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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: Cosmeston Lakes Country Park

28/366 Blossoming Blackthorn

28 Tuesday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, winter

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

blackthorn, Blackthorn blossom, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Spring blossom

Despite being caught twice in freezing hail showers, I had a lovely walk today, and part of the reason is because I saw my first Blackthorn blossoms for 2020. As Blackthorn flowers appear before the leaves (in contrast to Hawthorn, where the leaves appear first), this hedge along the roadside at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park still looks lifeless and barren.

200128 blackthorn (1)

In fact, the brown branches and twigs were dotted here and there with white buds and occasional fully open blossoms. Spring is coming!

200128 blackthorn (2)
200128 blackthorn (3)
200128 blackthorn (4)
200128 blackthorn (5)
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25/366 Grey, but a grebe

25 Saturday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, winter

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Great Crested Grebe

Today’s seven-mile walk was through thick grey drizzle-like mist and, except for the raucous gulls at the edge of Cosmeston’s east lake (where everyone feeds the birds), the land was hushed and still. Not wanting to get my gear wet, I only got my camera out of my backpack once, for a few shots of this handsome Great crested grebe.

200125 great crested grebe (1)200125 great crested grebe (2)200125 great crested grebe (3)

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15/366 Immature drake scaup

15 Wednesday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, winter

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

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

What a difference a month makes! Well, actually, not quite a month – my first photo below was taken on 21 December, the other two today, 15 January.

200115 scaup (1)

Two juvenile drake Greater scaup (Aythya marila) have been over-wintering in my local area, some days on the lakes at Cosmeston, some days in Cardiff Bay, either at the wetlands reserve or on the opposite side of the bay, near Ferry Court, always in the company of the flocks of Tufted ducks.

200115 scaup (2)

When they were first sighted, it was difficult to tell them apart from the female Tufties, so brown were they in appearance. But, as you can see in these photos, they are gradually acquiring more grey feathers on their backs and white on their lower bodies.

200115 scaup (3)

In February and March, scaup begin to migrate to the Arctic in preparation for breeding, though, according to my bird guide, some immature birds remain in their wintering grounds over the summer months. It will be interesting to see what these two decide to do.

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13/366 Sweet violets

13 Monday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in nature, wildflowers, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Sweet violet, Viola odorata

As the gusty winds of Storm Brendan began to blow the trees around and I slipped and slid along Cosmeston’s muddy paths, I came upon this host of spring flowers.

200113 sweet violets (1)

Not the traditional host (of Daffodils) these, but rather Sweet violets (Viola odorata), considered native in some parts of Britain, invasive garden escapees in others. I’m not sure which these are but they were lovely to see.

200113 sweet violets (2)
200113 sweet violets (3)

I didn’t detect any smell but that could perhaps just have been the wind and rain or my inadequate nose, as I’m fairly sure they are Sweet violets – blunt sepals, hairy stems and leaves, the right leaf shape and growth pattern, flowering very early. A delight on a grey day.

200113 sweet violets (4)

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363/365 An extremely early bumble

29 Sunday Dec 2019

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, winter

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Bombus hypnorum, British bumblebees, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Tree bumblebee, winter bumblebee sighting

I was amazed today at Cosmeston to hear a buzzing sound and then watch this bumblebee fly slowly past, to settle on the trunk of a nearby tree. It’s a Tree bumblebee, I think, Bombus hypnorum, a species that usually emerges from its winter sleep in March.

191229 tree bumblebee (1)

Yesterday I saw a Red admiral butterfly, and now today this bumblebee. It just shows how mild our winter weather has been so far.

191229 tree bumblebee (2)

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350/365 Ratty stocks up

16 Monday Dec 2019

Posted by sconzani in mammal, nature, winter

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

British mammals, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Water vole

One of the Cosmeston water voles was out and about today, munching on vegetation and also hauling in supplies, taking them under the dipping pond’s boardwalk and presumably stashing them somewhere.

