Nuthatch Nest

Nuthatch nest

We watch a pair of nuthatches feeding their chicks in a nest hole high up in a willow. They arrive with food every five or ten minutes and usually collect a faecal sack which they swoop down amongst the shrubs away from the nest to dispose of.

nuthatch

The female is noticeably lighter and more silver grey than the male which has a slate grey back. At one stage, after looking into the hole briefly, she pauses motionless on the right hand edge of the tree near the hole, facing downwards, with an item of food (perhaps a. It turns out that the male was in the nest hole and when he pops out a minute or two later with a faecal sack in his beak, she goes in.

Our friends John and Heather Gardner have been following progress on this nest watching the parent birds carefully blocking the natural cavity in the willow with beakfuls of mud. At this stage of a the process as soon as the nuthatches left the tree a blue tit would fly in the to investigate the hole. The nuthatches have seen off the competition.

Nuthatches nested in the same cavity last year but the mud barrier needed replacing after the winter.

Above the nest hole a hoof fungus projects like a canopy over a door.

Oak, red horse chestnut and wych elm seeds, Rhyhill.

Shelf Space

old books

It’s got to the stage where, if I’m buying a new book, I let an old one go. It’s difficult because even the ones that I’m not going to read again usually have some kind of story behind them.

Published
Categorized as Books

Kentia Palm

The Kentia Palm, Howea fosteriana, also known as the palm court palm or thatch palm is, as you might expect, a member of the Palm Family, Arecaceae, native to the Lord Howe Islands, which lie 500 miles to the north east of Sydney, Australia.

My thanks to Antonin from Evian (the town, not the bottled water company) for the French translations of items in the cruet at the Holmfield Arms.

Curled Dock

curled dock

Curled dock, Rumex crispus, growing at the edge of the car park at Newmillerdam, is a common weed of rough ground, farmland and the sea shore.

Nearby another weed of rough ground, hogweed, Heracleum sphondylium, was starting to unfurl its leaves from large, hairy sheathes.

The Owl Experience

owls
Barn owl, tawny owl, little owl and Indian eagle owl breast feather.

At a Yorkshire Owl Experience at Horbury Library we were introduced to Amba, as scops owl from Central Africa, and Caspa, an Indian eagle owl who was in the process of moulting but I drew three of our native owls: barn, tawny and little owl (Jack, Dusty and Charlie).

owl sketches

Link

Yorkshire Owl Experience

Brown-lipped Snail

brown-lipped snail

6th May: I picked up a dried up sycamore leaf from a shady corner of John’s garden and found this brown-lipped snail, Cepaea nemoralis, hidden beneath attached to the leaf. We had a dry April so the snail might have settled down to a period of inactivity known a aestivation.

Spiderlings

spiderlings
Olympus E-M10 II DSLR with 60 mm 1:2.8 digital ED macro lens

Two little clusters of spiderlings, hanging low down by our front door.

spiderlings
Olympus Tough TG-4 fitted with an LED diffusing ring for macro photography.

When I went in close with my Olympus Tough, I must have caught some of the surrounding strands of silk because the spiderlings started to disperse. They soon clustered together again.