Two badgers come visiting. I think a boy and, very obviously a girl - and she, Fluffy Tail, looks very big of belly to me, so cubs are probably on the way!
About Me
- mrsimmondssays
- Live for today but work for everyone's tomorrow! Any views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of any organisation/institution I am affiliated with.
Saturday, 30 April 2016
Monday, 25 April 2016
Saturday, 23 April 2016
If you go down to the woods today....
If you go down to the woods today.... and you look up to the treetops you will find blossom, leaf buds bursting into brilliant green and, at this particular site, huge messy nests.
and woodpeckers, |
pretty epiphytic ferns |
views across the Somerset levels |
bluebells along the path |
wood anemones |
more bluebells |
herons on their ragged nests |
woodpeckers (and squirrels)
and also the diminutive wren. |
Today marks 400 years since the death of Shakespeare:
I know a bank whereon the wild thyme blows,
Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows,
Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,
(A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Act 2. Scene 1.)
Here is that same tiny woodland violet nodding in the wind four centuries on. |
Thursday, 21 April 2016
What's on the Rhine this lunchtime?
This is the 'White Whale' - a tour boat that celebrates the visit to the river many years ago by a beluga. |
The bigger boats come complete with living accommodation and on-roof parking. |
Monday, 18 April 2016
By the Rhine
First here are some German mallards (as back home they have paired off - the males are mate guarding).
But what is this funny little tuft of ginger fur....
Saturday, 9 April 2016
It's duckling time!
At first I thought that she was poorly.
She was sitting at the base of the old hollow tree with her wing at a funny angle and kept dozing off. (I started to plan what I might do with a sick duck: where I might be able to take her and, if that failed, where I might keep her - and whether my wildlife first aid guide covered ducks).
Then she woke up, shifted her position and a little head looked out from under her. Then another and suddenly there were half a dozen mini-mallards at her feet which she had been sitting on and shielding with her wings.
These are the first ducklings of the year down on the canal. A little while later they take to the water....
It's tough bringing up six - especially as a single parent - but the canal offers lots of little hiding places and even some handouts from the locals and visitors.
She was sitting at the base of the old hollow tree with her wing at a funny angle and kept dozing off. (I started to plan what I might do with a sick duck: where I might be able to take her and, if that failed, where I might keep her - and whether my wildlife first aid guide covered ducks).
A sick duck? |
Then she woke up, shifted her position and a little head looked out from under her. Then another and suddenly there were half a dozen mini-mallards at her feet which she had been sitting on and shielding with her wings.
The ducklings emerge |
It's tough bringing up six - especially as a single parent - but the canal offers lots of little hiding places and even some handouts from the locals and visitors.
Badger's back!
Despite a large building project to the back of the garden, there have been some suspicious little dents n the lawn, so I put out the camera trap for the first time this year.
And here is what it caught
The little dents in the lawn are 'whiffle holes' a characteristic sign of badger activity and indicating where they have located and extracted a worm.
And here is what it caught
It is very difficult to identify badgers as individuals or even to assign a gender but this does not seem to be the big old female who dominated the garden by the end of last year. This may, however, be one of last year's cubs. We shall keep watching.
The little dents in the lawn are 'whiffle holes' a characteristic sign of badger activity and indicating where they have located and extracted a worm.
Monday, 4 April 2016
Spring signals at Prior Park Garden
Snakeshead fritillary |
Prior Park Garden is an 18th century landscape garden run by the National Trust.
Here are some pictures from a little walk around it on a Springtime Sunday afternoon.
It famously sits on the steep slope below the grand mansion that was built as a model for the Georgian town of Bath, which it now looks down on.
Bath from the garden |
Prior Park Bridge - a folly that spans the lake. |
Leaves bursting from the sticky buds of the horse chestnut tree |
Primroses and violets |
A mute swan resting on her nest |
Very soundly asleep |
A European robin pauses in mid-song |
Prior Park bridge |
View from the bridge looking up at what is now Prior Park college |
Wild garlic in bloom - this is the main ground cover and comes complete with the scent of garlic! |
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