Perhaps they have been fished out or, more likely, that
they now favour one of the deeper stretches up-stream. There used to be a shoal
of chub here, that I would see virtually every day but they, like the pike, are
nowhere to be seen. Sadly, so close to the road, the river carries the scars of
its human neighbours. An old mattress half covers the slowly rusting frame of a
bike and other, smaller, items are scattered nearby. What on earth prompts
people to treat the river in this way?
Leaving the bridge and moving upstream, the taint of Man is lost and the
river regains its graceful elegance. The banks are thick with emergent growth
and it is only because I am on higher ground that I can still see open water.
Away from the traffic, the air carries a soft hum, the combined droning
wingbeats of a myriad of insects. The pitch of this sound resonates within me
and adds to the sense of somnambulance. It is a wonderful feeling to immerse
myself in the life of the river in this way and I understand just why it is
that I am drawn to her margins.
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