Another of John Harding's lovely photographs, to keep us going till the spring.
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Tree-removal at White Lion Meadow.
A small feeding station under the pipe at White Lion Meadow.

Feeding by the pipe at White Lion Meadow.
Strimmed, but some cover left.
Over-strimming? No water vole signs here at the moment (there were plenty in the autumn).
A tiny amount of diesel in the water - ditch near Grocontinental.
Burrows and a slipway
Prints on the less-strimmed side of the ditch near Grocontinental. Rat prints are similar, but I think the star-shape indicates water vole as more likely.

It's a while since I've seen Spot, and I can't get over how much he (or she) has grown. We're now talking proper adult size, which is about the length of a juvenile guinea pig. I note the activity's now switched to the other side of the bridge, which makes me wonder whether he's the only vole on this stretch at the moment, or whether he's invaded another vole's territory. I haven't seen another adult since mid-September, but there continued to be a lot of runs and burrows appearing which I'm pretty sure weren't made by Spot; he was a) too small and b) living up by the pipe during that month.

Can you see the vole in the picture above? Click to enlarge and you might just be able to make him out at the bottom. Fantastic camouflage!
Whose scat?
Water vole feeding, with a dropping deposited on a stalk nearby.
Water vole feeding
Went down to check the rafts today and found plenty of water vole feeding all the way from Waterloo to Whixall marina, but also this scat which contained fur, what might have been vegetation, bones, teeth and (water vole?) claws. Mink scat's supposed to smell really foul, but this didn't; it smelt musty, mushroomy, or like an old damp cupboard. So I'm thinking - hoping - it's polecat, which we do have in the area. Mink scat often contains fish scales and fishbones. 


Had to lighten these shots so they're a bit grainy, but Spot's only coming out at dusk this week. He looks significantly bigger than when I first saw him, which is good. Towards this end of the year I've noticed they don't eat so much water cress; maybe they're after foods with a higher nutritional content?
Is it Spot? I don't know, he wouldn't come out. Another couple of weeks and, if the last two years' patterns are anything to go by, I won't be getting any sightings till February/March 2009. Water voles don't hibernate as such, but they do retreat to their burrows for most of the daily winter routine.A lovely crop of fly agaric under the trees at White Lion Meadow!








