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
Showing posts with label Ladywalk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ladywalk. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 May 2018

Ladywalk Nature Reserve



Last Thursday afternoon B and I spent a couple of hours walking around Ladywalk Reserve which is only about 20 minutes from home by car and our closest nature reserve.

Ladywalk NR is part of the the Tame Valley Wetlands and is a West Midlands Bird Club Reserve set in a loop formed by the River Tame. It has a variety of habitats - lagoons (the result of flooded gravel extraction workings), Reedbeds, Wetlands and Birch and Alder Woodlands.

It is a members only reserve so is usually very quiet. We only saw 2 people the whole time we were there.



Leaving the car park you walk along a public footpath alongside the


River Tame.




White Dead-nettle and


Hawthorn are starting to flower.




This is the path my son and I follow in late Summer when we go looking for blackberries.



If you continue along the footpath it does eventually arrive at Lea Marston church - a place I have written several posts about in the past.




These days there is a secure gate and a combination padlock you have to open to get onto the reserve.








Garlic Mustard along the bank of the stream.


Since we last visited a new hide has been erected overlooking the lagoons and feeding stations.








While we were in the hide a muntjac deer ran across the open area just behind the pool - no photo I am afraid I wasn't quick enough!


Mallard



Cormorants on one of the islands


Canada Geese


We saw a variety of birds on and around the feeders - Pheasant, Blue and Great Tits, Greenfinch, Reed Bunting, Dunnock and Robins.



Saplings have been planted around the hide.



I was wearing my old and trusted green wellies which was just as well because


although it was nowhere near as wet and muddy as Ryton Woods, there was mud in places.





Lady's Smock/Cuckoo Flower


Beehives in a clearing


"B" Hide is also new





Sorry not the best of pictures - they were too far away but on the right is a Great Crested Grebe on the nest and on the left a coot.



Distant view of an Orange Tip (female)



Ground Ivy and


Red Campion flowering.



Butterflies seen

Orange Tip
Brimstone
Speckled Wood
Holly Blue
Green-veined White (my first this year)
Large and Small Whites


Two unidentified damselflies were seen by the stream


BIRDS SEEN

Canada Goose
Pheasant
Reed Bunting
Coot
Moorhen
Mute Swan
Oystercatcher
Cormorant
Tufted Duck
Great Tit
Blue Tit
Black-headed Gull
Dunnock
Wood Pigeon
Mallard
Magpie
Great Crested Grebe
Greenfinch
Robin
Stock Dove
Grey Heron
Shelduck
Teal
Gadwall
Little Grebe
Lapwing
Green Woodpecker




Thursday, 25 February 2016

Visit to a Local Nature Reserve, Books and Baking


We made a brief visit yesterday afternoon to Ladywalk Nature Reserve - a West Midland Bird Club Reserve. The reserve is located in the Middle Tame Valley and consists of a series of lagoons of flooded gravel extraction works, reedbeds and Birch and Alder Woodland.

Hawthorn in leaf - in fact, I am sure a hawthorn bush we drove past on the way home was starting to flower - very early! Unfortunately, it wasn't possible to park on the road so I wasn't able to check to be 100% certain.


Not the best of photos - I do struggle with the Canon bridge and close up photography. Its quite a few months since I last used the camera and it brought home to me yet again how little I know about the controls and features. So a belated New Year's Resolution to start going through the manual as I struggled even changing the aperture!The camera also kept telling me I had set the self-timer button and I hadn't a clue how to reset it :( I would say the video recording button is in a rather silly place though as I lost count of the times I started to record without even realising it.



The public footpath leading to the reserve entrance goes alongside the



River Tame.


If you carry straight on here you eventually come out at St John the Baptist Church at Lea Marston which I visited last summer.


It looks as though there will be increased security once this work is finished. Entrance to the reserve is by permit only.


Full steam ahead for B and E - every time I stopped to take a photo or check a bird sighting through bins they had walked another 100 yards ahead of me.


There are many small pools as you walk through the woodland - containing a few Mallard and Coot yesterday.



There are plenty of nestboxes on trees around the woods.


One of the reasons for visiting was to try and see a Bittern as we have seen them at this reserve in the past and 3 have been reported in recent weeks - you can just see some of the reedbeds in the distance on this photo.


It was rather muddy - thank goodness for wellies!


This is the view from "B" hide - which seems to be the most reliable place at present for bittern sightings. One was last seen yesterday afternoon disappearing into the reedbeds in the distance. It failed to re-appear while we were there but it was good to sit and watch more common species such as Tufted Duck, Coot, Moorhen, Wigeon, Teal, Shelduck, Great Crested Grebe, Mallard and Common Snipe.


Reflections



No bees around today - it was a lovely sunny day but very cold!


We spent a quarter of an hour in Sainsbury's Hide which overlooks the feeding station. Didn't have much luck with photos except for this record shot of a pheasant.


Species feeding included Greenfinches, a Bullfinch (missed by me :( ), Chaffinches, Blue Great and Coal Tits, Reed Buntings, Robins and Blackbirds.

Walking back to the car this nest was visible in the bare branches - Long-tailed Tit or Wren? Probably the former as it didn't look small enough for a wren.






I'm re-reading a rather lovely book at the moment called "The Frampton Flora" by Richard Mabey which contains hundreds of wild flower paintings from the early 19th century. The watercolours, the work of a group of sisters and their aunts, were discovered in the attic of Frampton Court in Gloucestershire. Its a charming and delightful book and, although I think it is now out of print, its well worth looking out for a second hand copy.








The latest West Midland Bird Club Report has arrived in the post in the last couple of days. The Club has recently made available online all the old Reports which is rather a relief as I have dozens of past Reports in a pile which I was reluctant to get rid off. But if I can now access them online the decision has been made for me and I shall just keep the latest one! :)



I did persuade myself to part with some more fiction paperbacks recently but as always managed to make a purchase from Books Revisited - the excellent second hand charity bookshop in Coleshill. I was contemplating buying a book on Cotswold Villages when I spotted this book on a table and it just cried out to me to buy it.


It is written by a local author and is a charming story about a family living on a Warwickshire farm based on her own childhood experiences of her parents' farms in the nearby Shustoke/Maxstoke/Whitacre areas. She has also written a book about Warwickshire Villages which I will be looking out for in future visits to the shop!


And another purchase I couldn't resist! :)





Finally, sorry am wittering on in this post - some Cherry, Cinnamon and White Chocolate Cookies I made from a recipe in the Sainsbury's "Bake" magazine I bought late last year. I hadn't got any sour cherries or white chocolate so used dried cranberries and milk chocolate and they were delicious :)