Wednesday, December 31, 2008
New Year's Eve
a star to guide us by, Venus sitting by the newish moon, maybe this conjunction indicates next year will be a happier one for us all
Labels:
scenic
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
more red things
is it midday in Penzance, or New York? The end of a cold fine day is marked by a misty surreal sunset (much the same as last year at this time). Even though I am not that old, I reckon that in my lifetime winter has become very dry, and we have a new season, the monsoon season, that runs from May to September.
Labels:
sunsets
Monday, December 29, 2008
Friday, December 26, 2008
this large grey heron was seen over Carthamartha fleeing the scene, but I doubt that herons top and tail fish, I am sure they swallow them whole
Labels:
birds
Harriet finds her Christmas lunch
Harriet found and consumed the head of a salmon, and then found the tail about a mile away and consumed that on the way home. No fish as big as this swims in the Inny (it would run aground). All sorts of explanations spring to mind, but I think the most likely explanation is that someone had salmon for Christmas Eve supper, and something has scavenged the remains. Fox? No waste around here.
Labels:
dogs,
Inny valley
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
at the rock face
intricate and mysterious imagery from the quarry at Kit Hill. It looks like a natural (wild) version of a Japanese garden, or vice versa
Sunday, December 14, 2008
a welcome visitor
a goldfinch, fat from eating thistle seed, pausing to pose. A fugitive from the flock.
Labels:
birds
Thursday, December 11, 2008
the evidence accumulates
four days later the twig is bare, not a sign of a fungus or lichen. It was a cold morning but not frosty. It seems increasingly likely to me that this is ice, but I am puzzled why we only see it in areas of deciduous wood, and why I have never seen ice in this form before. A question for the New Scientist
Sunday, December 07, 2008
ice fungus
at almost the same time of year last year, and under similar very frosty conditions, we found these peculiar looking excrescences on dead twigs and branches in the woods (see link for more pictures). It puzzled me at the time that I could not find anything remotely similar in the (many) reference books in Spot's library when it was so very distinctive. After much searching, we have found a similar picture on Google images, at the University of British Columbia botanical forum (link). There it is suggested that this is in fact ice, not a fungus at all. This is certainly consistent with its sporadic nature in cold weather, and it looks just like wispy snow. Can this be true? If so, finding it out is yet another demonstration of the phenomenal information power of the internet, and Google in particular.
rapt attention
heavily disguised and almost invisible in the winter canopy, a buzzard watching Spot hare about in the early morning frost.
flocking together
I think the birds in the pages below may well be gulls, seen above today gathering in a field. The collective name for gulls, a flock, seems very appropriate.
Labels:
flora
Saturday, December 06, 2008
more mooning about
flocks of large birds flying south, in great wide V's, plus the occasional straggler("wait for me"). It is difficult to identify them, possibly curlews. They came in wave after wave, like images from world war 2.
Monday, December 01, 2008
Jupiter, Venus and Us
I know, it just looks black but there is Jupiter, Venus (below the moon) and the moon hanging out together, setting over our little village. I knew there was something strange going on up there. Thanks to Spike and the Laurel Cottage crew for pointing out this wonderful spectacle.
Labels:
interestingthings
an old bridge
an interesting relic ... these pictures show the remnants of an old bridge of some sort. The stone footings suggest it must have been quite substantial at one time although as far as I can tell there is no bridge marked on the OS map at this point. It is in the deepest part of the woods and looks more than the work of a few boys having fun.
Labels:
Inny valley
more progress at Beal's Mill
and now the joists are up, and the new flood barrier is looking good. New owners' daughter was almost swallowed up by the mud but was rescued with the loss of only one boot.
Labels:
BealsMill
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