191216 water vole (3)191216 water vole (1)

Luckily, I was the only person around and, by staying quiet and still, I was able to watch it coming and going for quite some time. It was a delight!

191216 water vole (2)191216 water vole (4)

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348/365 The final brood

14 Saturday Dec 2019

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Moorhen, Moorhen chicks, three brood of Moorhen chicks

The Moorhens of Cosmeston’s dipping pond have had a bumper year.

191214 moorhen family (1)

I blogged about their first brood of five on the day they hatched 1 April ‘91/365 New arrivals’ and then reported on their progress on 28 April ‘118/365 Chick update’.

191214 moorhen family (3)

Then, on 25 June, in ‘176/365 More new arrivals’, I happily announced the arrival of five more chicks.

191214 moorhen family (4)

I must have missed the hatching of the third brood, which probably arrived in early September. I’m not sure how many there were but four have survived and flourished, as you can see in this latest set of family photos.

191214 moorhen family (2)

These adult Moorhens are obviously excellent parents!

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343/365 The nut warbler

09 Monday Dec 2019

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Nut warbler, nuthatch, Telor y cnau

The Nuthatch is such an entertaining bird, with its propensity to run, quite quickly, headlong down tree trunks.

191209 nuthatch (1)

Over the centuries, and throughout Britain, this very handsome bird has acquired a wealth of vernacular names. My Fauna Botannica lists the following: mud dabber and mud stopper (I’ve never seen one near mud but this, apparently, refers to its plastering of mud around the entrance to its nest); nutcracker, nutback, nut jobber and nut topper (it is rather partial to nuts); woodcracker, woodbacker and woodjar (it likes to wedge the nuts it collects in cracks in tree bark, to hold them firm while it attacks them with its beak); and jar bird and jobbin (‘to job’ meaning ‘to jab’, at the nuts).

191209 nuthatch (2)

In Welsh the Nuthatch is Telor y Cnau, which translates as Nut warbler. I’m not sure I would label its rather strident call a warble – to me it’s more of a trill, but that’s just my interpretation.

191209 nuthatch (3)

This particular bird was stocking up on the sunflower hearts I had put out for the small birds to snack on at Cosmeston today.

191209 nuthatch (4)

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341/365 Marsh tit

07 Saturday Dec 2019

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, winter

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cogan Wood, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Marsh tit

Having stocked up on bird seed yesterday (the littlies are rather partial to sunflower hearts, I’ve found), I was delighted today to tempt out one of the resident Marsh tits in Cosmeston’s Cogan Wood.

191207 Marsh tit (1)

Actually, it wasn’t all that difficult. I was mobbed by Great and Blue tits as soon as I began sprinkling the seeds on an old tree stump, with one particularly cheeky Great tit grabbing a seed from my container before I’d even started tipping them out.

191207 Marsh tit (2)

I wasn’t sure the Marsh tit would come but it soon appeared and, although initially a little hesitant to compete with the other birds, it didn’t take long to summon its courage and was picking up 2 or 3 seeds at a time before flying off to find somewhere quiet to eat them.

191207 Marsh tit (3)

We’re lucky to have this bird at Cosmeston as it’s now an ‘uncommon and thinly distributed resident breeder’, according to the Glamorgan Bird Club’s Eastern Glamorgan Bird Report No.56, and these tits were only recorded in 8 locations in our county in 2017.

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325/365 Sleeping ducks

21 Thursday Nov 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, birds, nature

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, sleeping duck, Tufted duck

A freezing easterly wind was blasting anyone and anything foolish enough to be out and about today, which, of course, included me. At least I had the luxury of several layers of clothing, plus woolly hat, scarf and gloves.

191121 tufted duck (1)
191121 tufted duck (2)

For the Tufted ducks at Cosmeston, it was a case of lying low, in the lee of any vegetation that provided shelter, and trying to sleep, though with one eye open in case some kind person should toss them some seed.

191121 tufted duck (3)
191121 tufted duck (4)

*Note to self: Buy bird seed to take along on future winter walks.

191121 tufted duck (5)
191121 tufted duck (6)
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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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