Sunday 30 June 2013

Wildlife Further Afield

Foster's Green and Eades Meadow are Nature Reserves that have been given National Nature Reserve Status.



This is the extract from the Worcestershire Wildlife site. If you visit it is really important not to go off the path. Where people have the flowers are easily trampled and the beauty of the site could easily be lost.


Foster’s Green and Eades Meadows were once Foster’s Green Farm and have not been ploughed for at least 100 years nor have they ever been treated with chemical fertilisers, herbicides or other agricultural chemicals.
Lying on heavy clay soils, their interest lies in the large number of plants that grow here – over 180 have been recorded - and the huge number of insects, spiders and other invertebrates that they support.  Eades Meadow is particularly famous for its green-winged orchids in spring and meadow saffron in autumn.  The colour of the meadow changes daily as different flowers come into flower throughout spring and summer.
Foster’s Green Meadow is still farmed and Eades is grazed by cattle in late autumn and early winter before being left to grow hay.  The hay is cut late the following summer after the flowers have seeded.  Following a period of growth, the field is grazed and the cycle begins again.
Part of the land was once a small orchard and a few apple trees remain.  A number of large oak trees mark the positions of old field boundaries and young trees have been plated as future replacements.  The huge elms which once grew in the hedges were killed by elm disease and their demise opened up the field to the wind and sun. 
Please note that due to the fragility of the site, visitors should not stray from the public footpath that crosses part of the meadow.



Greater Knapweed

Yellow Rattle

The brown, purse-like calyxes (containing the sepals) of Yellow-rattle give this plant its common name - brush through a wildflower meadow at the height of summer and you'll hear the tiny seeds rattling in their pods. This
annual plant thrives in grasslands, living a semi-parasitic life by feeding off the nutrients in the roots of nearby grasses. For this reason, it was once seen as an indicator of poor grassland by farmers, but is now often used to turn improved grassland back to meadow; it feeds off the vigorous grasses, eventually allowing more delicate species to push their way through.

Common Spotted Orchid

Yellow Vetch



Ladies Bedstraw - Galium Verum
In the past the dried plants of Ladies Bedstraw were used to stuff mattresses, as the fragrant scent of the plants acts as a flea killer. The flowers were also used to coagulate milk in cheese manufacture and, in Gloucestershire, to colour the cheese Double Gloucester.


A bashful Oxeye Daisy


Common Spotted Orchid


Self heal - Prunella Vulgaris
Self-heal is edible: the young leaves and stems can be eaten raw in salads; the whole plant can be boiled and eaten as a potherb; and the aerial parts of the plant can be powdered and brewed in a cold infusion to make a tasty beverage.
Medicinally, the whole plant is poulticed onto wounds to promote healing. A mouthwash made from an infusion of the whole plant can be used to treat sore throats, thrush and gum infections. Internally, a tea can be used to treat diarrhea and internal bleeding.
Quaking Grass
Gently shivering in the breeze, the loose heads of Quaking-grass are a distinctive feature of meadows and grasslands, particularly those on chalky soils. Its heart-shaped flower heads dance on delicate stems, giving the plant many different common names such as Totter Grass, Dithery Dock, Wigwams and Toddling Grass.


Small Tortoiseshell

Small Tortoiseshell

Yellow Shell Moth - Camptogramma bilineata

Chimney Sweeper - Odezia atrata

Crested Dogstail


Flag Irises



Tuesday 25 June 2013

Wild Life Meets Wild West

What a stunning day - just what I'd been waiting for and it looks like the Damselflies were too!

They were out in abundance by the time I took my later than normal walk. The air temperature had warmed up considerably and they like me were basking in the long-awaited sunshine.

You don't know what to expect when you walk along Piddle Brook but most people wouldn't expect to find a Cowboy. At the centre of Piddle Brook meadows is Church Farm - the smallholder is a fan of country and western music and collects some interesting paraphenalia, some of which is in the field. 


I love the log cabin and Cowboy plus the shepherdess who tends her sheep quite implacably for most of the year. The only disruption is when a strong winds knocks the Cowboy over or the Log Cabin is flooded out.


Female Banded Demoiselle
Green Damselfly

Male Meadow Brown Butterfly

Grasses - not for the Hayfever Sufferers!



Male Banded Demoiselle


Green Damselfly

Green Damselfly with Wing Askance!

View towards Naunton Beauchamp


Dog Rose



Green Damselfly




Speckled Wood

Common Blue

Speckled Wood





Large Skipper Butterfly


Large Skipper Butterfly

Naunton Beauchamp Church


Not sure what is in there!

So quite a walk with lots to see...and that was just to a few fields - amongst the bird sightings were two Yellowhammers, a Chaffinch, Warblers - probably willow but I couldn't see them. Blackbird song was beautiful.

Saturday 22 June 2013

Summer Solstice Sightings

Although the date would suggest mid-summer it has hardly felt like it for long. The evenings have been beautiful though and as long as I'm wearing waterproofs in the morning the walks just get a bit damp so it has still been possible in the beautiful long grasses of Piddle Brook Meadows.

Here are a couple of as yet, unidentified plants! Some research required..



The Banded Demoiselles are appearing but the numbers of Green Damselflies have been greater. 


It has been commented in the media recently that the number of ladybirds is low this year. I haven't seen any yet.

A Yellowhammer was repeatedly singing from the hedgerows on my walk this morning and as I left the Meadows, right by the road to Naunton Beauchamp another one was singing. It was a bit windy but here is the video...