Showing posts with label Winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winter. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 December 2023

By The Big Water


Real life and English weather can sometimes conspire to reduce the amount of time I spend out and about, but occasionally you have to "make a break" from confinement. So my brother Les and I headed for Grafham Water, a man-made reservoir which is about 40 minutes' drive from mine.



The door of the Park Ranger's vehicle gave a clue as to what the countryside is like after a wet and gloomy month. But we were going to head along the concrete dam which gives easy walking and good views across the water.



The skies soon clouded over, but down to the south-east it was clear, allowing the low-angled winter sunshine to reach in beneath the grey blanket and bring a warm glow to the December scenery.



I paused to take a photo of the pier leading out to the Valve Tower, mainly because I always intend to but also because today the lighting on the distant shore gave a nice symmetry to the scene. As Les pointed out, in all the many times we've passed this way we've never seen anyone doing any work here; maybe it's all operated remotely nowadays.



The usual winter birds were all present: Tufted Duck, Mallard, Gadwall, Teal, Goldeneye, a few Shovelers and Wigeon and a single Pochard; Great Crested and Little Grebes, Cormorants, Grey Herons, Coots and Mute Swans; some Canada Geese and, though we didn't see any, I'm sure some Greylag Geese were there somewhere. The only wader we saw was a Common Sandpiper.



We followed the path along the southern shore for a while.



Eventually we arrived at our favourite, slightly rickety, bench where we had our customary banana and hot chocolate while scanning for birds. Then we had to retrace our footsteps back to the car park.



Back at "the quiet corner", which is often a place to see many ducks, there was a working party clearing some of the reeds. Very necessary, but also rather noisy, work.



Like London buses, I don't take any pictures of the Valve Tower for years, then two come along, one after the other! The dam that we have to walk stretches right along, from right to left at the back of the photo. See that farmhouse just to the left of the tower......?



Nearly back to the visitor centre now, where there was a tempting sign.....



In mid-December? No, of course we didn't!


*******

3 Lads Singing

The singing group, The Young 'Uns, got their name when as teenagers they found they could get served (under age) in one of their local pubs, which turned out to be home to a folk music club. They were made welcome and, liking the atmosphere, they became regular visitors, eventually daring to stand up and sing themselves. Although they can sing an old song with conviction they began to write their own songs which, in traditional style, were based on real events, often stories which they'd seen on the news or read in the papers.

3 Dads Walking

Andy, Tim and Mike got to know each other when each was hit by the tragic suicides of their daughters. They decided to go on a long walk across the country to raise awareness of the issues, campaign for suicide-prevention education in schools, to talk to each other about their grief and encourage other men similarly affected to seek out help.

Here's what happened when all six men met up....


You can find out more about 3 Dads Walking here: 3 Dads Walking

If you enjoyed the singing and songwriting of the Young 'Uns you can find numerous clips of them on YouTube.


Take care.


Wednesday, 25 January 2023

Mist Upon The Mere

Such a quiet morning. The trees are barely moving. A chill mist hangs over the mere. Then somebody starts up a chainsaw....



That will be someone from the RSPB, who run this reserve, tidying up some fallen branches. They'll burn up the small twigs and ivy and stack the remaining wood to provide a home for insects - if you want to attract birds you'll need to have the insects that they feed on.



The mechanical racket soon ceases and all returns to quietness and stillness. I always find it tricky taking photos on days like this; colours are so subtle and the light so gentle and fleeting.



Soon we find one of our quieter birds, a Treecreeper. It's a small, unobtrusive little soul that's perfectly adapted for climbing up tree trunks and probing the cracks in the bark for tiny grubs and insects. It proceeds in a spiral up one tree, then flies down to the bottom of the next one and begins the process once more. They are not rare, just hard to notice.



Some of the areas of still water are frozen over, but the many natural springs here keep other parts ice-free.



Another hard-to-spot bird is making itself known in the reeds by emitting a series of pig-like squeals. It's a sound that can only be a Water Rail - or else a pig! In icy conditions the chances of seeing a Water Rail are greatly increased as they venture out from their usual haunts, deep in the reedbeds, in search of food.



Just then one runs across the path a little way in front of us before disappearing into the reeds once more.



The alder trees look wonderful at this time of year. Those are not leaves on the branches but thousands of tiny cones which provide winter food for flocks of Goldfinches and Siskins - and maybe a Redpoll or two.



Just as we're completing our circuit of the mere the chainsaw starts up once more. Time to head for home but not before meeting the reserve's latest celebrity....



This colourful cockerel has taken up residence in the car park and fondly imagines that every visitor has some food for him. If he develops enough road-sense to survive winter he'll make a good living around the picnic tables later in the year.


Take care.


Sunday, 22 January 2023

From Murkiness To Clarity

A Sunday morning stroll that began with a misty dawn and gradually transformed into a bright and clear day.


The village street at daybreak.



Early sun dissolving the mist.



An unusual view of the cottage on the corner.



Gnarly roots and leaves.



A rough fence.



The first rays of the sun.



Frosted grasses.



The poplar row.



Hieroglyphics.



Magical Melwood.



Red hot.



Footbridge over the River Mel.



Small ghost threatens to throw half a brick 
at passing photographer!


Take care.

Saturday, 14 January 2023

Away From The Mud

Where to go when you want to escape the mud of this English winter but still want to get out on a walk and see some wildlife? I know the very place.



The Lea Valley on the edge of North London may not seem to most obvious place for a country walk, but at least it has many miles of gravel and tarmac footpaths, though you'll have to put up with the occasional eyesore.



