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earthstar

~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Category Archives: winter

2/365 Feeling guilty

02 Wednesday Jan 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, birds, nature, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, birding, birdwatching, British birds, British robin, robin, Robin Redbreast

Winter seems finally to have arrived and it was frosty when I arrived at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park early this morning, hoping for a nice long walk before the school holiday crowds arrived. Unfortunately, in my haste to leave home, I forgot to fill my seed container so had nothing to offer the hungry birds. This fluffed-up little Robin was not at all impressed.

190102 robin

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Everything has beauty

31 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in fungi, nature, winter

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

#7DaysofWildChristmas, beauty is everywhere, everything has beauty

181231 beauty is everywhere (1)

It was Confucius, I believe, who said ‘Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it’. Well, today, on the last day of my #7DaysofWildChristmas challenge and the last day of 2018, I bring you incontrovertible proof that beauty can be found anywhere. And I’m fairly positive not many people would have spotted this particular piece of gorgeousness.

181231 beauty is everywhere (2)
181231 beauty is everywhere (3)

Can you guess what it is?

181231 beauty is everywhere (4)

Need a clue? I was walking through the meadows at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park when I spotted this in the grass.

181231 beauty is everywhere (5)

It’s … mould growing on rabbit pooh! I presume the liquid droplets are dew rather than something that’s been produced by the mould … or the pooh, but I may be wrong about that. I think you will agree, however, that this is truly a beautiful thing to behold.

181231 beauty is everywhere (6)

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New Year Plant Hunt

30 Sunday Dec 2018

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

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

#7DaysofWildChristmas, #NewYearPlantHunt, British flora, New Year Plant Hunt, wildflowers in bloom, winter-blooming wildflowers

From 29 December to 1 January don’t be surprised if you see people taking photos of blooming wildflowers, puzzling over pictures in ID books, scratching their heads over the differences between one plant species and another. We are the New Year Plant Hunters, doing our best to find and identify as many wildflowers in bloom as possible throughout Britain to help the BSBI (Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland) keep track of what’s happening in the botanical world around us. And you can join in. Go for a walk, list what you find and submit your list on the BSBI website. So, for day 6 of my #7DaysofWildChristmas, I took myself on a walk around Penarth and was delighted to find these 27 species in bloom.

181230 bittercress sp
181230 black nightshade
181230 bramble
181230 buttercup sp
181230 cat's-ear
181230 common knapweed
181230 common ragwort
181230 daisy
181230 dove's-foot crane's-bill
181230 forget-me-not
181230 gorse
181230 groundsel
181230 herb robert
181230 ivy-leaved crowfoot
181230 mallow sp
181230 mayweed maybe
181230 radish sp
181230 red clover
181230 red dead-nettle
181230 red valerian
181230 shepherd's purse
181230 sow thistle
181230 spurge sp
181230 thistle sp
181230 unknown umbellifer
181230 winter heliotrope
181230 yarrow
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Under the log

29 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in fungi, insects, molluscs, nature, slugs, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#7DaysofWildChristmas, brain fungi, Catinella olivacea, Cogan Wood, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, earthworms, Harvestman, orange slime, slugs, snails, turning over logs, woodlice

The weather was back to grey and drizzly again today so I donned my wet weather gear and headed to Cogan Wood to spend part of day 5 of my #7DaysofWildChristmas challenge turning over a few rotten logs and branches. And what did I find lurking there?

Woodlice; snails both long and rotund; earthworms; luscious balls of orange slime; tiny globular balls that looked like the eggs of something or other; pale little lumps of White or Crystal brain fungi; slugs brown and black; a stripey legged Harvestman; miniscule white mushrooms adorned with drops of water; a young centipede or millipede – I can never be quite sure which is which; dark little cup fungi, black with olive rims (Catinella olivacea) – very pleased with that find; and various other things, the photographs of which were either out of focus or too grainy due to the poor light conditions in the woodland. There’s nothing quite like getting wild and muddy – it was fun!

181229 under the log (11)

181229 under the log (1)
181229 under the log (2)
181229 under the log (3)
181229 under the log (4)
181229 under the log (5)
181229 under the log (6)
181229 under the log (7)
181229 under the log (8)
181229 under the log (9)
181229 under the log (10)
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Wild Christmas, day 3

27 Thursday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in fungi, nature, walks, winter

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

bracket fungus, Cathays Cemetery, Clitocybe fungi, club fungus, coral fungus, earthstar, fungi foray, fungus, inkcap, mushroom, Redlead roundhead, waxcaps

I’m currently taking part in the local Wildlife Trusts’ #7DaysofWildChristmas challenge. This ‘is a week-long challenge to do one wild thing a day from the 25th to the 31st of December’. For me a challenge like this is easy peasy ’cause I try to live my whole life as one long wild challenge but I like to support these initiatives to help to inspire other people to put more Nature and wildness in their lives. Believe me, in a world as crazy as ours currently is, you will feel better for it.

For today’s challenge I spent about four hours at Cardiff’s Cathays Cemetery, hunting for fungi to photograph (not forage) in both the old and new sections of the cemetery. I figured that, after all the rain we’ve had recently, I should be able to find one or two nice things. I wasn’t disappointed.

