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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, 26 April 2025

Coot chicks ahoy!


One of the strangest of the Spring chicks! Here young coots that have just left the nest are lovingly fed little bits of choice vegetation by both parents.







Location: the big pond at Dyrham Park just north of Bath. 

Monday, 31 March 2025

Out in the Spring Marshes

 


Some Spring-time views from Ham Wall - an RSPCA reserves in the Somerset levels and famous for its reed beds, and population of bitterns, which could be heard booming sonorously in the background hidden well out of sight. Marsh harriers could be seen flying low and fast over the reeds.  Here are some images - 

Great egret

Cormorants drying their wings.

Sleeping mute swans - is that a nest?

Egret high overhead.

A great crested grebe

A surprise sighting - a glossy ibis. Apparently there are a handful visiing the reserve at the moment.

A grebe inspecting the nest during the change-over of parents.


A coot taking nesting material to its nest.


Sunday, 2 March 2025

Badger snacking!



Hello badger. It's a very cold and frosty night on the cusp of Spring but badger continues to come out, although not every night, and here in the last snippet of film, you will see she is not alone.








Wednesday, 22 January 2025

A short swan saga

It is a crisp January afternoon and I am admiring the view across the Dunedas aquaduct looking at the woodlands beyond as the sun starts to set.

 

Two young swans - still with some of their juvenile grey feathers - rush by swimmng fast.


Hard on the youngster's feathery heels are two adults. Their wings arched up in full threat posture.

Arched wings.



Once the juveniles are successfully chased around the curve and beyond what we can now assume is a boundary of the adults territory, they relax and turn around. 


They quietly swim back across the narrow aquaduct and into the even narrower channel that leads to what is left of the old Somerset Coal Canal.



Hopefully, come the Spring this bonded-pair will make a nest and produce some cygnets of their own, which later in the year they will also chase away.