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.Saturday, June 20, 2026
Rabbit News
....in the two big rabbit fields just up the track from us, some of which are the ones with white patches around their shoulders, and in the verge of our road, where they're most active late in the evening, any one of which might well be Sonny. In any case, Sonny recently found himself with more food than he could possibly cope with when the house next door, which is nearing completion, had........the whole of its back garden laid to turf, so there is enough grass there to feed Sonny and a hundred of other rabbits.
Then, this morning....
....we found a new rabbit in our back garden, a very small rabbit which spent some time hopping round the place as if he was considering moving in. He's welcome, as long as his relatives don't all move in at the same time.Friday, June 19, 2026
Grey Skies
....this cross-leaved heath was an exception.This is yet another northern marsh orchid but it's significantly different from all the others in that it's growing in our garden. It's one of three we rescued from a neighbouring croft where the butler sink they were growing in was needed as a herb planter.
And, yes, the number of small birds coming into the garden to feast on the sunflower seeds does seem to have increased considerably since we lost our sparrowhawk.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Disaster!
Close readers of this blog will know that this sparrowhawk nearly died back in February when he collided with one of the glass panels which surround our balcony - see post here. Following that, we put decals on the glass and this seemed to have the desired effect - certainly the number of small birds braining themselves on the glass fell to almost zero.
Unfortunately, we didn't have quite enough decals to put on all the glass. We should have bought some more to put on the two remaining ones but the panels involved were furthest from where the small birds had their feeding station, so we left it.
This is the result.
Not everyone is in mourning but I feel deeply responsible for what has happened.