Go easy on the leaves

On of my jobs at the weekend was to clear up the leaves in the garden, it seemed the Cherry tree was the last to hold on to its leaves but decided they should all fall at once.

It is always a good idea to leave some leaves on the ground for earthworms, but as I was clearing some leaves in a flowerbed I had forgotten about one of the gardens residents that will spend all winter under damp leaves and that is our only remaining native frog, the common frog, there are Marsh frogs in the Romney Marsh area of Kent but these were introduced, and the Pool frog was once widespread in the East Anglian fens (known as the Fen Nightingale) but the population declined during the drainage of the fens, there was one remaining population in Norfolk but there has been no sign of breeding there since the 1990’s and there was hope to start breeding one remaining male from the Norfolk pond with females from Sweden in a hope to kick-start that population again.

So we can say there is only the Common frog now and increasingly there are more numbers found  in our gardens than in the wild.

Common frog emerging from under a garden plant container

Common frog in the garden

They will spend the winter under rotting logs, cavities under slabs or underground as well as the damp leaves before emerging in spring to breeding ponds.

We have a very small pond in our garden too small for fish but every year we look for the first signs of frogspawn.

Sometimes Wildlife can be right under your nose

Nan birdwatching with seagull behind him

You can wait for hours and not see anything

Wildlife watching can be fun, be it bird or animal, sometimes you can wait for hours and see nothing, sometimes you are lucky and see things you did not expect.

When I lived in Lowestoft we would quite often get rare birds fly in from the sea, once I saw a Woodchat Shrike and a Rose coloured starling in 2 minutes only about 800 metres apart and this was only  after I overheard a man in shop say,  ” there are a lot of Twitchers down at the Bird’s Eye factory looking at a pink bird “.

I have heard stories of a Puffin on the river Ouse in Cambridgeshire, and a pod of Porpoises that swim up the river Nene as far as Wisbech on a regular basis ( I have seen the photographs ), more a surprise perhaps would be in the 1800’s when Whittlesea mere in Cambridgeshire was drained  the skull of a wolf and skeleton of a killer whale were found.

So As I always say it is worth keeping you eyes and ears open as you never know what will turn up.

The days are getting shorter

Yes the days are getting shorter as it now seems to be dark when I leave for work and getting dark when I get home. so what better way than sharing some images from Summer.

Canal boats moored on the river.

Early June morning and canal boats on the Ouse

I love the East Anglian Landscape in at any time of the year, but late Spring and early Summer is my favourite time, with the fields golden with crops and the flowers out in bloom makes early morning walks along the river special.

These early morning walks are made all the more special by the Summer Migrants that arrive and the still air is full of their song, like the Sedge warbler and the first Cuckoo calling.

Small warbler in undergrowth

Sedge Warbler finds a perch to sing from

Those days seem so far away now as we wake to the foggy damp mornings and everyone is rushing about in big coats, hats and gloves, but it will not be long until Spring and we wait for the first signs of longer days.

Until then I will look at and share my images that makes being an East Anglia a special place to be.

 

Living with Wildlife

Once every few weeks I give all the bird feeders and bird table a good clean with water and weak bleach solution to make sure there is no possible spread of disease amongst the feeding birds, after the news today regarding the case of avian flu in Yorkshire I may do this more often.

Yesterday after I had cleaned the feeders and allowed then to dry I filled them and hung them up again I heard a rustle in the ivy expecting to see one of the many house sparrows I was surprised to see a very damp looking woodmouse which had climbed  the ivy and was now eye level to me, I was not surprised to see the mouse as it and three others had been regular visitors to the bird feeders, I was surprised to see it as I had managed to catch three and release them in the fields and had not seen any for a while, now whilst I could quite happily live with woodmice in the garden, my wife said she could live with one maybe two and as we had seen four on the peanuts in one session of feeding themselves we decide to reduce our garden population.

Woodmouse eating peanuts on a birdfeeder

Woodmouse feeding on the peanuts

I was fascinated by how bold they were climbing up the ivy, then the honeysuckle to go from branch to feeder.

When I cut the honeysuckle back they started climbing the centre pole of the feeder to get to the feeders which hung from arms at the top, some would get about 4 feet from the ground fall off and climb back up,  I even found one had got into the feeder via the very small opening for the birds to get the seed.

