Saturday, 26 December 2015
Monday, 2 November 2015
Please Check your Bonfires Before Lighting Them!
Amphibians such as the GCN and the baby smooth newts above, as well as small mammals and reptiles, are looking for piles of logs in which to hibernate. If you're building a bonfire, don't do it more than a day or two in advance, and if it's been up a while, do try shifting it a few feet so that any animals who've taken refuge there have a chance to escape.
Monday, 5 October 2015
Squeezing the Last Drops out of Summer.
Common lizard
Very juvenile newt
Field voles
Prees Heath
Meadow Pipit
Comma
Fly agaric
Common frog
Juvenile smooth newt
Small tortoiseshell
Shaggy ink cap
Common toad
Friday, 11 September 2015
Winding up the Season
I never see much of the voles after early September, so this blog goes into semi-hibernation for the winter. However, I'll be keeping track of the hedgehogs and any other wildlife encounters over the colder months. Then fingers crossed it'll all kick off again in Spring...
Friday, 4 September 2015
The Days are Growing Shorter
Common toad and Common Blues at Black Park Road
The ditch at Broughall, with some water vole droppings
Edgeley Road vole, and a latrine below.
I felt lucky to see this vole as they've been very shy lately. Also, there was a flash flood in the field, so I worried some might have been drowned. But no, they're hanging on, both here and at Broughall.
Sunday, 30 August 2015
Grocontinental
Shy vole
Above: two feeding stations and a piece of vole-cut stalk.
Latrine sites
Looks like a burrow but it's actually just a trackway through the grass into the water.
We've also been assured we can go back and survey the site at regular intervals in the future.
Tuesday, 25 August 2015
Postcard from the North Yorkshire Coast
Grey seals
A toad (and the ferrule of my husband's walking stick).
Painted Lady
Brimstone
An odd threesome of Southern Hawkers
Kestrel?
If anyone can ID the dragonfly/darter/chaser in the fourth picture down, feel free!
Tuesday, 18 August 2015
Elephant hawk moth
Gatekeeper
Common shrew
Baby grass snake (Brown Moss)
Swallows
I am really struggling to get more than swift glimpses of water voles at the moment. They seem very shy, so whether this means numbers are down on their usual August peak, or whether there's a predator about, I don't know. So the best I can give you this week is a misty video clip, caught by using a trail cam.
Labels:
Brown Moss,
feeding,
field off Edgeley Road,
latrine,
Sighting,
snake
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