The forest in the summer
Is really hard to beat
With shady bird-filled greenness
Giving shelter from the heat
While our neighbours in their paddocks
Curse the heat and flies
And rub the endless dust
From their red and gritty eyes
And when the icy winter wind
Cuts through them like a knife
It is warm inside our forest
And filled with happy life
And the streams within the forest
Run full and crystal clear
Regardless of the rainfall
All throughout the year
The forest has its seasons but it also has an eternal quality. It is buffered from the elements and irrespective of the time of the year is vibrant and full of life. We live in a forest that extends into State forest and National Park on three sides and cleared farmland to the west. We always notice how warm it is in the forest during the winter compared to the cleared land with its morning frost and cold winds that cut through you like a knife. And in summer, the leafy shade protects us from the scorching summer sun and we look with pity on the unfortunate sheep sweltering in their open paddocks next door. We are also fortunate in having a spring fed creek that flows year round irrespective of rainfall. Forests buffer rainfall run-off! Heavy rain soaks into the forest floor rather than sheeting off and causing floods and it is then steadily released during the dry times. The cleared land in contrast is much more subject to flooding in wet times and dry creeks beds during dry spells.
The cleared land is spectacularly pretty during our wet winter in its green European way but the gloss is quickly gone and by December the fields are dry and dusty and the dams are often dry. In summer in particular we are grateful for our forest. While our neighbours swelter in their dust bowl we have the pleasure of watching fledgling black cockatoo’s learn to fly and are lulled to sleep with the lullaby of Mopokes hunting in the forest.
Yes, we do have a fire risk but we are well prepared and would always get out early should a fire come. Cleared paddocks, however, are no guarantee of safety in the event of a fire. Most of the 38 homes lost in our nearby town of Toodyay in last season’s summer fires, for example, were located in open paddocks. I think bush fires are deadly where-ever you live and it is dangerous to be complacent just because your house is located in a paddock a long way from trees.
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