Sunday, April 13, 2008

Tamar views 2


the Tamar in its valley, meandering eastwards, view towards Lamerhooe, Dartmoor in the far distance.

fighting sparrow

this house sparrow (grey cap on brown head) has caught his reflection in the window and is getting very cross at his doppelganger's assertive behaviour.

more marsh marigolds


a much better picture of this brilliant yellow flower. This is a large specimen with many stamens. For folklore see earlier page

Saturday, April 12, 2008

mayflowers are back


in the week that we have been away the first of the mayflowers or cuckoo flowers have appeared. This pretty little flower has many common names including cuckoo flower, milkmaid and Our Lady's smock. Its first full flowering is commonly regarded as an accurate predictor of the arrival of the cuckoo itself. Richard Mabey, in Flora Britannica, suggests smock may have been slang for "a bit of skirt" and was suggestive of what went on in Spring meadows. Locally there is a variant complex double flowered variety (see previous page for more pictures and discussion, and link for a Spring song). Apart from its association with ancient patterns of human fertility, it was also believed in some places that anyone who picked the plant would be bitten by an adder, or that your house would be struck by lightning if you brought it indoors (are these metaphors for pregnancy?).

Rezare


the small village of Rezare, overlooking the Inny valley, just before a hail storm.

demolition works 2


More progress down at Beals Mill (see previous page)I am going to suggest to our parish council that it is renamed No Mill.