written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Saturday, 22 October 2022

Insomnia

Of course I'm writing this  insomnia  blog in the middle of the night. Why wouldn't I? Finding myself awake at 3 a.m. when all is dark and still, except for the owls...

night mover
... I type through the early hours in an otherwise silent conservatory by the glow of an anglepoise lamp, sipping a glass of cold, lactose-free, semi-skimmed and wondering just why owls - who are remarkably well-equipped to hunt at night - ever developed their unique physiology in the first place. Why become nocturnal? Was it because they couldn't sleep? Did they say 'Fuck it guys, you know what? We'll embrace the dark and stay awake all night!'? I'd like to think so.πŸ˜‰

Their specialised adaptation as night movers and hunters includes their ability to fly silently, and to see and hear in the dark with exceptional acuity; (that's my word of the week). 

Their feathers act not only as camouflage, they are also covered with a soft, velvet-like structure that dampens sound. Their wings are large, meaning they can glide and don't have to flap very often, plus they have baffles along the leading edge of the wings that breaks up the turbulence which is the major component of noisy flight. Their prey simply cannot hear them coming. 

They locate their victims first by sound. Unlike human beings with our symmetrical ears and stereophonic hearing, owls have ears that are located asymmetrically in their skulls and thus they can locate sounds in three dimensions, not just two. This affords them pin-point accuracy when detecting the position of a target mouse or vole, even in complete darkness. 

But their night vision is also extraordinary. Their enormous eyes are specialised to collect what little light there may be. Those eyes are so large in fact that they have lost the muscles that normally allow eyes to move around in their sockets, which means they must turn their heads if they want to vary their field of vision. As a result, they've had to develop the ability to swivel their heads about 270 degrees in either direction (compared to our 90 degrees left or right). 

Finally, as with cats' eyes, they have a tapetum lucidum behind each eye, a reflective surface that bounces light back to the photosensitive cells, allowing them a second take to detect differences in light even at very low luminance. Wow, owls...    

... though of course there are other predominantly nocturnal animals, quite a list - in fact well over a hundred creatures who prefer the hours of darkness to the day. They include the black rhino, cockroach, dwarf crocodile, great grey slug, honey badger, nightingale, paradoxical frog, raccoon, sugar glider and woolly lemur. But I'm not concerned with any of them. I'm only thinking about the owls...

Owlswick wallpaper by Sandersons
...and wallpaper (see Snowy above, £63 per roll - not found in the house on the strand, I hasten to add); and cranking up the Saturday night imaginarium to devise this flight of fantasy, a sort of baffled nocturne, to fit:

Owl Paper
Since I let your shape escape in pricking night,
I shouldn't be shocked if the ghost of a screech
teases my disoriented ears, or the merest sense 
of a velvet swoop nearly makes me duck down.

Owl paper, over cracks where darkness seeps in,
decks these bedroom walls and although I know
that in this eery stillness of nocturnal pitchblende
the only thing really moving is my mind, I howl...

...and turn on the light. You're branched as before
in your oak tree, beaky, big-eyed and swivelling
to regard me curiously, with just a hint of disdain.
But how to explain a scatter of pellets on the floor?

To close out on theme, here's a musical bonus from Principal Edward's Magic Theatre, a band I was very fond of in my teens, so much so that we engaged them to play a charity May Day gig at my school when I was in the sixth form. This song comes from their debut LP. Just click on the title to play itEnigmatic Insomniac Machine

Thanks for reading, sleep soundly. S ;-)

32 comments:

Binty said...

Owls are weird! I enjoyed this Steve, by turns amusing, informative and spooky. Loved the song too, woo hoo.

Boz said...

Very Twin Peaks la!

Ross Madden said...

Witty and wise with a lovely twisty poem. πŸ‘

Joy said...

Love it ❤️

Debbie Laing said...

They call to me from the woods at the back of our house! Loved the poem.

Miriam Fife said...

What a lovely owl photo. I enjoyed this Steve.

Stu Hodges said...

Very good Steve. For best effect I feel I should have read it at 3 in the morning, not 10 o'clock - but hey, I sleep well these nights.

Rick Shaw said...

"beaky, big-eyed and swivelling" OvO

Lizzie Fentiman said...

Funny and spooky. Extraordinary creatures, owls. And what a great roll-call of nocturnal animals. I want a paradoxical frog!

Nigella D said...

I loved the blog (so much I didn't know about owls) and I loved the spooky poem. Was "nearly makes me duck down" intended as a play on words???

Penny Lockhart said...

Thoroughly entertaining. I loved your humorous style and all those owl facts. It's a clever poem and I liked the twist.

Rod Downey said...

The wit of you (get it?) πŸ˜‰

CI66Y said...

Very good Steve. I really enjoyed the blog, the poem and hearing PEMT again after all these years. Did you go to Coventry? A great result for you.

Jen McDonagh said...

We have owls locally, mostly heard rather than seen. I loved the poem.

terry quinn said...

Well, blow me. What interesting facts about owls. Fascinating article.

A terrific poem.

Brett Cooper said...

A great blog. Australia, for all its cut-off-ness and indigenous creatures not found anywhere else, does have owls. My faves are the barking owl, the masked owl and the powerful owl. No kidding. Cracking poem too.

Gareth Boyd Haskins said...

I never knew that about owls not being able to move their eyes. Fascinating blog Steve and a great poem.

Alistair Bradfield said...

I thought this was a most entertaining read. I love your style, that unpredictable mix of jokey and factual. The poem is great. And who wouldn't want a woolly lemur as a pet? Principal Edwards Magic Theatre sound tremendous. I'll look to stream their album. Nice one. πŸ‘

Bridget Durkin said...

There's definitely something spooky about owls. I loved the poem.

Amber Molloy said...

Yes, as others commented, what a spooky beauty.

Bella Jane Barclay said...

Fascinating owl facts, lovely photo of 'night mover' and your supposition about owls becoming nocturnal tickled me. I love the poem with a surprise in its tail.

Billy Banter said...

Anyone who papers their bedroom with owl wallpaper (specially at £65 a roll) has got what's coming to them!

Jared Littowski said...

I never knew rhinos were nocturnal. Great owl facts and poem.

Anonymous said...

Woohoo twittwoo Nicky Nacky Knocky wooooow!

Anonymous said...

A fascinating and entertaining article. Loved the poem. I don't think I'd want that wallpaper now though even if I could afford it!

Saskia Parker said...

Loved your "baffled nocturne", great poem. ❤️

Andy D. said...

Enjoyed this Steve. Fascinating owl info and a too witty little poem (LOL). Great to hear Principal Edwards again. How we dug them back in the day. Stay well.

Dan Ewers said...

I liked that you actually wrote this in the middle of the night. Usually when I wake up in the early hours I just raid the fridge, snack and go back to bed. That's the difference between a poet and a waster (LOL).

Olwyn Morgan said...

Aren't owls amazing? I really enjoyed this. Nicely spooked poem too.

Dani Merakli said...

The goddess Athena was often portrayed as an owl. She was also goddess of wisdom. That probably accounts for the popular belief that owls are very wise birds.

Ozzie Blake said...

I loved the blog, entertaining and instructive, and the poem - a hoot! πŸ˜‰

Frida Mancour said...

Fascinating fowls, owls. (Actually not sure if they are fowls but I love the rhyme.) Your spooky poem is very clever.