It also has a modern "wildlife discovery centre", with a viewing tower and a bird hide (it all looks a lot more comfortable from inside than from without). And, believe it or not, most winters that rarest and most elusive of birds, the Bittern, takes up residence in the scruffy patch of reeds right outside the windows. Knowing it is there however is an entirely different thing to actually seeing it!



No matter. We can still enjoy this rather attractive piece of art as we make our way along beside the Horsemill Stream. Over the years the Lea Valley has been used for all kinds of human endeavour. The watercourses provided power for early mills and factories, the soil is suitable for market gardening and it once had the largest expanse of glasshouses to be found anywhere in the world.



The valley has always provided a transport corridor with railways, a major road and the River Lee Navigation running through it. There were many large pits dug to extract sand and gravel. A whole host of industries came here and several are still active, mostly electronics and consumer goods. Then there came warehouses and what used to be known as transport but now has to be called "logistics". And of course there's an electricity sub-station and its army of unsightly pylons.



Nowadays large parts of it are given over to nature and recreation of all kinds. Apart from walkers, cyclists, anglers, boaters and those who just like to get outside, there are also facilities for many kinds of sports - even an Olympic Park at the southern end of the river!



Gulls and Rooks enjoy the flooded meadows in wintertime....



...while Mallards can be found paddling around throughout the year. I know they may be common, but you'd have to go a long way to find two handsomer fellows.



Unless perhaps you came across a couple of Mute Swans in the locks along the Lee Navigation.



The whole area is threaded with a confusing tangle of water channels, large and small, all with their own particular beauty. We saw surprisingly few people as we made our circuit of the park, considering how many tens of thousands live within just a few miles - I suspect it's an entirely different story during summer.



A wealth of golden catkins (for one of my regular readers who always enjoys seeing them). The low winter sun illuminating them from behind gave them an added glow.



A Cormorant watched us as we came near to the end of our morning's stroll - a pleasant mix of natural history, human history, winter sun, conversation and of course hot chocolate. (We never did see that Bittern though).




Take care.


Tuesday, 10 January 2023

Cuckoo Fen


If you wait for the ideal day to go out for a walk at this time of year you may never get out of the house at all. So it was that my brother Les and I drove to the village of Over, on a blustery day, to investigate the recently opened footpath around the southern part of Cuckoo Fen, part of the Ouse Fen project to create a huge reedbed for the benefit of wildlife.



We began in Over itself, checking the church spire which sometimes provides a look-out perch for a Peregrine Falcon, but no luck this morning. Instead my eye was attracted to a decaying door in a building which had obviously once seen better times. 



We turned off the main street along Overcote Road, which passed some attractive houses before the road turned into a farm track.



The land here is only about 4 metres above sea-level, while the village is built on higher ground, between 5 and 15 metres  above sea-level. Such subtle variations in height make all the difference along the fen-edge; they say you can always tell a true fenman because they can point out "hills" which most people can't even see. Bare Hill, just a short distance from here, is named on the map, but doesn't warrant a spot height or even a contour to confirm its presence.



We turned off onto an old track known as Ouse Fen Road. The substantial ditches on either side suggested that it was once an important way. Despite this double-drainage it was still plenty muddy in places. We soon had descended another metre or two, which meant the land was becoming wetter.



We've now reached Cuckoo Fen where a path, of sorts, loops around a body of water of highly irregular shape.



It was probably too windy for many birds to be about, though we saw several species of duck, a large flock of geese and, star of the show, a Great White Egret standing nonchalantly at the water's edge. But we'll have to wait till summer for the Cuckoo to turn up on Cuckoo Fen!  

Ah, here's a convenient bench.....


 Time for a cup of hot chocolate!



This area has an interesting history:
           It was once at the edge of a huge area which flooded every winter (and was mostly fairly waterlogged throughout the rest of the year). This was the original Fenland.
           Then in the seventeenth century there was a huge effort to drain the Fens for agriculture. Despite protests from the wildfowlers, fishermen and reed-cutters, who had traditionally made a living here, great channels were cut across the peat lands to get the water more quickly to the sea.
           More recently the gravels deposited by the River Great Ouse have been exploited and many quarries were excavated.
           During the last few decades as each gravel pit is exhausted it has been returned to nature.



Quarries are still working in the area, but gradually a huge reedbed is being formed. Already many once-scarce birds are making a home here - Marsh Harriers, Bitterns, Egrets, Bearded Tits and so on. 



Those of you who've followed these walks will recognise these Konik ponies which graze the land and help to keep it in good shape. 



Then we turned back and took a different lane leading towards Over.



We were closely observed as we sauntered by. I sometimes think there must be as many horses and ponies in our villages now as there were before we had motorised transport.



Another paddock held some sheep, though they paid us little attention. The black ears, eyes, nose and feet make me think that these are Kerry Hill sheep. They originate from the village of Kerry in Wales, not the Irish Kerry as you might think. They are a heartening success story in that they were once a threatened breed but numbers have increased sufficiently for them to be removed from the at-risk list.



A Mute Swan was cruising around one of the small ponds. 



Every house in the Fens that has Dutch gables has stories about them being houses of the Dutch engineers who oversaw the drainage of the Fens, but this is one of the buildings which has some evidence to support the idea. It's thought to have been built by a Dutch prisoner of war who was set to work on the drainage scheme and who decided to settle here, eventually doing well enough to build this fine home.

Now we're heading home ourselves. Hope you enjoyed the outing.


Take care.