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.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Encounters
The lack of butterflies is upsetting as we've spent the last two years planting this garden so it would attract insects. At the moment we have a variety of flowers available including pansy, aquilegia, kale, clover, lupin, raspberry, blackcurrant, buttercup, gorse, bugle, strawberry, a beautiful pink-flowered hawthorn.... I could go on and on.
Yet, so far, this has been a dismal year for butterflies. We are now into the official British 'summer' so, with this in mind, I took a walk this morning with Mrs MW to see if our local 'hardiest' butterfly, the speckled wood, was on the wing in Speckled Wood....
....which it wasn't, probably because the air temperature sat at a miserable 15C, the grass and leaves were damp, and the sun was obscured by blanket of low cloud which spasmodically delivered a thin drizzle.Thankfully, the walk did produce a few moments of real pleasure as....
....just past Speckled Wood the path skirts a large field beyond which lie the railway line and the village - and in the middle of the field, despite the human noise, which included the heavy traffic on the A9, a........roe deer hind was enjoying breakfasting on the farmer's lush pasture.The deer knew I was there. She knew, I suppose, that if I had a dog with me the dog couldn't get to where she was. And perhaps the deer has been photographed before because she didn't seem in the slightest worried by my antics in trying to digitally capture her.
Then, in just one place in a clearing in the dark Scots pine plantation, I stumbled across a mass of white flowers of the........delicate wood sorrel. Beautiful!Monday, June 1, 2026
A New Visitor
With the weather so dull we didn't expect to see much insect life beyond a few bumblebees, flies and hover flies but were surprised to spot, and fail to photograph, a painted lady. Why an incomer painted lady should be so much more resilient to the weather than the locals is a bit of a mystery to me.
So, disappointed, we walked back to the car through the Dunrobin Castle woods rather than along the shore, to be overwhelmed by the brilliance of the greens of the deciduous trees and the chorus of bird song - blackbird, song thrush, robin, wren, chaffinch, willow warbler, chiffchaff and, for a change, a spotted flycatcher.We returned to a rabbit-less garden which, yesterday evening, had a new and very welcome visitor....
....a great spotted woodpecker attracted to the peanuts.This is a visitor whom we'd love to see frequently.Sunday, May 31, 2026
Loch Treig
There was a price to pay: the rising waters submerged the hamlets of Kinlochtreig and Creaguaineach at the loch's southern end, the West Highland Line had to be diverted, and an ancient drovers' road was lost. The scheme had a long-term effect as water was also taken from many local streams so they now run with much lower volumes; the Spean has suffered from this.
Saturday, May 30, 2026
Purple & Yellow
This was disappointing but the other wildflowers made up for it, in particular....
....the brilliant purples of the wild thyme which, along with the bright yellows of the eggs-and-bacon plants, seemed to be enjoying a good year.Friday, May 29, 2026
Tsuro
Imagine then our distress when, on Tuesday afternoon, we found....
....a small body laid out on our garden terrace.We're not 100% certain that it was Tsuro, nor could we work out how the rabbit died, as there was no sign of wounds or of disease. We have had myxomatosis in the area before but rabbits which die from that horrible disease tend to have weepy eyes, and this little corpse look remarkably healthy.
We gave him a decent burial in a place where his nutrients will, in due course, benefit the garden which he so much enjoyed; and, while we're hoping that this wasn't Tsuro and that he'll suddenly reappear, we're also on the lookout for a small rabbit to take his place.