Spring is taking its time. It seems in no hurry this year, as if it knows that winter still has a bite - so we've only now found the first dog violets growing on a sunny bank and....
Thursday, April 16, 2026
A Slow Spring
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
A Hut Circle
The circle is covered in dead bracken at this time of year but it's clearly visible in this picture with the two gorse bushes on its far side. The circular wall is 1.5m thick and the internal diameter about 10m, making the hut's total diameter about 13m. Considering it may be two to three millennia old, it's in very good condition.
One thing that's remarkable about these iron-age houses is that their builders made no attempt to conceal them, preferring to choose a site with a good view. It would, therefore, have been visible from miles away. This suggests that, at the time they were built, the world was an unusually peaceful place.I have written about our previous visit to the site here.
Monday, April 13, 2026
Tiger Country
I often bemoan the increasing scarcity of our larger wildlife, such as deer, foxes, pine martens, badgers and, now, rabbits, so this beetle was a timely reminded that there's plenty of excitement still to be found amongst the multitude of much smaller species which inhabit even gorse heathland - like this beautiful insect.
Sunday, April 12, 2026
An Adventure
Saturday, April 11, 2026
The Dark Woods
....along the edges of the forestry where some of the gorse is in flower, as it has been for much of the winter. In the woods themselves I spotted just one dandelion in bloom. One.
That said, the forestry was, despite a bitingly cold wind, full of the songs of small birds but....
....seeing them, let alone taking a picture of them, was difficult: in this photo there is a very excited male goldcrest but please don't ask me exactly where.So there had to be something important to draw us in to the unwelcoming environment of these woods and that was, of course....
....the annual return of the ospreys, there being four nests around the shores of Loch Fleet.From meeting acquaintances on recent walks who have seen them we know that some are back from western Africa. The occupants of this nest, the one that's most accessible to us, have been seen but they weren't at home today, though we thought we heard them calling.
So we'll have to return to the dark woods....
Thursday, April 9, 2026
The Boiled Frog
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Roe Encounter
A couple of weeks back we saw three roe deer moving up through the bracken under the trees but they were in too much of a hurry for a photograph but I was thrilled today when....
....this roe deer seemed in no hurry to hide, giving me plenty of opportunity to capture the first pictures of one of these delicate animals since August last year.When we first came to Golspie we used to see red deer on the moorland above the forestry but they were culled when the estate fenced the area and planted trees, so the roe deer are now the largest mammal in these woodlands and a symbol of Scotland's shrinking wilderness.