Sunday, March 25, 2012
sea side flowers
Sea campion is a close relative of red campion and has the same pattern of five deeply divided petals.
Dogviolets are hardy plants that will grow almost anywhere.
Thrift is a sea side specialist and loves these barren rocky and salty places.
Cormorant at Downderry
we have several Kurt Jackson paintings (from a time when he was very inexpensive) but he didn't paint this one
Labels:
roundandabout
Saturday, March 24, 2012
the world is alive with the sound of living
Life is stirring; the air is buzzing with the hum of bumble bees and hoverflies, brimstones, peacocks and commas are emerging, celandines, daffodils, wood anemones and dog violets are in flower, long tailed tits, wrens, robins, great tits are singing out, buzzards are pairing up by soaring on Spring thermals, the fish were leaping out of the water. Spring.
One thing I have noticed is that the first butterflies to emerge in early Spring are much more frisky and easily unsettled than later in the year and therefore harder to photograph. This is surprising given that it remains quite cool especially in the morning. It may be because as there are fewer of them at this time of year they are more conspicuous targets for birds and other predators, so it pays to be more agile.
wood anemone
comma and celandine
robin singing his socks off
Labels:
birds,
butterflies,
flora,
Inny valley,
Spring
Monday, March 19, 2012
Tutwell
the little hamlet of Tutwell, where Uncle Max was born, Dartmoor in the distance. Tutwell sits on the top of the Tamar valley. In the panorama below it is to the left, and a little hamlet called Townlake in Devon on the other side of the valley is visible to the right. As usual the photo has suffered from making it fit onto the blog page!
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