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earthstar

~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Category Archives: nature

November on the Ely embankment

30 Thursday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay, Coot, Ely embankment, Lesser black-backed gull, Linnet, long-tailed tit, Redshank, River Ely, Rock pipit, Turnstone

171130 9th Ely embankment

The 9th of November was a ‘5 Turnstone, 2 Rock pipit, 1 Grey wagtail’ kind of day at Cardiff Bay, with a cool wind blowing through huge banks of clouds and the odd rain shower. That didn’t deter the birds browsing along the embankment edge though.

171130 9th rock pipits (1)
171130 9th rock pipits (2)

On the 15th, a beautifully marked Song thrush was feasting on berries in the small front garden of one of the apartments that sits on the edge of the embankment (see Berries and Birds a few days ago), and, as well as 2 Rock pipits and 6 Turnstones, there were 3 Redshank grazing along the water’s edge – a nice treat. Also, a Lesser black-backed gull was looking exceedingly pleased with itself for finding a huge dead fish and vociferously defending its prize with loud screeching.

171130 15th redshank (1)
171130 15th redshank (2)

171130 15th LBB and fish

On the 17th – a ‘3 turnstone’ day – the star of the show was a lovely little Linnet. I’d seen a family party of parents and two fledglings grazing amongst the rocks here back in August so perhaps this bird was one of those.

171130 17th Linnet and turnstone
171130 17th Linnet

My last November wander by the Ely was on the 25th, when 3 Turnstones, 2 Linnets (nice to see them again), 2 Pied and 2 Grey wagtails, and 1 Redshank were joined by a Dunnock and a small flock of Long-tailed tits passing through the shrubs edging the walkway. Also, something freaked out a group of Coots and, rather than ‘run’ rapidly across the top of the water as they usually do, they actually flew. I’d never seen coots fly before.

171130 25th Long-tailed tit171130 25th Flying coots

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Wild Words: Rampike

29 Wednesday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in nature, trees

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#WildWords, dead tree, rampike, words about Nature

Rampike: Noun, meaning ‘A dead or dying tree, especially the bleached skeleton or bleached trunk of a tree killed by fire, lightning or wind; an upright stump, especially a burnt one’.

171129 rampike (1)

The Oxford Dictionary lists the word as being common in Irish English, English Regional, North American Regional, and Northern, though what Northern means is unclear. The rampikes in my photos are English (above) and Welsh (below).

171129 rampike (2)

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Leaf skeletons

28 Tuesday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, leaves, nature, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn leaves, skeleton leaf, skeleton leaves, veins in leaves

One of the things I love about this time of year is the way the substance of some leaves crumbles to reveal the complex structures of veins. Lacy, delicate, fragile.

171128 leaf skeletons (1)

Going, going, gone!

171128 leaf skeletons (2)
171128 leaf skeletons (3)
171128 leaf skeletons (4)
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Through a hedge, quietly

27 Monday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Green woodpecker, Picus viridis, woodpecker

171127 Green woodpecker (1)

My usual view of the Green woodpecker (Picus viridis) is a flash of its bright red Mohawk, bright green body and bright yellow rump as it rockets rapidly away from me. They are notoriously nervous birds and, as they usually feed on wide open expanses of grass – all the better to spot the dreaded photographer trying to creep up on them, they easily spot my clumsy attempts at stalking, and fly off at the drop of an ant. So, the few photos I’d managed to get were with my long lens on full zoom, with, invariably, the bird partly obscured by branches, twigs or long grass.

171127 Green woodpecker (3)

Until last Friday that is…. I was enjoying a wander at Cosmeston, when, having already unsuccessfully stalked one bird, I spotted another in a different field. This time, this woodpecker was completely occupied with poking in the damp soil for ants, and I was on a footpath behind a hedge. I moved to the grassy verge, took care not to step on anything that might crack or rustle, and kept my head down. If the bird looked up, I froze until it got back to its digging. There weren’t many gaps in the hedge so I still couldn’t get very clear or very close shots but I am still ridiculously pleased to have got these couple.

