Waxwing

Waxwing
"To see a world in a grain of sand,
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand
And eternity in an hour."

From "Auguries of Innocence"

by William Blake

Tuesday 14 July 2020

Weekend at Herefordshire - Part 1: Bodenham Lakes NR and Church



We decided to go the caravan at the weekend to take some more items and also my daughter was due back at work on Monday so it would be a mini break for her. We travelled at tea-time Friday which we discovered was not the best time to go as the traffic was awful at times and the journey took an hour and fifty minutes as opposed to one hour twenty minutes the previous Sunday!


The hedge next to the caravan has a lot of bramble flowers which were covered in insects.

Here a Marmalade Hoverfly




This is the tiny garden we have inherited - hidden in amongst the plants is a bird bath which we will move to the front.




On Saturday we decided to visit Bodenham Lakes which is only about 20 minutes away. Well it should have taken 20 minutes but the reserve was hard to find and it actually took 50 minutes! We passed Queenswood Arboretum and Country Park on the way but the car park there looked exceedingly busy. Perhaps a place to visit mid week?



Bodenham Lakes

The area was once part of Lady Close Farm and the 114 acre site was developed for gravel extractions from the late 1800's. Extraction finished in the late 1980's and the pits were linked to create a lake. Bodenham Lake covers 50 acres and is one of the largest stretches of open water in Herefordshire. The reserve is bordered by the River Lugg. More than 160 species of bird have been recorded here and it is also a good site for damsel and dragonflies.

There are two orchards which date back to 1700 and trees include cider and dessert apples, perry pear, cherry, greengage and walnut. Apples are sold to local producers for cider making.

Grassland beside the lake is managed as unimproved grassland with no fertilisers or pesticides and is grazed or cut for hay each summer. This management regime has encouraged many wild flower species to flourish, for example, birds'foot trefoil and common spotted orchid. One area of former gravel working has been left to re-colonise naturally and there are teasels, evening primroses and bee orchids.

In 2018 Herefordshire Wildlife Trust started work to imrpove the habitat. 2000 young reeds have been planted to create a reedbed. In 2019 three islands in the lake were improved to allow little ringed plover and oystercatcher to nest away from predators. A large muddy spit was also created to encourage waders.




It was busier there than I expected although most people seemed to be respecting social distancing. It was a bit of a shock to the system after hardly leaving home for months! The only downside was that there were gates to open - so the hand sanitiser was used regularly. Anyway the reserve was really lovely and will certainly be worth repeated visits.


We took a path which ran alongside the lake.



Traveller's Joy or Old Man's Beard (John Scurr if you see this post I hope I have id'd this correctly and it isn't White Bryony!)


Mallow


Mullein






Teasel and Meadowsweet



We must go through the orchards on the next visit.




Meadow full of wild flowers - so many bees and butterflies including Meadow Brown and Common Blue. Flowers included Clover, Silverweed, Buttercups, Trefoils and Self Heal.







Self Heal



We didn't carry on any further as the hides, and possibly the paths, were closed. So we retraced our steps

Red Admiral



Purple Loosestrife





Sloes and Hawthorn berries are forming.








We followed another footpath along the other side of the lake.

Stonecrop?


Evening Primrose


Lady's Mantle






Butterflies seen on the walk included Red Admiral, Peacock, various "Whites", Gatekeeper, Meadow Brown and Common Blue. There were a lot of bees and hoverflies and we saw one blue damselfly and a dragonfly (a hawker species I think). I didn't see that many birds (Cormorant, Mute Swan, Blue Tit and Blackbird) but to be honest I was constantly being distracted by wild flowers and insects!


There was a permissive path to the church but B and E were not keen on using it as it was very narrow and it would be rather difficult if you met someone coming the other way! We do live in such awful times that you have to think like this :(

So I didn't get chance to look round the church exterior and churchyard.


St Michael and All Angels, Bodenham

Construction of the West Tower began in the late 13th century and most of the building is 14th century.










In the evening we went a walk to the pool and wildflower meadow on the caravan park. No photos this time as it was getting close to dusk!

Part 2 will include a local walk and the church at Hatfield.



If any of the flower id is incorrect please feel free to correct me :)



All photos taken by me with the Panasonic Lumix FZ330 bridge camera


14 comments:

Bovey Belle said...

