Day 4 #30DaysWild – Frogs

2DSC_0971A few weeks ago my 10 year old son and I collected some frogspawn from a local pond, and since then we’ve been watching avidly as it turned into tadpoles then frogs. So today our 30 Days Wild activity was releasing our little frogs back into the wild. 2DSC_0979We chose an area beside a ditch under a hedgein our local playing field, not far from where we found the frogspawn. 2DSC_0989It’s been fun watching their development and I wish I’d done this when my children were younger as it’s been a great way to get them more engaged with nature. We’re already looking forward to next spring.2DSC_0993

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Day 3 #30DaysWild – Clouds

Today for 30 Days Wild I spent some time looking at clouds. I don’t know anything at all about different types of clouds, but I would like to teach myself. If anyone can recommend a book or website for a beginner please let me know.

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And a couple more, taken the following morning:

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Day 2 #30DaysWild – Slugs and Snails

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For day two of 30 Days Wild I spent some time watching snails and slugs. I find them fascinating, but this is often overshadowed by my frustration when they eat my favourite plants, so it was interesting to spend half an hour getting to know them a bit better.

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Chelsea Flower Show Part 1

A little late, but here are my thoughts on this year’s Chelsea Flower Show.

I’ve been going to Chelsea for the last 4 or 5 years. I have to admit to being more interested in plants than in design, and I am one of those gardeners whose garden is crammed with a messy mixture of one of each cultivar rather than the limited palette of plants I know would work better design-wise. But I am starting to understand more about why designs work and why I connect with some gardens and not others.

Beardshaw Morgan StanleyOne of my favourite show gardens this year was the Morgan Stanley Healthy Cities Garden, designed by Chris Beardshaw.  I loved the colours, the fact that every space was crammed with a vibrant range of plants, but somehow it all still looked ordered and even calm. I would like to read more about how colour works in garden design.

This garden1DSC_0575 is being rebuilt after the show in a community space in east London, and I think you can tell that it is designed for a ‘real’ situation. I feel a bit uncomfortable about the extravagance and waste that must happen in order for these perfect show gardens to be created. The plants that must be rejected, the energy and resources that go into getting the plants in peak condition at exactly the right time, the transportation, all for just a week-long show, so it’s good to know that many of them will have a life after Chelsea.

Pearson ChatsworthDan Pearson’s garden will eventually be recreated at its spiritual home at Chatsworth. It was quite astonishing and incongruous to see what looked like a small slice of the countryside surrounded on all sides by crowds of people in smart clothes drinking champagne (though I haven’t been to Chatsworth – perhaps that’s what it’s like). Although it was a dramatic, huge scale project, with gnarled mature trees and large boulders, it was the tiny details I enjoyed most – the plants growing out of cracks in the rocks, the tufts of grass that looked like they had been there for decades.

A completely different garden which I liked just as much was the Beauty of Islam Garden by Kamelia Bin 1DSC_0614Zaal. I loved it’s simplicity and calmness. I find it very interesting to work out how designers create atmosphere in their gardens, and for me Bin Zaal did this best at Chelsea this year. All green and white, it felt like a very quiet, contemplative space, even in the bustle of Chelsea.
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Another garden that really captured my attention was the Royal Bank of Canada garden by Matthew Wilson (conveniently sitting here in his garden). This one will was designed to be rebuilt at a hospice after the show.

Having enjoyed the fact that the Beardshaw garden was so crammed with plants and colour, what I liked about this one was the sparseness of the planting, allowing each plant to stand out.

1DSC_0668I also liked these wiggly benches.

I hope to get round to writing a part 2 soon…

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Day 1 #30DaysWild

Although I think people have been signing up to the Wildlife Trusts 30 Days Wild pledge for a few weeks, I only noticed the #30DaysWild hashtag today. It’s a project encouraging people to do something to connect with nature every day during June.  I sort of try to do this already, but I like projects like this where I have to make a proper commitment to something I’m only vaguely doing at the moment but would like to do more of….

I didn’t have much time to plan what to do for Day 1, and had a fairly stressful afternoon taking my Mum 20150601_131417for a hospital appointment. However, during the visit I had half an hour or so waiting time, so decided to take a walk around the hospital grounds.

It’s in a semi-rural area, but, like many hospitals, the outside is a grim mix of concrete, metal and peeling paintwork, and initially it doesn’t look too promis20150601_131448ing a place to connect with nature.

I noticed some woodland behind one of the buildings where I could hear at least two different types of birds singing.

As I walked on I noticed a poppy growing out of the gravel path. Then my first sighting of elderflowers this year.

