I still have memory flashes, moments when a scene from my past suddenly explodes into my consciousness, like a great rocket illuminating the dark ramblings of my mind. I have fewer, which is a shame as these pictures are of special places, so I try to hold on to them as they fade, then perhaps spend a few minutes hunting to see if I have any photographs of the place that might help recall that moment.
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
A Memory
Monday, June 8, 2026
In The Garden
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Sonny
We were thrilled this morning to wake up to find our new rabbit back on the path below the sitting-room window, enjoying a breakfast of grass and clover.
He's now established here so we felt we ought to give him a name. Following readers' suggestions on last Thursday's post we have decided to call him Sungura Secundus, sungura being KiSwahili for rabbit and secundus being Latin for second - so,'Second Rabbit', or Sonny for short.
A Deserted Beach
So we are fortunate to live so near the Littleferry beach: it's an impressive swathe of sand and usually as deserted of humans as any comparable tropical beach - today we saw just three people walking their dogs - but we do like beaches to have some wildlife along their shores.
Our local beaches' lack of life is depressing and concerning. If you search this picture you will find three gulls; and a few gulls were all we saw in the time we spent on the beach. The only other wildlife of note was, along the high-tide line, a line of corpses of........dozens of small moon jellyfish.So we left the beach and wandered across the links where the northern marsh orchids are putting on their annual display. This year the flower-heads are smaller, and some areas have no orchids at all, but the hundreds of flowers are impressive.We were also pleased to find that, in the coniferous woodland along the back of the links, the creeping lady's tresses were about to flower.The links also had a few fungi on display, the best being this large common puffball.
On our way back to the car we diverted from the path to see if the dragon- or damselflies were active on Loch Unes but an air temperature of 15C is obviously a bit too chilly for them.
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Yellows
My return journey took me past the lower rabbit field where....
....a rabbit collective has developed a warren in the middle of the field. It would seem to me that the rabbits feeding here are wide open to attack by the buzzards and kites that are nesting in the pine plantation not two hundred metres away, but perhaps a wise bunny has negotiated some sort of agreement with the local raptors.Friday, June 5, 2026
Hut Circle: A Last Visit
As I approached home this bird met me with an explosion of song, which enabled the Merlin app to identify it as a male blackcap - which, in its excitement, was hopping around too much for a good picture.
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Another Rabbit
Before Tsuro's sad death I had seen two rabbits of about the right proportions feeding on the grass at the front of the houses in our road. This was late in the evening, around 10pm, when it's still very light here. So I'd like to think that this is Tsuro's friend.
We thought this might be a one-off visit as he was disturbed by the builders working next door, but he was back this morning so, maybe, we have a new resident rabbit. The next thing we'll need is a name for him.