Sadly, this morning's weather had deteriorated since yesterday, with a cold easterly blowing, the temperature not rising above 9C, and....
....all the sheep in the adjoining farmer's fields very firmly sitting down - a sign that they did not think things would improve.So I wrapped myself up in almost winter gear and set off on what has, in the past, always been a very frustrating walk. This gate is usually locked, preventing walkers from enjoying a circular route of about an hour - but today I found it unlocked. Better still, just in front of the gate were........about twenty primrose plants. Nowhere else on any of our walks round here have we seen any primroses in flower this spring, so there must be something very special about this spot.Then, to join the many birds singing, and despite the temperature, a cuckoo called, and continued to call along the Bheinn Bhraggie ridge for half an hour. It may well be that the timing is right for the cuckoos to exploit the willow warblers, which have been arriving in increasing numbers.
To my considerable surprise, as their eggs have, for some weeks, been covered in slimy brown silt, a whole mass of tadpoles have appeared in the small seep that runs out of the quarry above our house where, in previous years, we've also seen palmate newts.To complete a very enjoyable walk I found two rabbits in the Rabbit Field from which, over the winter, they had completely disappeared. The rabbits were some distance apart but I'm hoping that they'll manage to meet and re-fill the field with their families.