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~ a celebration of nature

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Author Archives: sconzani

Shaggy inkcaps

19 Wednesday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British fungi, Coprinus comatus, inkcaps, Lawyer's wig, Shaggy inkcap

They might look sturdy but these Shaggy inkcaps (Coprinus comatus) from yesterday’s walk would probably be gone if I had walked this way again today. You can see the taller one in the centre has already turned to mush, in the process producing a black ink that some people use for their artworks (see, for example, this work by Jo Brown, who creates amazing art inspired by fungi, and the rest of the natural world).

221019 shaggy inkcap

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Red-backed shrike

18 Tuesday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn migration, bird migration, birding, birdwatching, British birds, butcher bird, Lanius collurio, Red-backed shrike, red-listed birds

Shrikes are known as butcher birds, perhaps because of their powerful hooked beaks, more likely because of their tendency to create larders by impaling excess prey on spikes in trees and bushes. I have previously seen a distant Great grey shrike but last Sunday I had the opportunity to watch my very first Red-backed shrike at fairly close quarters, and what a stunning bird it is!

221018 red-backed shrike (a)

The Red-backed shrike (Lanius collurio) was once a reasonably common bird in southern England but, like so many British birds that have suffered from habitat decline, it is now classified as red-listed. And, though it’s thought one or two pairs still breed in England each year, these birds are mostly seen on passage, migrating to their northern breeding grounds in May-June, then heading to their over-wintering grounds in southern Africa between August and October.

221018 red-backed shrike (b)

When I was reading up about these birds, I discovered a 2018 article on the Bird Guides website, reporting on the altitudes reached by migrating birds, which noted that, from Sweden (one of the countries where these birds breed), the Red-backed shrike ‘flies at up to 3,650 metres. Both individuals [the other bird was the Great reed warbler] flew the highest above ground across the Mediterranean Sea and the Sahara, but the shrike also reached high flight altitudes closer to its winter grounds in southern Africa.’ It seems incredible to me that the small bird I saw sitting in a tree amongst the sand dunes at Kenfig National Nature Reserve would soon be flying up to 3 kilometres high in the sky over southern Africa!

221018 red-backed shrike (c)

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Three Little egrets

17 Monday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Little egret

Three Little egrets standing on a wall
Three Little egrets standing on a wall
And if one Little egret should suddenly fly away
There’d be two Little egrets – that would still make my day!

Apologies for the poor rhyme. I still find it amazing to see such exotic-looking birds in a local Welsh setting but their numbers are certainly increasing. These were on the banks of Llanishen Reservoir in north Cardiff last Thursday.

221017 little egrets

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Autumn crocus

16 Sunday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn colour, Autumn crocus, autumn flowers, Colchium autumnale

I simply couldn’t resist the way the sunlight was illuminating these Autumn crocus flowers (Colchium autumnale). They looked almost translucent, ethereal, celestial, sublime.

221016 autumn crocus

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Ms Gadwall finds a friend

15 Saturday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Gadwall

Do you remember my piece back in July about The Gadwall that thinks she’s a Mallard? Well, she’s back – or perhaps she’s been lingering unnoticed in the more sheltered spots around Cardiff Bay – and, though I still think she thinks she’s a Mallard, she now has a male Gadwall friend who’s trying to convince her otherwise.

221015 gadwalls (1)

Personally, I hope he succeeds, not from any notion that a pairing would somehow be romantic but rather because in the area where they are now several birds (and a large fish) have been found dead in recent weeks. This might be due to avian flu (it has been reported to the appropriate authorities) or it could be the poor water quality, but it would certainly be better for all the local ducks if they moved elsewhere.

221015 gadwalls (2)

The only positive thing about their location, in the old canals of Cardiff’s Atlantic Wharf area, is that you can get very close views. And so I couldn’t resist a visit, partly to say hello to Ms Gadwall again but also to get some good photographs of the drake.

221015 gadwalls (3)

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A single silent parrot

14 Friday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi

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Tags

British fungi, parrot waxcap, waxcap, waxcap fungi

Yesterday saw me back on my old stomping grounds in north Cardiff and along the way I popped in briefly to the new section of Cathays Cemetery. Although both the old and new sections of this huge cemetery are recognised hotspots for fungi and enjoy SSSI designation, the council chooses to ignore recommendations for the site’s management and so I have noted that with each passing year the quantity and diversity of fungi has declined. Though I didn’t linger long yesterday (it’s depressing to see the sparsity where once there was abundance), I did manage to find a single Parrot waxcap, saved from the strimmer’s plastic blade by its location between two old gravestones, stunning in its solitary beauty. If only this Parrot could scream ‘Save us!’ … but would anyone be listening?

221014 parrot waxcap

p.s. I have previously approached the council about their management of these places but, as is typical when I try to communicate reasonably with the various local authorities, their responses contain mostly excuses for their actions. They will not listen to the Parrot!

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Feed up, fly south

13 Thursday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

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Tags

British butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, ivy flowers, Red Admiral, Red admirals feeding on Ivy

It’s not only the birds that head south in the autumn. During a walk along the coastal path earlier this week, I noticed several Red admirals getting ready to migrate.

221013 red admiral (1)

Ivy flowers are essential for them at this time of year when they need to take on as many nutrients as possible before they take the big plunge and fly off over the cliffs, a feat that never ceases to amaze.

221013 red admiral (2)

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Winding down with waders, 3

12 Wednesday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, British waders, Dunlin

A single Dunlin, which appeared to fly in to the rocks at Newton Point with a flock of Ringed plovers, was my first sighting of this handsome wader species this year. Though initially standing alone on the quickly disappearing patch of sand at the base of the rocks, it soon moved on to a large rock to hunker down with the other roosting waders, the Turnstones, Ringed plovers and Sanderlings.

221012 dunlin

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Winding down with waders, 2

11 Tuesday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, British waders, Sanderling

Sanderlings are stunning small waders, usually hyperactive sand scurriers, though these particular beauties were trying to settle in for a night’s sleep. When splashed by a high wave from the incoming tide, they seemed almost to mutter crossly and fluttered forward to the next dry spot.

221011 sanderling (1)

These were my first Sanderling sightings for the year and an absolute joy to be near as they settled to roost, some just closing their eyes and hunching down, others tucking their heads under one wing. Watching these little waders winding down made me feel quite sleepy too.

221011 sanderling (2)

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Winding down with waders, 1

10 Monday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, British waders, coastal birding, Newton Point birding, watching waders

My Saturday was wonderful, a day’s birding along the Vale of Glamorgan coastline with my friend Della, checking clifftops for Choughs (unsuccessfully), stumbling over Stonechats along shorelines, scanning blue skies for Kestrels and Fulmar (the latter also unsuccessfully), hoping for (but not finding) the gold nuggets of Yellowhammers in hedgerows, nabbing a snippet of a Little owl in a crumbing barn roof.

221010 newton point birding

We wound down by watching waders settling in for the night at Newton Point. Arriving about two hours before high tide, we were able to find a couple of spots amongst the rocks where we could sit quietly, almost obscured from the birds, and watch their antics, listen to their chatter as the encroaching tide pushed the birds closer to us. It was the perfect end to a magical day (and I’ll share more about the birds tomorrow and Wednesday).

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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Recent blog posts

  • My first Holly blue April 10, 2026
  • Alder flies April 9, 2026
  • Lily beetle April 8, 2026
  • First bee-flies April 7, 2026
  • Bloody-nosed beetle April 6, 2026

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Unless otherwise acknowledged, the text and photographs on this blog are my own and are subject to international copyright. Nothing may be downloaded or copied without my permission.

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