Friday, April 12, 2013
oil beetle
we seem to be a local hot spot for the violet oil beetle. It likes this habitat of grass, wild flowers and leaf mould to be found on the edge of glades and woody hedgerows. This is a male, and he was warming up in the sun. Given their very complicated life cycle (qv, and link) it is amazing that they seem so common around here.
Labels:
insect life
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Pest (or pet), the lack of growth in the grass is driving the local warren inhabitants back into our gardens.
Labels:
wildlife
getting together
birds are busy pairing up ready for the breeding season. Male and female robins look very similar. They pair up in late winter/early spring. The female chases the male until he accepts her but then he cements the relationship by feeding her, often on the ground. Male and female bullfinches are strikingly different and much more secretive. They are described as 'sedentary' and rarely move far from their local patch.
Saturday, April 06, 2013
Thursday, April 04, 2013
more excitement
first it's long tailed tits, and then it's red wings in the paddock. They are another of our winter migrant visitors, and normally they have left for Scandinavia by April. The cold dry weather seems to be upsetting these natural rhythms but enhancing the bird watcher's daily enjoyment.
Labels:
birds
relativity goes tits up
Our neighbours all report seeing long tailed tits regularly in their gardens but they seem to avoid our feeders (too full of hungry sparrows?) so it was very pleasing to see one (on the frozen apple tree) for the first time today.
two suggested universal laws of nature:-
1. Buy any garden furniture or barbecue equipment after 1st March and it will rain incessantly until September.
2. Put some fertiliser and weed killer on a grass lawn and it will not rain again for several months.
Clearly these two laws must interact, and this would suggest that you should only buy garden furniture a day or so after fertilising the lawn, or conversely fertilising the lawn several hours after buying garden furniture. This may be one of those higher dimensional problems with a solution in an alternative universe.
Labels:
birds,
philosophy,
weather
Tuesday, April 02, 2013
idyllic days
some days seem just perfect and today was one of those days, the ducks on the Venterdon duck pond overlooked by a bank of daffodils, primroses and celandine, and (below) a squadron of fieldfares taking off. They are winter visitors and will soon be off to their breeding grounds in southern central Europe.
Monday, April 01, 2013
what shall I eat next
one of my favourite things! The arrival of a female woodpecker in the garden suggests we might see some more soon.
Labels:
birds
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Easter primroses
these primroses, in a small patch on the road into our village, are an unusually rich buttery yellow (compared with the normal pale yellow see post below)
Labels:
flora
four for a boy
In addition to all the other birds a group of magpies have started hanging around. I am not quite sure what they are up to, (courting?), but usually it is trouble.
Labels:
birds
Friday, March 29, 2013
at the Venterdon motorway service station
It has been a hectic Good Friday get away at the bird feeders this afternoon. I don't know whether there is a specific collective noun for green finches but a gang of them (holiday makers, I suspect) descended on the garden and proceeded to harass the locals. There is definitely something in the air today (snow?) that is exciting our avian visitors.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
primroses!
Upon this Primrose hill,
Where, if Heav'n would distil
A shower of rain, each several drop might go
To his own primrose, and grow manna so;
And where their form and their infinity
Make a terrestrial Galaxy,
As the small stars do in the sky:
Where, if Heav'n would distil
A shower of rain, each several drop might go
To his own primrose, and grow manna so;
And where their form and their infinity
Make a terrestrial Galaxy,
As the small stars do in the sky:
from a poem by John Donne
worm hunting
One of the pair of mistle thrushes that has decided to nest in our garden. They hunt like blackbirds, occasionally cocking an ear to the ground to listen for grubs or worms. They have a very easy to recognise alarm call that sounds like a loud rattle .... brrrrrrrrrrrrrrr which sums up the weather as well.
Labels:
birds
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
late opening
well, something is trying to get out and pretend it's Spring. And what about this for an amazing discovery in the parish (link to Old School News, Stoke Climsland, April 2013). Can't get enough of old bones myself.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
picked clean
this is the skull and upper jaw of a female fallow deer. The teeth are incredibly sharp, just right for chewing bark off trees. Harriet found this trophy and then demolished it.
