Beavers By Moonlight
The Scots Magazine|June 2024
Once away from the shadow of the hill, Jim's infinite patience is rewarded with the memorable moment he has been waiting for
Jim Crumley
Beavers By Moonlight

BEAVERS by moonlight seemed like a good idea. A string of clear nights either side of a full moon was a gilt-edged invitation.

Moonlight gilding every corrugation in the river, gilding every ripple, layering wet flanks of beaver fur with a gilded dazzle, every newly-gilt detail of their architecture aglow even as they cemented it into place, gilt-edged cubs playing with their own moonshadows, new avalanches of woodchips at the base of a gnawed tree rendered into white-gold heaps of unburied treasure. That kind of thing.

I had in mind, the transformative effect of moonlight on so many evening shifts of peering into the tree-shrouded black river for black beaver shapes practising the black arts of their architecture in the dark.

Now, on a perfect evening, I watched the northwestern sky's purples fade to blue-blacks. Woodland darkened, the banks and the beaver canal and the pools and the dams all darkened, and I sat and watched the darkening and waited for the moon.

The evening was windless and quiet, apart from the many-voiced haverings of the river. There are worse conversationalists for a nature writer with time on his hands than a Perthshire river.

But the river only darkened.

It took longer than it should have to appreciate that only the fields to the west glimpsed through trees were in moonlight. Then I realised that the hill at my back was the source of colossal shadow.

This particular beaver territory remained moonless even on a moonlit night, but I wondered if perhaps a beaver might go curiously out into the open moonlit country, the better to see what was going on in the neighbourhood.

So I walked west into the fields until suddenly my moonshadow leapt into life and headed for the river, keeping the company of a shrub-darkened burn that oozed down the side of the field, the better to diminish my impact on the landscape to watching eyes.

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