While the male sparrowhawk was a fairly frequent visitor to our garden this was the first time we'd seen the female.
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Two Hunters
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Storm
Last Thursday night and into the early hours of Friday morning, ir rained heavily enough to cause the local burns to flood, if only for a few hours before the thirsty soil sponged up the precious water. The rain was very welcome but the accompanying vicious lightning and thunder was not, the strikes putting out the lights and knocking out much of the village’s broadband for several hours. Our broadband seems to have been one of several in the community affected for we lost our router, and the 4G network here is so poor that we were unable to use it unless we sat in one of the better spots - which in our case was the balcony. Hence, with apologies, the sudden lack of posts on this blog.
The rain, about 24mm of it, has done wonders for the garden, and our resident rabbits - yes, we now have rabbits rather than a solitary rabbit - have been making the most of it. We now have a larger rabbit, presumably the mother, and….I keep saying how worried I am. This lack of butterflies is unnatural.
Thursday, June 25, 2026
A Coast Path Walk
....the first common blues of the year, some of them....startlingly blue, and....We also found this butterfly. I'm not sure what it is, perhaps a grayling or a rather worn painted lady..
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
The Bar
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
A Fine Weather Walk
The second 'first' of the year followed shortly afterwards, a first dragonfly which passed me too quickly to identify it beyond saying that was a hawker. However, a few minutes later....
The bell heather is just coming into flower, as is the cross-leaved heath, joining........the northern marsh orchids in a fine display of shades of purple.
Monday, June 22, 2026
A Walk to the Village
Just beyond the fungi, and still in the plantation, we almost trod on....
....what I think was a wood mouse - also called a field mouse. Since it was in the middle of a mountain bike track we persuaded it to move away into the undergrowth.From the pines our path enters Speckled Wood, so called because, in normal times, it is an ideal home for a large population of speckled wood butterflies - but times are not normal, and we hadn't seen a butterfly here from some weeks.Happily, that changed....
....for we found a good dozen of these very understated butterflies on the wing, mostly chasing each other - I assume to catch up on what must be a very late breeding season.Sunday, June 21, 2026
Low Tide at Littleferry
If the number and variety of birds we saw was a bit disappointing, the exceptions were....
....a few dozen eider, mostly juveniles, and two........fluffy wader chicks whose plaintive peepings brought........mum hurrying over to try to attract us away - at which point we retreated and continued our walk.Wandering back over the links, enjoying seeing the ground covered with wildflowers, we finally managed to persuade a six-spotted burnet moth to sit still enough to have its picture taken.As if this were not enough, we spotted....
....the white bell heather plant which we found two or three years ago and then 'lost' until today.White heather is supposed to be lucky. In this portrait my grandfather, George Wilson, has a spray of white heather in his buttonhole, the picture presumably taken on one of his Highland walking holidays when he was 'home' on leave from Burma.