Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB
[graphic][merged small][merged small]

LARGE tracts of sand, exposed to the atmosphere, are proverbially monotonous and desert. Their surface is too loose and uncertain, and water finds its way through them with too great facility, to admit of the growth of a varied vegetation or to afford food and shelter to many animal inhabitants. In a great measure, this barren character applies to extensive sand deposits under the sea; and yet the sandy sea-shore has many attractions which the sandy land-down cannot boast of. The constant flow of the ocean binds together the unsettled particles of sand, and the retreat of the tide from such a coast, if it afford the visitor no other enjoyment, gives him a delightfully smooth and firm pro

[blocks in formation]

menade, generally of considerable length and breadth; while it rarely happens that monotony is so absolute as to destroy the picturesque associations of the shore. The constant pulsation of the waves on the margin of the tide, far from affecting us with the sense of monotony, serves rather to soothe the mind; while the changes of light and shade on the surface of the sea supply sufficient variety to keep the senses awake. And these changes are quite sufficient, even on the tamest shores, to arrest the attention. Few have attempted to paint coast scenes like those which Crabbe so graphically brings before us :

"Where all beside is pebbly length of shore,

And far as eye can reach, it can discern no more ;"

and none with his power of description. The coast which awakened his genius is one of the least picturesque in England; but he saw it with the eyes of a poet and a naturalist. And all who learn the use of similar organs of vision will find that there is no place so dull as not to afford us abundant sources of pleasure.

If we do nothing but watch the flocks of sea-birds which, on the recess of the tide, are attracted to the shore in search of food, their habits will soon begin to interest us. Gulls, terns, and sandpipers, of various species, will then become familiar friends; and in watching their various ways, and tracing them when they leave us, discovering whence they come, and to what country they annually migrate, we shall begin to feel a strong interest in all that concerns them.

[blocks in formation]

The Dunlin, the most common of the sandpipers (Tringa variabilis) is found all round our coasts, where it collects, on sandy shores, in vast flocks, which, on the recess of every

[graphic][merged small]

tide, are busily occupied in searching along the margin of the sea for the minute marine animals, on which they feed. In summer, this active little bird deserts its marine haunts, and retires to moors and unfrequented places, similar to those selected by the plover, where it makes its simple nest and rears its brood. In August, both the young and the old birds return to the coast, and it is then especially that the most numerous and most active flocks are to be seen. Yarrell well describes them as "incessantly upon the move, shifting their ground perpetually, running nimbly along, or taking short flights from place to place, frequently wading to follow the

*Brit. Birds, iii. p. 82.

[blocks in formation]

aquatic insects, worms, mollusca, and the smaller thinskinned crustacea, which are put in motion by every receding wave. If disturbed, the whole flock take wing together, and, wheeling along in half circles near the edge or the surface of the water, each bird exhibits alternately a dark or light appearance to the observer, as the upper or under side of its body happens to be turned towards him."

The terns, or sea-swallows, by their very graceful form and rapid flight, skimming along the surface of the sea, seldom fail to attract the notice of the most casual visitor. But it is not till we examine them minutely that we are aware of the numerous species which inhabit different parts of our coasts, each no doubt selecting that place where he finds ground best fitted to his wants. No less than eleven species of tern either visit or breed on some part of the British shore. Many of them migrate to very distant places in their winter rambles, exploring the shores of tropical countries, and even extending their flights to high latitudes in the southern hemisphere. No birds are better fitted to remain long on the wing. The elegant, boat-shaped body, small in proportion to the great length of wing, is easily supported in the air during a very long-continued flight. To the same family of birds belong the sea-gulls, which are mostly of larger size and less slender form, but with very similar habits; and also the famous albatross, whose lengthy flight, reported by voyagers as continued for weeks or months together, is so celebrated. But the time which the albatross can remain on the wing has, I think, been much ex

FOOT-PRINTS ON THE SHORE.

25

aggerated. Like the gull and the tern, though not a diving bird, it swims with great buoyancy, and, notwithstanding the enormous length of its wings, it does not appear to find much difficulty in mounting again in the air, after it has alighted on the water. It is quite true that when caught, and liberated on the deck of a ship, it finds it impossible to take wing: and hence it has been hastily inferred that, unless from some cliff or projection of considerable elevation, the albatross cannot commence its flight; and as the same birds are often found following the ship for many weeks together, it has been said that they continue all that time on the wing. But no one can have watched the albatross with much attention, and not seen it alight frequently on the water. It lives on animal matter, which it finds floating on the sea; and though it sometimes secures its food while on the wing by skimming along the water, it is just as common to see it close its wings and swim like a gull and when it wishes again to rise, it may be seen running and flapping along till it has acquired sufficient impetus, and finds a wave of sufficient height to start from. Then, with a not ungraceful motion, it soon resumes that steady flight, which may continue over a wide extent of sea.

The foot-prints of sea-birds on the sands of the shore are often unnoticed, and are swept away by the first returning wave. So are the tracks of trailing shell-fish, which may sometimes be seen furrowing the surface of fine hard sand in considerable numbers. The common yellow nerite (Littorina litoralis) is a frequent maker of these trails, as it moves its station from one small rock

« ZurückWeiter »