
Every year, it is the same. The warblers are long gone, the swallows have just departed, and, as evening falls, the housemartins gather and circle wildly above the house.

Catching insects on the wing, frantically shoring up their nests (as if they knew what winter storms were coming), they chatter, bicker and dot merrily about. Congregating daily on the TV aerial, their activity gathers obvious momentum as the year turns into September. They slip into a sort of behavioural overdrive: performing every aspect of what it means to be a housemartin, being themselves, turned up to eleven.

For a while, they are all there is, each evening.

We, whose summer hearts are lifted by their cheery company, sit below, and marvel at their antics.
“Look at them go,” we say, “just look at them.”







And then they are gone.
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schöne Fotos, schöner Text! Hat mich sehr berührt!
What amazing photographs. They express the essence of movement and the magic transitory nature of a bird on the wing. Thank you for sharing them!
Tom has outdone himself: truly *amazing* photos!
A few days ago, I went outside and it smelled like autumn here for the first time.
Such glorious photos – thank you so much Tom!
Here in Upper Antarctica we are finally slipping into spring, and the birds are arguing and trying to build their nests. The forest Ravens are getting cheeky and our cockatoos – both the sulphur-crested and yellow tailed black cockatoos are loud and restless. The starlings and blackbirds are frantically nesting as the evenings get longer.
Those PHOTOGRAPHS!! Thank you to the Housemartins for being, Tom for the talent and Kate for the writing and the sharing!
Amazing photos!
Can almost hear those wings. beautiful photos, thank you.
Thank you, martins, Tom, and Kate.
Beautiful. Breath taking. Thank you!
That is some serious shape throwing!
Beautiful 🪶
Such lovely pictures and words.The pictures reminded me of “Jonathan Livingstone Seagull”
Takes one’s breath away with their majesty…thanks.
Hermosas fotos! Muy lindo articulo!
Beautiful photos! Thank you!
Beautiful pictures, Tom. I suppose the House Martins will be coming our way (South coast) soon, picking up others as they come, en route to sub-Saharan Africa. Soon ‘our’ Dark-bellied Brent Geese will be returning from Siberia. Meanwhile our local Canada Geese have got the whole ‘flying in a skein’ thing down to a fine art, even this year’s goslings.
What stunning photos – almost origami like.