181227 fungi foray (1)
181227 fungi foray (2)
181227 fungi foray (3)
181227 fungi foray (4)
181227 fungi foray (5)
181227 fungi foray (6)
181227 fungi foray (7)
181227 fungi foray (8)
181227 fungi foray (9)
181227 fungi foray (10)
181227 fungi foray (11)
181227 fungi foray (12)
181227 fungi foray (13)
181227 fungi foray (14)
181227 fungi foray (15)
181227 fungi foray (16)
181227 fungi foray (17)
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Christmas baubles

24 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in nature, plants, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

berries, fruit, hips, Nature's decorations, winter colour

Here are more of the beautiful ‘Christmas decorations’ currently adorning the otherwise-dreary December countryside, courtesy of Ma Nature, and some of these are even edible, by birds and animals if not necessarily by humans.

181222 christmas baubles (1)
181222 christmas baubles (2)
181222 christmas baubles (3)
181222 christmas baubles (4)
181222 christmas baubles (5)
181222 christmas baubles (6)
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Second time lucky

19 Wednesday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

1st-winter drake Scaup, Aythya marila, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Greater scaup, juvenile Scaup, Scaup

On Sunday I went to Cosmeston Lakes Country Park to look for the Scaup that has, since 13 December, been enjoying the delights of the lakes and the company of the huge number of Tufted ducks currently resident there. I had a wonderful mooch about but couldn’t find the Scaup (though I did spot a Hawfinch, a rare visitor, and was very pleased with that).

181219 scaup (1)

So, I went back again on Monday, partly to look again for that Hawfinch but also for the Scaup. And I was lucky with both birds, with another very fleeting, distant view of the finch but superb close views of the Scaup, which came to feed on the seed I always carry with me in the winter.

181219 scaup (3)181219 scaup (5)

This is a drake Scaup – actually a Greater scaup (Aythya marila), which is usually just known as Scaup, as the Lesser scaup is so rarely seen, and a first-winter bird, as it doesn’t yet have its adult plumage – the brown colouring you can see on this bird will disappear as it develops into an adult.

181219 scaup (6)181219 scaup (7)

In south Wales, the Scaup is an uncommon winter visitor and passage migrant, which, according to the latest Glamorgan Bird Report, enjoyed a ‘welcome increase of records and numbers’ in the 2017 first winter period (i.e. between January and mid April). Let’s hope the increasing number of sightings of this handsome little duck continues.

181219 scaup (8)181219 scaup (9)

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Winter 10, week 4

16 Sunday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#WildflowerHour, #winter10, British wildflowers, cats, flowering wildflowers, wildflowers, winter flowers, Winter heliotrope

It’s certainly getting a little more difficult now to find any wildflowers in bloom but, tucked away from the prevailing westerlies and battering rain in small sheltered niches, a few wee beauties still persist.

181216 wildflowers (1)
181216 wildflowers (2)

And, of course, the winter-flowering species, like the Winter heliotrope pictured above, are just beginning their flowering period. I managed to find several large swathes of this invasive plant in and around Penarth this week. My other finds are shown below.

181216 wildflowers (3)
181216 wildflowers (4)
181216 wildflowers (5)
181216 wildflowers (6)
181216 wildflowers (7)
181216 wildflowers (8)
181216 wildflowers (9)
181216 wildflowers (10)
181216 wildflowers (11)
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The gammy-legged Rock pipit

15 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, seaside, winter

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Ely embankment, Rock pipit, Rock pipit with misshapen claw

Last Monday, during my stroll along the Ely embankment path, I enjoyed a close encounter with this Rock pipit. It had ventured across the pavement at the top of the stony embankment and was poking about in a pebble-filled ground-floor garden in front of one of the tall apartment blocks that border the path. I guess, to a Rock pipit, one group of stones is as good as another to explore for insects.

181215 rock pipit (3)

The Rock pipit saw me approaching and quickly hopped back across to the safety of the embankment, where it would be easier to fly away. So, I moved to stand next to a lamp post, kept completely still and waited.

181215 rock pipit (2)181215 rock pipit (1)

As I’d hoped, the pipit decided I presented no immediate threat and, though it continued to keep a wary eye on me, it soon hopped back across to the garden again. So I was able to spend a delightful 10 minutes getting some photos and watching it foraging. It always amazes me how much food small birds like this seem able to find – tiny titbits to be sure but, presumably, enough to keep them alive.

181215 rock pipit (4)181215 rock pipit (5)

It was only when I got home and checked my photos that I noticed the bird’s gammy right leg, with its twisted misshapen claw. This had not seemed to be causing the bird any difficulty while I was watching it. And then something stirred in my memory – I was certain I’d seen this bird before. And, sure enough, when I checked through my Rock pipit album, I had photos of this same bird in this general area taken on 27 January and 11 March 2017, and 11 and 31 January, and 14 March 2018. I’m not sure how long Rock pipits usually live but this little bird has obviously been coping remarkably well with its disability.

181215 rock pipit (6)

Same bird, 11 March 2017

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The zigzag winter 10

09 Sunday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers, winter

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#WildflowerHour, #winter10, British wildflowers, Penarth, wildflowers, wildflowers blooming in winter, winter flowers, Zigzag path

I’ve blogged previously about the wildflower and invertebrate delights of the local zigzag path that leads from Penarth down the cliffs to Penarth Marina. It’s a path I walk at least once a week so, during Friday’s wander, I decided to see what wildflowers were still in bloom there for this week’s Wildflowerhour and its Winter 10 challenge. And here they are …

181209 bramble
181209 common ragwort
181209 daisy
181209 groundsel
181209 knapweed
181209 mallow sp maybe
181209 sow thistle
181209 thistle
181209 white clover
181209 yarrow
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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

  • The Marl Med gull January 29, 2026
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  • Millipede: Nanogona polydesmoides January 26, 2026
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