Sunday 29 July 2012

Guided walk to Wistman's Wood with Penny and Jess

On Friday morning I had a very enjoyable walk from Prince Hall Hotel to Wistman's Wood with Penny Johnstone and her daughter Jess, who were great company, as is everyone who stays at Prince Hall.  Penny particularly wanted to go to Wistman's Wood as she had heard a lot about this place.  It's a strange remnant grove of oaks and rowans isolated in the middle of Dartmoor, growing into twisted shapes out of the boulder-strewn hillside and hanging with ferns, mosses and lichens.  We walked across Muddilake Newtake to Littaford Tors, then dropped down to the wood and back down the valley to Two Bridges.  Conditions were fantastic, with bright sunshine and a warm breeze.  The wildlife was quiet, as might be expected given this week's heatwave, but we did hear a Grasshopper Warbler reeling in the gorse south of the wood, and see a Wheatear, plenty of Skylarks and a Golden-ringed Dragonfly.  There were also crystal clear views across the central basin and down to the southern moor.  The only sounds were the wind and the whinnying of wild ponies.


Here are some pictures from the walk.


 Highland cow in Muddilake Newtake.

 Jess at the north eastern edge of Wistman's Wood.

 The view in from the edge of the wood.

 Wistman's Wood from the south.

 Longaford Tor, looking from Littaford Tor.  The cone of Longaford is a distinctive landmark visible from many places in the central area of Dartmoor.

Penny and Jess on Littaford Tor.



Family environmental activities in the Tamar Valley

On Wednesday I led a morning of family-orientated nature activities for the Tamar Valley Area Of Outstanding Natural Beauty.  It was blazing hot and we were glad to be able to duck into the cool of the shady woods.  After a slow start the event was quite well attended.  It was quiet birdwise, but the children heard both Green and Great Spotted Woodpeckers, and saw abundant wood ants, comma butterflies and a southern hawker dragonfly.


After a walk in the woods, taking part in nature awareness activities such as a mirror walk, the children built mini dens back at our gazebo base, and made craft insects using wooden clothes pegs.  Thank you to Ben, Emma, Tom, Milly, Chloe and the other children who participated keenly despite the heat and their end of term fatigue.  Thanks also to Lara and Ian of Floating Lime Media who organised the event.  Here are some photos of the morning.


Ben found Cinnabar Moth caterpillars on these ragwort plants.


 Ben and Emma Lewis with one of the dens that the children built.

 Emma showing us the butterfly that she made.

Keen birdwatcher Tom on the mirror walk.

Saturday 28 July 2012

Blue skies

Now summer has finally arrived and we've had a week of hot, clear weather.  Here are some photos from Huccaby and Green Down, Holne to prove it.  The farmers have been busy getting the hay in, and the birds have breathed a sigh of relief and gone very quiet, preoccupied with feeding and moulting instead of proclaiming their presence, defending their territories and trying to keep themselves and their offspring warm and dry. 


The predominant colours are now blue, blonde and deep green, with the flowers into the late summer purple phase of foxglove, heather and thistle.  Conditions seem to have suited the foxgloves this year and they're putting on a vivid magenta show almost everywhere you look.


The other day my wife and I pulled up the car under a Hobby sitting on a telephone wire, mobbed by frantic swallows.  I think it's only the second time I've ever seen one at rest - they're usually on the wing when you see them.  This one had probably just made a failed attempt to catch a swallow and was sitting contemplating how it could improve its technique next time.















Nightjar walk in the Tamar Valley

Here are some photos from a Nightjar walk that I led at Devon Great Consols, the old arsenic mine near Gunnislake in the Tamar Valley, on 14th July.  Fortunately this was the first suitable evening for some time, and we were rewarded with good views of two males, with extended periods of 'churring' close by.  Warm, muggy evenings with plenty of moths on the wing are the best times to look for Nightjars, so needless to say there have been very few opportunities over the last month or so, and I dread to think what the torrential rain has done to these ground nesting birds this season.  This particular night was just right - overcast but warm and calm.  After the show we had an atmospheric walk back through the woods in the dark.

Thank you to the Tamar Valley Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty for organising this event.


Monday 2 July 2012

Murky!


This is the 'atmospheric' view of the avenue leading to Prince Hall last Tuesday when I met Gary Spillane at the hotel for a guided walk.  Less than ideal conditions for nature watching, shall we say.  Still, Gary was very cheery and positive and happy with fleeting views of Redstarts, Goldcrests and not a lot else.  This weather really is the limit.  How did we skip summer and go straight to November?  I keep checking the five day forecast, grasping vainly for an increase in temperature and a drop in the wind, but it's not coming.


On a more upbeat note, I saw a Hobby on my commute to Plymouth two days ago.  I have been thinking about an informal list of birds seen on my way to and from work over the last few months, and it's not bad: Redstart, Wheatear, Grey Wagtail, Great crested Grebe, Teal, Mandarin, Lapwing, Common Sandpiper, Hobby, Osprey, Merlin and Cuckoo among others.  Would anyone else like to get in touch with their 'commute list'?