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A summer evening walk on the South
Downs turns into a wildlife encounter in the dark.
Dark Encounter
My summer walk along the crest of the South Downs set me up for
an enjoyable evening meal at the Devils Dyke. I took the precaution
of bringing a torch for my return walk, but paths on the downlands
of southern England are easy to follow in the dark; they shine out
as white pathways of exposed chalk. A fresh, starlit summer evening,
and the comfort of a good meal gave me reason to be content with
my day.
Darkness does not easily scare me, so the silhouette moving across
the field to my left raised vigilant apprehension rather than fear.
Nevertheless, when a second shadow joined it I slowed my pace and
proceeded with greater caution. If they were cats, they were larger
than I had ever seen. Stories of larger members of the cat family
surround many uncultivated areas of Britain, though not the South
Downs as far as I know. Darkness lends special significance to unidentified
shapes; so I stopped. The two creatures continued their course,
which would cross the chalk path a few yards in front of me. I preferred
not to meet them head on.
I am fascinated with wildlife though, like most people who live
and work in town, my knowledge of the native fauna of my home country
is largely theoretical. England's few remaining wild mammals have
survived by avoiding direct encounters with humans, so they are
rarely seen in the wild. I knew just what a badger looked like -
provided it was displayed in a perfect pose with its black-and-white
snout looking out of the picture; so it took several minutes for
me to realise what I was seeing.
Both badgers reached the path and turned in my direction. This
was the point when they would look like the pictures I had seen,
and it could only last a few seconds. I switched on the torch, bringing
them to a briefly frozen pose before they made off to the right
and disappeared down the hill. My first, privileged encounter with
wild badgers gave me a thrill that lightened my steps on the remaining
two miles of my summer evening walk.
©Rick
Hill
2000
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