Walking With Mr Smaug.
Walking With Mr Smaug.
He
waits for me in the brightness near the open back door with his tail
a kinked exclamation mark. He occupies the space, lean body angled
across the hall, pointing. As I step towards him he is already in
motion, skipping lightly down the back steps on balled feet.
He
waits for me two paces away as I slip on old leather shoes, the ones
without their laces. Then we decide if it is the sort of day that we will
push through the black currant canes behind the old wooden shed, or
head left towards the carport. He leads. It is a wooden shed day, and
I feel the stiff brush of canes past my right shoulder, and the drag
of sunny boards on my left.
He
takes a more direct route, ducking under the veranda, and floor, and
matches my pace as I struggle round the side. He emerges at the back
of the shed and rakes his claws down the warty bark of a nearby
elderberry bush that has been let grow to the height of a tree; he
bends his back, reaches high with his arms and holds the position
like an athlete stretching hamstrings. Sunlight makes his claws
flash.
We
play Pooh Sticks in an open storm water drain that is more graciously
referred to as “The Stream”. He waits beside the drain like a
held breath, still, balanced and focussed. Ears swivel as I snap off
a short length of willow, and send it on its short voyage. His gaze
follows the twig’s every lunge and undulation as it hurdles
ripples, and shoots small rapids.
Then, as it nears, he is tense,
waiting his moment. He strikes like a snake. Bam!
One long front arm
up to its elbow in the water, paw patting, treading, claws hooking.
He has it now, bites it dead, and scoops the twig onto the bank
beside him, to join the others piled there.
He
has vaulted the drain and is twenty feet up an evergreen tree before
I have registered his absence. Near the top the foliage parts like a
theatre curtain and a large bird exits stage left with stuttering
whoops of wings scooping air. I push through bushes and get to where
I can see cat against sky. He has wrapped arms and legs around a
slender trunk that is no more than 6 inches broad, and has reached
the point where the usual laws of gravity have started to apply. The
top third of the tree sways as he adjusts his hold. He is slipping
now, thin twigs are cracking and breaking all around him and he lets
go of the trunk with his arms and starts to thrash around with his
front paws, desperate to find something solid to hang onto. He
twists, the tree shakes, and his eyes meet mine. He lets out a
puzzled and despairing “Ohh!” sound, and tries to work towards
me. The tree lurches, he slips lower. He begins to spiral round the
trunk, snapping twigs and bending branches. This is better. He gains
some control.
He completes the last third of the descent full of
confident swagger, looking pleased with himself.
He
wraps himself around my legs, he is black that is brindled red-brown
in sunlight. We examine new grass, dead leaves, and pounce on things
that rustle.
He
rolls against the sunny buttressed base of an alder. The air is
refrigerator cold, my breath makes diaphanous curtains of mist that
hang and drift, he puffs little grey speech bubbles.
Comments
Four legged companions are definitely recommended! Mr Smaug makes the little walk great fun. I'm really enjoying his company.
Hi Barbara,
Pats coming up! Mr Smaug purrs very quietly despite his impressive size. I was amused to see his little frosty puffs of breath on that chilly morning. A bit hard to get a photo of them unfortunately, but he looked like a little dragon!
Hi Patti,
Glad you enjoyed the walk! Mr Smaug seems to have really bonded with me in a way that is (and I say this very quietly so that cats can't hear) almost like a dog! He walks (almost) at heel, and does arrive (sometimes) when I whistle! He also doesn't seem to mind water.
Hi Gwynneth,
It would be really nice to catch up with you in person if you do manage to get down this far in NZ. A very special thing to meet up with someone from the blog. :-)
Good question! Mr Smaug was the almost identical twin brother of Brian (sadly Brian got killed on the busy main road). Mr Smaug was identical to Brian in everything but his jaw which was deeper and squarer compared with Brian's and had a dragon-like appearance from some angles, so "Smaug" he became (after the dragon in the Hobbit), and "Mr" followed a bit later. "Mr Smaug" suited him better than either "Mr" or "Smaug" alone. I loved seeing Mr Smaug puffing little steamy clouds out of his nose on the chilly morning that we went for our walk. Just right for a dragon!
To go out with an animal friend, as you describe, to have everything reduced to essentials - breath huffs, leaves, sunlight, adventure - nothing extraneous or jarring...isn't that the best thing? Walks with my Great Dane where he did his doggy thing and we negotiated all the details, unspoken but clearly - I miss that more than almost anything.
Thank you for your lovely comment, I am sorry to have missed it until now, it seems to have got in "under the radar" somehow! The various animals that have walked beside us through life have been really precious and made our journey far more enjoyable. It hurts very deeply to lose them, but it is wonderful to have had the pleasure of their company.
Hi Anna,
He certainly is! I had a good walk with him this morning and enjoyed seeing bluebells, and crunching through dry dead leaves!
What a wonderful privilege it is to see
Mr Smaug in action and enjoy your beautiful
walk with you, thank you ��
You are quite the Narrator with such warmth and expression, I felt the very essence of that walk I was right there with you....
For me here in the UK I am very accustomed to seeing puffs of our breath on cold frosty mornings...
A fellow acquaintance of ours (Steve,Sydney) cannot imagine living in such a cold environment..
Our bodies acclimatise from birth and makes the coming of all the seasons quite magical and exhilarating..
For me Spring is my very favourite when everything is awakening fresh and anew..
Mr Smaug is a beautiful creature and I very much agree with you..
The animals I have had through my life's journey are all fondly remembered with love and appreciation for their companionship, each cat and dog are etched into the family's threads of our tapestry of life, from my childhood and beyond...
My Best To You
Maria xx
Glad you were able to take a walk with Mr Smaug too! This post was done when we still had Spring to look forward to, as I write now we are in the beginnings of Autumn and it won't be long before there are dragons once again under the trees with their little puffs of steam at each breath!
We are so thankful for the procession of animals that have walked with us through the years, they have added much love, fun, and warmth.
Kind Thoughts,
Peter x
happy memories!
... many happy memories Peter & Laura.
I'm glad I wrote that description of my walk and took the photos, it does help bring back happy memories of our morning adventures, and the photos give a lovely sense of Mr Smaug in his prime, full of fun and vigour!