Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Casting Clouts
Monday, May 11, 2026
At Home
Sunday, May 10, 2026
The African Rabbit
Rabbits have always been special to me, this association dating back to the Geraldine Elliot books which my mother read to my brother and I when, as small boys in the second Mombasa house we had in Cliff Avenue, we were required to join her on her bed during our compulsory afternoon siestas. I have written about these books before - here. One of their main characters was Kalulu the rabbit, who was the trickster in Bantu folk lore, whose stories were transported to the Caribbean and Americas by slaves from West Africa, in which he became the character Br'er Rabbit. So, from an early age, I learned that rabbits were clever.
In fact, the African rabbit isn't a rabbit but a hare. My first recollection of seeing one 'in the wild' was on one of those miserable days when I had just boarded an aeroplane departing from Nairobi airport on my return to school in England after a summer holiday in Mombasa. As the 'plane taxied out onto the runway to take off, I recall seeing a 'rabbit' feeding on the grass a short distance from the 'plane, this noisy silver monster not bothering it in the slightest. It was one of those occasions when I swore I would never forget the moment: and I haven't.My next encounter with rabbits was on the lawns at the rear of Telham Court, the building which housed my prep school, Glengorse. The boys weren't usually allowed access to these lawns but, one sunny summer's day, the headmaster, who took us for Art, permitted me to go on to the lawn to sketch some rabbits which were happily feeding there. I managed to crawl very close to them, and produced some rather pleasing pictures.Tsuro remains with us, having taken up residence in the marsh grass which surrounds our pond. I do rather worry for him as there are some large crows coming in to the garden to feed on the small birds' food, but he seems very capable of looking after himself. And he is behaving himself: he seems quite content to eat the grass and not our plants.Saturday, May 9, 2026
The Unexpected
....returned home, Tsuro was here to greet us.
Friday, May 8, 2026
The Colours of Spring
The one thing missing from this feast of early spring life is the insects. In the last few days I've seen a white butterfly and a peacock, and a few large bumblebees. Perhaps this paucity of insects is easily explained by blaming the weather - the midday temperature has been struggling to rise above 10C, and it has been breezy - but I do wonder....
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Tsuro
Yesterday I spent some time sitting in the sunshine watching it. Happily, at the moment its main food seems to be grass, and it's welcome to as much of that as it wants. It has yet to have a go at any of the other plants - as far as we can see - so I'm not sure how we're going to react if we find it has eaten our vegetables or a rather precious ornamental plant.
I've decided to call it Tsuro, which means rabbit in Shona, one of the languages of what is now Zimbabwe. When we were in that country - between 1967 and 1970, when it was called Rhodesia - I used to........run the school's farm club. Our most ambitious project was to rear rabbits for use in the school's kitchen, and to sell to a local butcher. The scheme went horribly wrong, so we lost a fair amount of money, but I came away with the nickname Tsuro, which I rather liked. What I didn't miss was the killing and dressing of as many as fifty rabbits each Wednesday afternoon.I learned a great deal from the rabbit fiasco. I'm just sorry that the 'business' involved the murder of so many rather pretty little animals.
I have other good reasons for feeling rather affectionate towards rabbits, of which more anon.