Saturday, 16 January 2016

Friday 15th January 2016


A crispy day in Carsington


The Gelly Babe guide to being a Gelly Babe
 



One should not underestimate what it takes to be a Gelly Babe.  Gelly Babes like to meet monthly in good weather.  These expectations are set very high given the complexities of the British weather and our eventful lives.  Today was no exception.
Organisation of military precision is essential to make a Gelly day run smoothly.  Sometimes Gelly Babes have to sacrifice their beauty sleep and send in weather reports.  Gritted roads in Wirksworth checked (tick).  Views of snow from Brassington, but not in Brassington (tick).  Icy roads reported south of Chellaston, not north of it (tick).  Final rendezvous information communicated (tick).  Four ticks are good.
 
Gelly Babes like to park easily and for free, or at least get value for money.  The machines at the Sheepwash car park clearly do not understand the Gelly Babe preferences.  Four tickets with four different exit timings for two vehicles, not good.  Cross; not tick.  Jo likes to pretend to help out other hapless drivers and and somehow ends up with their returned coins.  Hmm.  Not to be outwitted by a simple machine the Gelly babes test out a theory that tickets are transferable between car parks. It worked. Tick. 
 
One Gelly Babe was so focussed on making sure the day ran smoothly that she forgot to eat her breakfast.  Luckily Maggie had some left-overs from hers.  Fortified after a sugar rush of shortcake and kit-kat Helen J felt ready to face up to her serious duties of the day.  Today’s duties included being chief weather girl, chief birder, chauffeur, photographer, recipient of eventful texts and blogger.  This actually wore out Helen J so much that later in the evening when making mojitos, instead of adding soda to the rum, she added even more rum to the rum.  It was lucky that this happened on a night when she was not in charge of anything else!  
Gelly Babes sometimes go by another name.  Today they are mostly being Gelly Birders. Gelly Birders want to see lots of birds; ones they are familiar with and others never seen.  This can get quite silly.  Kookaburras do not like Carsington as it does not have any gum trees.   Also it is difficult to spell, as are pigeon and wigeon which sound as though they should have the letter ‘d’ in them.  Jo is only satisfied when she spots a woodpigeon.
 
Jo is also very good at birding today and spots a pair of siskins flying in a flock of chaffinches.  Gelly babes learn that other birds like to flock together too.
 
 
 
Long tailed tits and dunnock like to flock at bird tables.

 
But, some birds do not like to flock at all.
 
 
As this might spoil their chances of gaining ‘poser –of-the-day’ award.
 
Helen J is mindful to share out her duties and promotes Jo to chief birder and chief list maker.  Jo likes making lists.  
One of the Gelly Babes duties is to keep others informed of their own eventful day.  Today was one of those days. When Pam texted to say she was on her way, arrangements of where to meet were put in place.  The Gelly Babes did have to think carefully about how to phrase this as not all Gelly Babes know their front from their back.  When Pam texted a second time to say that her house was full of smoke and she would rather wait for the fire engine, they immediately thought of Lynn.  Lynn gets very excited about men in uniform.  Gelly Babes have very long memories.  Luckily for Pam it was only Jen’s bedroom which had caught fire.  Jen is also lucky as now she gets a new bedroom.  Pam has learned that mirrors in bedrooms are dangerous. 
Helen M also texted to say she was unable to meet for lunch.  Helen M was busy mopping up after a flood in Alex’s kitchen.  Lesson no 2:  if you have a drip in the house, sort him out immediately.  If only Jen and Alex shared a house then the day may have been less stressful.  Hindsight is a wonderful thing.
 
 
Fortunately lunch at the cafĂ© was largely uneventful.  Helen J learned that posh beans on toast includes neither cheese nor the number 57.  Alison likes posh beans.  Gelly Babes like to chatter about all sorts of things.  Today they mostly chatted about how little old ladies like to buy new clothes and hide them in drawers full of gifts of soap and perfume. This is something the Gelly Babes will look forward to in years to come,  when they are old enough.
Gelly Birders are very determined.  Having spent the morning looking at cormorants and great crested grebes pretending to be great northern divers, the Gelly Babes realised they could not go home without one more try.  On their way to Stone Island, they stopped to admire the weather:
 
 
Windmills having a lazy day
 
Which is why there are still patches of ice.
 
The Gelly Babes were not the only ones hunting for elusive birds.  Mr Welly, a bit fresh from Willington, prided himself on seeing a bittern this morning.  Helen J might have been impressed had he not added that he was also hoping to see six great northern divers.  Tardy research means he would likely be disappointed.
 
Sadly, Helen J cannot add magician to her list of duties otherwise she would have found a shoveller for Maggie and a treecreeper for Alison.  However, she did have one last trick up her sleeve: patience.  Patience is a virtue.  Virtues can outwit even the most elusive of birds.  And so, it is with great pride and joy that the Gelly birders celebrated several viewings of the great northern diver. There were several viewings because it kept diving for long periods of time and they only had one telescope. A GB first and bird of year.  And so, Helen J mindfully regained her title of chief birder of the day.

 

Today’s bird list (Jo still being entitled to keep her duty of chief lister)
 
blackbird
black-headed gull
blue tit
canada goose
chaffinch
coal tit
coot
cormorant
crow
golden-eye
great crested grebe
great northern diver* (bird of the year)
great tit
greater black-backed gull*
house sparrow
lapwing
little grebe
long-tailed tit
magpie
mallard
moorhen
mute swan
pheasant
pied wagtail
pochard
robin
siskin*
snipe*
teal
tree sparrow
wigeon
woodpigeon
 
32 birds in total.  * are GB firsts with two being exceptionally good birds to have on our list.   4 new birds on previous years making our running total of 78.