Labels:
deer
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Friday, March 15, 2013
light in the lanes
Storm clouds ahead on a sunny evening. We are lingering somewhere between Winter and Spring. When Spring finally comes it is going to be short and very energetic and everything will be out at the same time, more like North America than our usual languid season.
Labels:
lanes
Sunday, March 10, 2013
squeezed out
One indignant goldfinch unable to get to the nyger seed feeder because of a pair of hungry bullfinches. This may be the same pair who bred successfully somewhere in the garden last year
Labels:
birds
Saturday, March 09, 2013
camellia time
much later than some years but about the same time as last year the camellia is a welcome sign that the plants are stirring.
Friday, March 08, 2013
des res Cornwall part 2
I am not sure what is going on with our house sparrows but they seem to be jostling for squatters' rights.
Wednesday, March 06, 2013
on a happier note
hellebore (green I think rather than stinking which is supposed to have a crimson border to the flower, but it looks more yellow than green (!)) brightening up the junction by the duckpond.When I last photographed this plant in 2008 (see link) I thought it was the stinking variety. It shows how variable plants can be in their appearance.
Monday, March 04, 2013
a waste of Spring
Sadly, flowers are not the only things to be found growing in the lanes. These waste tips have appeared by the side of Rowden lane, a bridle path. It is not easy to access this area and it must take some effort to get a trailer loaded with rubbish here and dump it, why not use that effort to get rid of the waste legally? I have made this point before several times (to no avail of course); it is so sad to see the countryside abused and violated in this way.
Labels:
rubbish
Sunday, March 03, 2013
Cornish daffodils
The recent cold dull weather has brought Spring to a grinding halt, but here and there are signs of the slow emergence of the first of our native harbingers of Spring. In the river valleys locally these slender and very beautiful little native daffodils are just starting to flower. Plus common dog.
Labels:
flora,
Inny valley
Monday, February 25, 2013
these childish things
Labels:
interestingthings
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Downhouse
despite the cold weather the crocuses at Downhouse are making a fine display this year mixed in with snowdrops, and daffodils yet to flower.
Labels:
flora
Friday, February 22, 2013
no spots on my D600 (yet)
rooks and starlings swarm over a field where muck has been spread, giving the impression of a very spotty CCD.
Labels:
birds
Thursday, February 21, 2013
a day at St Ives
We went to an exhibition of William Scott at the Tate modern, St Ives (see link) and quite unexpectedly enjoyed the brilliant photographs of Peter Fraser, of which these are not examples, but very much in tribute to him.
Labels:
roundandabout
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
des res
one bedroom, much sought after location, near popular restaurant, safe for children, must see now, viewing by appointment only.
I need somewhere bigger than that
Monday, February 18, 2013
Inny valley
the Inny valley in late winter, showing the gentle slopes down to the river. The sun is out and the sheep are grazing.
Labels:
Inny valley
Sunday, February 17, 2013
purple nuns
even earlier than usual purple toothwort makes its annual appearance in the woods by the Inny
and an ambi-otic collie (Meg) making a guest appearance
Labels:
dogs,
flora,
Inny valley
Saturday, February 16, 2013
a little poppet
A meadow pipit in the grassy terrain they like, showing the slender beak and pale eye markings typical of this common but restless bird.
Labels:
birds
Friday, February 15, 2013
mist in the valley
Oh what a beautiful morning,
Oh what a beautiful day,
I've got a wonderful feeling,
Everything's going my way
Oh what a beautiful day,
I've got a wonderful feeling,
Everything's going my way
Labels:
scenic
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
which one?
We have a mistle thrush in the garden which likes to sing from the top of the tallest tree. They are described as greyish looking birds which makes me wonder if this is a song thrush with its warmer brown colouring. How do you tell?
Labels:
birds
Monday, February 11, 2013
Thursday, February 07, 2013
Old Mill
This used to be a quiet wooded valley full of larch! Anyone who knows this area would be hard pushed to recognise the dam below Old Mill from this picture.
Labels:
woods
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