What a lovely walk. Bodenham is one of the areas where several interesting houses (interesting to us) have come on the market, but of course sold . . . Still like the area, even more after I have been for this walk with you!

All wild flower ID'sseem fine to me (it is Stonecrop). Lovely photos, as always.

Ragged Robin said...

Bovey Belle - Thanks so much. Bodenham is lovely - we saw a lot of it driving round and round looking for the reserve! There is a sign to it but not really viewable from the road! Two interesting looking pubs too for when life is eventually normal!

Thanks re: the Stonecrop confirmation :)

Margaret Birding For Pleasure said...

Bodenham is a lovely place to explore and you certainly had a lovely day it. for I am pleased you saw so many butterflies and bees. Photos are all great.

Ragged Robin said...

Margaret Birding for Pleasure - Thanks so much Margaret. I hope your injury is improving.

Rustic Pumpkin said...

A lovely area, and it must feel like freedom. I am continuing to hunker down as my village is now a flurry of activity, overflowing with tourists {apparently, as I only have the word of others brave enough to venture into the village} What a wonderful variety of trees in those ancient orchards. Do you know how old the trees are, and if any of them have been cultivated from the original stock plantings?

Rosie said...

Lovely photos. Bodenham Lakes looks a wonderful place with much to see and do and now you know where it is I'm sure it will be a place you will return to often when you stay at your caravan. Glad you were able to visit again and stay for a day or two. The church looks interesting and the Arboretum, perhaps next time you pass ny the car park will be emptier so you can visit there too:)

Millymollymandy said...

Well this is all rather exciting - I guess from the previous post that the static caravan is new? Is this the first time you have stayed there? What a fab place to spend weekends or longer with so much to explore on the doorstep. All those wildflowers in the meadows and orchards are wonderful, not to mention the lake with the wildlife there! Hope you can get there when the weather is warmer and sunnier to see what other species of butterfly etc you might see. I'm quite envious! :-) Mxx

Ragged Robin said...

Rustic Pumpkin - Thank you. So sorry to hear you are being inundated with tourists :( Apart from the orchards dating back to 1700's no idea of age of trees or cultivation. I will explore in the future. When things are more normal the Visitor Centre might re-open at Queenswood and I gather they have a lot of books for sale there :) So there may be one on Bodenham Lakes.

Rosie - Thank you. Yes, we should find it easily next time. I suspect both places would be quieter in the week rather than the weekend. I must have a closer look at the church or at least the churchyard and exterior - not sure yet if I am ready to go inside public buildings! :( Also a bit hesitant as I think they are only open for private prayer not people wielding cameras!

Millymollymandy! Thanks so much. Yes it is new. We made the decision last year. I had thought about it for a while as it seemed a good way to have a "country retreat" without moving which is difficult atm with kids still being at home. I found the site on the internet and it appealed because it was family run, small, and lots of wildlife features. Also in a part of Herefordshire I love - my Dad's family came from Herefordshire so we went a lot when I was little. We went to have a look last October at the 3 caravans for sale. Bought it pretty quickly and paid a deposit but as site closed end of Nov to end Feb we didn't completely buy it until February. Then of course there was the lockdown so the week before last was the first time we had been able to go and last weekend was the first time we had stayed there. On a good run it is less than 90 minutes from home so ideal for short breaks. It sleeps 6 so we can all go if we want to.

Amanda Peters said...

Looks lovely, plenty of interesting wildflowers and insect to keep you occupied.
Amanda

Ragged Robin said...

Amanda Peters - Thanks so much. I will be busy! :)

Pam said...

This is lovely, what a perfect spot you've picked! It's going to be great for you exploring everywhere (even better when you don't have to think about how you're going to manoeuvre around people!).  

Ragged Robin said...

Pam - Thank you. I did check out quite a few caravan park websites and this was by far the nicest and smallest :) I must admit current situation has taken a bit of a shine off it all. But hopefully, if infection rates drop a lot more I might feel more confident of going to places like Ludlow.

CherryPie said...

The lakes and walk look lovely :)

Ragged Robin said...

CherryPie - Thank you. I would like to go back in the week when it may be quieter.