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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Environment
Derek Niemann

Country diary: A chomping otter transforms into a beautiful creature

An otter by a riverbank
‘I followed the otter, rising and submerging until it reached the open spot where it would stay to fish for the next quarter of an hour.’ Photograph: Tony Phelps/Alamy

Two joggers were running on the opposite bank of the Usk, their loose dogs flushing rabbits that skittered down through willow scrub to the water’s edge. The river ran straight, deep and smooth here, yet to be ruffled by the broad meander 300 metres downstream that would fillet the current over a boulder-strewn bed of pebbles.

Earlier I had sat among woodland in front of the river bend, watching a pair of dippers hop from rock to rock. They bobbed towards the shore, curtseying and giving soft deflated screeches, before one braved a swoop up to its nest in the hollow of an old beech beside the grass mound where I perched. Feeling disturbingly close, I stood up and pressed on upstream, spotting in the middle of the river what I took to be a female mallard, except this bump left a wake, and there is no such thing as a turbo-charged duck. I followed the otter, rising and submerging until it reached the open spot where it would stay to fish for the next quarter of an hour.

Unperturbed by the commotion on the bank, the otter looked up. Face on I could see its jaws chomping continuously, an open-mouthed “ung, ung, ung”, baring its big canines. Light-coloured whiskers bristled over its cheeks, manky hair plastered all round, bulging bull-like eyes showing their whites. God you’re ugly, I thought.

And then the otter turned beautiful, a sharp twist profiling its hound dog head, a hunch and lift of its shoulders, back oozing into an arch, lifting its light belly clean out of the water, wet fur slicked back as if combed. It did not so much dive as flow underwater with dolphin ease. From the depths beneath the centre of the circling ripples came a froth of bubbles, the gush drifting to the point where the animal’s head next popped up. Each subsequent duck or dive released a jet of bubbles, perhaps helping the animal to sink. And then the otter disappeared. Somewhere in a bankside thicket nearby it had found its couch, a place where it could lie up and rest awhile.

• Country Diary is on Twitter at @gdncountrydiary

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