Woodmouse in seed feeder

Woodmouse in seed feeder

A larger mammal we had seen in September at RSPB Titchwell in North Norfolk was a Chinese water deer, it’s size is between a Muntjac and Roe deer, and 10% of the World’s population is in the UK, mainly in Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, after escaping from Whipsnade Zoo in 1929 the quickly adapted to  living in the British countryside.

Small deer on marshes

Chinese Water deer on Salt Marsh, RSPB Titchwell, Norfolk

So really it was a surprise to see one as bold as brass walking across the salt marsh feeding on the plants, they seem to love the wet habitat of the Cambridgeshire Fens and Norfolk Broads and like the woodmice in our garden I am happy to live with them in our countryside, although others may not.

Small deer feeding on grass

Chinese Water deer feeding on grasses, RSPB Titchwell, Norfolk

Swans, Owls and Otters

Whooper swan with head under wing

Whooper swan resting

Today was festival of swans at WWT Welney, so I make no excuses for showing images of the whooper swans.

It has been misty nearly all day which in a way made it better as most of the swans remained on the Wash at Welney, only during breaks in the mist when it looked like it was lifting did some of the swans decide to fly out to feed in the surrounding fields.

Being the first day of the festival of swans despite the mist there was still plenty about, it seemed the Barn Owls were out early hunting as there were good sightings of one feeding along the bank of the drains, there had also been a sighting of a Long-eared Owl sitting on a post on the road that leads to Welney WWT centre, add to that Marsh Harrier, Rough Legged Buzzard and Merlin anyone visiting  today would not have been disappointed.

Not seen, but leaving plenty of evidence in the form of tracks there had been Otters in the Bedford New Cut easily overlooked by people crossing the footbridge they were there for all to see.

Otter footprints in the mud

Otter prints in the mud of the Bedford New Cut

Along with the swans, were Pochard, the male far outnumbers the female at Welney with only 10% of the females coming here whilst most of the females will spend the Winter in the warmer climate of Spain.

Pochard Male diving duck

Male Pochard

There were also Snipe, Golden Plover, Black-tailed godwit, Redshank  and lapwing in good numbers, so all in all despite the weather it was a good day, I will finish off this post with more images of the Whooper Swans, after all it is Festival of Swans weekend.

Whooper swan

Whooper swan

Whooper swans

Whooper swans

Warmest Halloween day

So it did after all turn out to be the warmest recorded Halloween day here in the UK, I decided to take my camera with me to work in Cambridge and took images before I started work, during my Lunch break and when I got home.

Where the leaves on the trees had turned there were some stunning colours and it was hard to know where to start but sometimes just the simple shot works to show the variation in the colours.

Red and Orange leaves

Autumn Leaves

Walking during my lunch break I saw there were many Squirrels running around storing the nuts they had gathered into thier secret hiding places always looking to see who or what may be watching where the stored food for the winter months is located. Usually the squirrel will be watching the Jays stashing food only to steal it for themselves.

Grey Squirrel

Grey Squirrel on the lookout for other watching squirrels

On the train on the way home I noticed lots of Lapwings gathering on the fields amongst them here and there were Golden Plover, the next field revealed about 200 Golden Plover by themselves, the train was going too fast to take a picture and I hoped the train going past may have put the plover up so I could see the changing white to golden brown as they turned into the sunlight, but it was not to be.

When I arrived home the trick or treaters were walking around the neighbourhood, this has got really popular here in the UK over the last few years, when I was a lad we did try to make lanterns using swedes we found in the farmers fields, but I just had to take a picture of Pumpkins my neighbours children had made next door.

 

Happy Halloween to you all.

Halloween Lanterns

Halloween Lanterns my neighbours children had made

Autumnal Colours

October draws to a close and once again it has been a really mild day, the prediction for the last day is the warmest Halloween on record, but the colours of Autumn this year do not seem to be as bright at last year, maybe I am wrong there are still some very colourful trees but not in such big numbers, maybe some are just late changing? and we are going to see more warm days in November or will we be in for a shock?.

Autumn leaves in the sunshine

The Colours of Autumn

I dare say a mild dry day will bring plenty of Trick or Treaters out tomorrow evening, so I wonder if this scarecrow I saw early this year is still in it’s field or will it be wandering about tomorrow?

Scarecrow in field

A wandering Scarecrow?