
On a trip to Norway, the author met Anna, a woman who lived a traditional life looking after Eider ducks and harvesting their feathers. Years later, when feeling uncertain in his own life, the author contacts Anna and arranges to spend time with her, learn about her lifestyle and help out with the work where he can.
This is a fascinating look at a vanishing tradition that has been carried out in Anna's family for generations. The Eider guardians make protective huts for the ducks to nest in and then once the ducks have left the nests at the end of the season, the guardians collect the eiderdown to make duvets.
This kind of traditional lifestyle was threatened when Norway began rapid modernisation after discovering oil in the 1960s, and at more or less the same time period, the arrival of feral mink, which preyed on the Eiders. The islands with their tradition of looking after the eiders have since been recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
During his time with Anna, the author gets to know her and her way of life. We hear about how she came late to her family tradition, after having worked in a care home and brought up her children. Seeing a stuffed Eider in a local museum inspired her:
"She stared at that duck. She wondered if that was what a thousand years of island culture had been reduced to - some display panels and a stuffed duck. She didn't want this to be all she could show her children in the years to come."
Anna comes across as having a wonderful attitude to life, living close to nature and in tune with the natural rhythms around her. The reader is impressed by how this ancient tradition still lives on.
The Place of Tides by James Rebanks, published (2024) by Penguin Books.