171127 Green woodpecker (4)171127 Green woodpecker (5)

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Berries full to bursting

26 Sunday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, plants, wildflowers, winter

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Tags

autumn colour, Black bryony, British flora, bryony, poisonous berries, red berries, Tamus communis, winter colour

The name ‘bryony’ is entirely appropriate for this plant as it comes from the Greek word bruein which, apparently, means ‘to be full to bursting’. However, though the berries of Black bryony (Tamus communis) are cherry-red and luscious-looking, please don’t be tempted to eat them as they are deadly poisonous.

171126 Black bryony berries (2)

There are, in fact, two plants with the bryony name in Britain, White bryony and Black, but they are not part of the same plant family. Rather surprisingly, Black bryony is the only member of the yam family to grow here but, again, don’t be tempted to eat its roots. In spring and summer, Black bryony’s long tangling vines can be found rambling over, under and through the shrubs and bushes of hedgerows and scrub-lands, and in autumn and winter, though the heart-shaped leaves brown and drop, the masses of red berries brighten up the countryside for many months.

171126 Black bryony berries (3)
171126 Black bryony berries (1)
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Berries and birds

25 Saturday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, birds, nature, plants

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

autumn berries, berries, berries and birds, berry eating birds, birding, birdwatching, Song thrush, thrush

In recent days, on my regular walks, whether in suburban streets or in the local parks and nature reserves, wherever I see berries there are birds, usually thrushes, gobbling down as many berries as they can find.

171125 Thrush and berries (1)

A Song thrush found its golden treasure trove in a tiny, but well-planted-for-wildlife garden amongst the apartments of Penarth Marina, and, below, this thrush, at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, looked to have chosen a berry far too big for its beak but it persevered and, eventually, by applying a little pressure to squash the berry a fraction, down the hatch it went.

171125 Thrush and berries (2)

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Collared earthstars

24 Friday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

British fungi, Cathays Cemetery, collared earthstar, earthstar, fungus, Geastrum triplex

You can’t have a blog named Earthstar without including, every now and then, a few photos of the Earthstar fungi for which it was named. I was pleased to see this little colony of Collared earthstars (Geastrum triplex) in Cardiff’s Cathays Cemetery is still thriving.

171124 Collared earthstars (2)
171124 Collared earthstars (4)
171124 Collared earthstars (1)
171124 Collared earthstars (3)
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Glorious mud

23 Thursday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in geology, nature

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Tags

Barrage mud, Cardiff Barrage, Cardiff mud, mud

‘Mud, mud, glorious mud
Nothing quite like it for cooling the blood
So follow me follow, down to the hollow
And there let me wallow in glorious mud.’

171123 mud

I never saw Cardiff Bay before the Barrage was built in the 1990s but, from photos I’ve seen, I believe much of the foreshore was a lot like this, as much of the coastline to the east of Cardiff still is.

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Wild words: feuillemort

22 Wednesday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, leaves, nature, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#WildWords, autumn colour, autumn leaves, dyling leaf, Feuillemort

Feuillemort: adjective, meaning ‘having the colour of a dying leaf’, from the French feuille morte, meaning dead leaf.

171122 Feuillemort (1)
171122 Feuillemort (2)
171122 Feuillemort (3)
171122 Feuillemort (4)
171122 Feuillemort (5)
171122 Feuillemort (6)
171122 Feuillemort (7)
171122 Feuillemort (8)
171122 Feuillemort (9)
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Wildflowers at Barry Docks

21 Tuesday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Barry Docks, British wildflowers, Common toadflax, Daisy, Hemp agrimony, Hoary mustard, Ragwort, Red valerian, scabious, Wild parsnip, wildflowers, Yellow-wort

I caught the train to Barry Docks last Friday, hoping to get a good look at an uncommon bird (a Great northern diver) that had been making itself at home there for the previous week or so.

171121 Barry Docks

Unfortunately, the bird spent most of the two hours I was there happily swimming and diving several hundred yards away on the other side of the dock, but it was a gloriously sunny day and I did find lots of lovely wildflowers still in bloom around the edge of the docks so I was happy.

171121 Ragwort sp
171121 Red valerian
171121 Common toadflax
171121 Scabious sp
171121 Daisy
171121 Yellow-wort
171121 Cow parsley
171121 Bindweed sp
171121 Sow-thistle sp
171121 Wild parsnip
171121 Hoary mustard
171121 Hemp agrimony
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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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