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I watched some bumblebees on potentila plants surrounding the bleak-looking car park. I saw 5 or 6 bees on just one small plant. I find bumblebee identification very tricky, but there were definitely at least 2, possibly 3 species there. I scaled this up and found it heartening to think that the perimeter of this large car park might be providing a food source for hundreds, even thousands of bees.

On a small area of grass I noticed birds foot trefoil, and yarrow, as well as plenty of daisies, buttercups and speedwell.20150601_131519

I won’t say I enjoyed the hospital trip, but at least the stress was alleviated a little bit by my walk, and it made me think about how the bleakest looking places are never nature-free zones. I hope I’ll look a little closer next time.

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Tree Following – May 2015

Tree following was started by Lucy – info on how to join in can be found on her blog, Loose and Leafy.

I am very last minute with my post this month, and I had hoped to write a lot about all the nature and signs of spring in the area immediately around my tree, but I am running out of time to put my link on Lucy’s blog, so I’m afraid it’s just a short post about blossom.

DSC_0437I think of hawthorn blossom looking like great big white wands wafting up and down on the roadside – something like this:DSC_0450

But this month I’ve had a really good look at the beautiful, delicate flowers. The newer flowers have bright pink anthers.

DSC_0451This spring I’ve particularly appreciated the succession of blossom. It’s hard to believe the fruit trees and blackthorn, which were flowering away a month ago are now almost wholly green, but I think this makes me appreciate the spectacle of hawthorn all the more.DSC_0475

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Rose Training

Cardinal de Richelieu

Cardinal de Richelieu

Over the Easter break I visited a garden that’s long been on my bucket list: Sissinghurst. It certainly lived up to expectations in many ways, but I particularly  loved seeing it at this time of year when much of the structure of the garden is still laid bare and not partially hidden by flowers and lush foliage.

One thing I found especially fascinating was seeing the carefully trained roses.

Ombree Parfaite

Ombree Parfaite

They have all been tied down so painstakingly that I found it almost as stunning to look at as a fully flowering plant. Of course training roses horizontally or arching the stems back down towards the ground doesn’t just make them look neatly trained, it promotes new growth and flowering all along the stems rather than just at the tips.

Gerbe Rose

Gerbe Rose

Tuscany Superb

Tuscany Superb

Some of these plants are trained on fairly compact structures which could be copied in a smallish garden.

I’m really hoping I will find time to go back later in the year and see them when they are flowering.

Pax

Pax

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Tree Following – April 2015

Tree following was started by Lucy at Loose and Leafy – info on how to join and links to other tree following posts can be found on Lucy’s page here.

My tree is showing signs of life! From a distance it looks as though nothing has changed, but close up there are plenty of little leaf buds.

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What I found very interesting this month was walking around the other parts of the field to see how the other hawthorns were doing. There was a very marked difference depending on their location. My tree is roughly west facing and, while it has a row of houses behind it,  on the other side it’s in quite an exposed position – as you can see in the picture below where I’ve marked my tree with an arrow.

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Here is what my west-facing tree’s leaves looked like a few days ago.

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And this is another tree on the same day in another part of the field. This one faces south and is sheltered (but not shadowed) by another row of trees perhaps 20-30 metres away.

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I so much enjoyed looking at the hawthorns in different positions and working out why some were ahead of others and am looking forward to doing the same with their blossom. On the Springwatch Easter special they asked people to report on 5 signs of spring as part of a research project with the Woodland Trust. One of the signs was hawthorn blossom, so I shall certainly be reporting the date of my first sightings. More information on the Big Spring Watch here.

The picture below gives an idea of how close my tree is to water. My tree is marked with an arrow, and the row of trees along the back of the picture are on the bank of a brook.

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The tall grasses to the right of my tree are in a soakaway pond, built to provide addtional drainage when part of the field was built on. The pond, though it looks rather murky and unpromising, currently has lots of frogspawn and tadpoles.

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On the day I took most of these photos, I also saw a heron on the field. Although I don’t see herons very often here, I frequently see them by a canal and lake fairly nearby.

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BTO Garden BirdWatch

starlings3 Oct 14I like the idea of being able to do a bit of ‘citizen science’, collecting data for a worthwhile cause, while doing something I enjoy.  My first experience of this was doing the RSPB’s Big Garden Bird Watch every January for the last few years. A couple of years ago I started doing Butterfly Conservation’s annual survey, and I’ve also done Plantlife’s Wildflowers Count (now the National Plant Monitoring Scheme) which involves visiting a fixed route or plot and recording all of the wildflower plants you see.

As well as feeling like I’m doing something useful, I like the structure of having a survey to complete, a list of things to look out for, some help with ID, and using it as a starting point for finding out more about different species and habitats. I’ve learned a lot about wildlife from taking part in these surveys.

When I did the RSPB survey this January I found myself thinking (as I do every year) that I would enjoy doing this more regularly. After a bit of Googling, I came across the BTO’s Garden BirdWatch (GBW), which involves weekly recording of the birds which visit your garden. There is no specific time commitment, they just ask that you try to be consistent from week to week with the amount of time you spend and the times of day you watch. For me the easiest way to do this is to watch the birds early most mornings out of the kitchen window while I make breakfasts and packed lunches. I also do half an hour one afternoon. There is also the option to record insects, mammals and amphibians visiting the garden.

When you register you give details of the type of garden you have, including location, size, any trees, food plants blue tit Oct 14-2and ponds, and each week, along with species seen, you record the type of food (if any) you have put out. Apart from having a garden there are no specific requirements, which is lucky as I have a very small suburban garden with no large trees, no pond, not much to entice birds at all.

It costs £17 to join the survey, which is to cover the BTO’s admin costs. New members get a useful book called Garden Birds and Wildlife, which I am really enjoying reading. There is also a quarterly magazine, Bird Table.

As a child I was briefly a member of the RSPB’s now defunct Young Ornithologists’ Club, but, coming from a decidedly indoorsy family, I didn’t really have the opportunity to pursue my interest, so don’t have a wealth of wildlife knowledge remembered from childhood. Coming back to learning about birds as an adult feels a bit overwhelming at times. For the last year or so I’ve been listening to a couple of birdsong CDs in the car, on and off, but really struggling to remember anything from them. I still sit outdoors and find it impossible to differentiate the different individual songs. Learning things like silhouettes and flight patterns seems far too ambitious. I swoodpigeon and starling 2poke to an experienced birder a few months ago who recommended I start by building on existing knowledge and visit somewhere familiar and local at least once a week and watch carefully to learn as much as possible about the birds and their behaviour, before moving on to less familiar habitats and species. So this is more or less what I am doing with GBW.

Having a regular survey to complete gives me the impetus to sit and watch and get to know the species on my own doorstep. In the last couple of months I’ve seen dunnocks for the first time, or perhaps recognised them for the first time as I think I’ve probably mistaken them for sparrows previously. Now, of course, I can’t imagine why I couldn’t see the difference – perhaps one day I’ll think the same thing about birdsong. I’ve also noticed behaviour like the time I had a male and two female blackbirds in the garden and the females were angrily chasing each other, clearly not enjoying the competition. I am noticing which birds prefer to feed on the ground, which prefer to be on the feeders or fences, and which ones prefer which foods. I’ve also learned, finally, to tell the difference between great tits and blue tits. I think I am even starting to learn to recognise starling flight patterns. I am planning a few changes to the garden to make it more bird friendly too.

starlings5 Oct 2014I am finding GBW such an enjoyable and rewarding experience and would recommend it to anyone who is considering joining. Whether you are already knowledgeable about birds and just like the idea of taking part in a survey that provides BTO with a lot of useful information about how bird populations are faring. Or, maybe, like me, you want to learn more about birds and are looking for a starting point. Either way it is £17 well spent.

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Tree Following – March 2015

This is my third Tree Following post. This meme was started by Lucy at Loose and Leafy. You can join in any time of the year – full information on Lucy’s blog.

I am a bit disappointed by my tree this month. The season has changed so demonstrably in the last couple of weeks. Everywhere I go I’m seeing new shoots, bulbs flowering, the beginnings of blossom, but my tree isn’t doing an awful lot just yet, though there are tiny, tiny buds showing…

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I had a better look at the tangle of undergrowth in the hedgerow around the base of the tree, trying to work out which bits are shoots and branches from my tree and which are other plants. My winter tree ID skills aren’t too good (as yet) so I should get a few surprises later in the spring as I start to identify more of my tree’s neighbours.

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A few feet away from my tree I noticed the first daisies and celandines.

DSC_0160aI think this Stella Artois/celandine combo sums up my neighbourhood.

DSC_0166aThis photo is the ground immediately in front of the tree, with lots of herb robert, cleavers and brambles.

DSC_0156aThere were a lot of birds in the tree, hedge and field – starlings, herring gulls, magpies, house sparrows and others. I didn’t have my binoculars so will need to go back and have a good look in time for next month. I am hoping for BIG changes to my tree and it’s surroundings by April!

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