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Showing posts with label Butterfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butterfly. Show all posts

Monday, 22 September 2014

Fungi September 2014

Pictures of mushrooms and toadstools I've taken the past few weeks.
There is a website called Wild About Britain. In it there's a page called British Fungi Identification
I've only put the links in, in case anyone reading wants to identify a certain species since I'm not going to. 
There is one large mushroom shown that may cause merriment to some readers. I make no comparisons of it's shape to anyone I know !
The last two pictures are non fungal, but I've included them in this post because I can.





















Two butterflies had flown away by the time I took the above picture.
It looks as though the sap coming out of a tree on the banks of the Bladnoch has attracted them.


I just caught this heron before it disappeared.

Hope you all enjoyed the 'shrooms.

Have a nice day.

Wednesday, 30 July 2014

A few pictures from around Newton Stewart

Pictures from a couple of walks around the town's periphery.

A colourful welcome


Towards Barrhill Farm


Small Toirtoiseshell


Dragonfly 


Same dragonfly different angle


The best picture
(I can't find what name it goes by)
Bob from Blue Sky Scotland tells me it's a Ruddy Darter. Having done a Google image search I must concur.


The same tortoiseshell


Newton Stewart view


Cree estuary view


A little way behind sat his harem


Ducks on Blairmout


Of the remaining six cygnets, five seem to be doing well. I fear for the wee fella !


Field bindweed




Interesting wall plaque


I wonder who PM was ?


View to Drigmorn and Millfore


The Penkiln Burn


Bower Drive bird feeders


A popular dining area


View towards Wigtown Bay from Newton Stewart old golf fairways


an inland Oystercatcher


A drystone wall mystery


Zoom in to Wigtown Bay




Last picture of the day

Friday, 4 July 2014

A beach and countryside walk

It's been a funny week. Warm and overcast a bit. 
It's Friday as I'm composing this post and it's pouring rain.
(The river needs it as the last picture will show)
On Wednesday I decided a beach walk might clear a fuzzy head.
I headed east and parked up at Mossyard beach car park.
(I need to go back and find the ring marked rocks, Castle Wilkie and the Standing Stones of Newton, don't ask why I didn't have my map with me ! ))
It was very quiet as I walked east across the rocks and sand.


This fella seemed to be looking for lunch.


There were a lot of oyster-catchers around.


I kept my eye open for anything worth photographing.


This stretch of coastline from Auchenlarie to Gatehouse of Fleet is very popular with holidaymakers.
Cabins and caravan sites thrive in the summer and although there was no activity on the beach I could see plenty of people either setting up camp or doing maintenance on their mobile homes.


Standing over a rock pool, it wasn't my intention to take a 'selfie', but when I saw it in the LCD screen.......................


...................I decided to take another.


Shoreline and rock-pool plants.
Leaving the shoreline I took a short walk through the Cardoness-Estate-Holiday-Park. Here there are 182 owner occupied holiday homes, 38 chalets and lodges and half a dozen sites for tourers. As you drive pass the entrance on the A75, you can't see any of this. It really is a hidden gem.


Alongside and to the west was a path through the woods marked as a nature trail.
I decided to take a walk through for my return to Mossyard. 
Here's a Meadow Brown.


By far the most widespread in Galloway is the Ringlet.


As I climbed up a an incline I came to a bench with a view and a memorial plaque.
I've touched up the photograph of the name plaque, the paint is flaking off.
Apparently Geoffrey was a skilled surgeon and died within ten weeks of Rosemary's passing.


This is the view they enjoyed in the 40+ years they came up here.


Now to get back to the beach. I headed inland until I could identify whether the cattle I saw were bulls or otherwise.
This is a view of Newton Farm with the hill Mill Knock behind.


When I got close I saw they were inquisitive young ladies.


Across another field there were lots of gulls looking for easy pickings behind a ploughing tractor.


Back at Mossyard I saw this female blackbird trying to drum up lunch.


From Mossyard I now took short walk west to White Bay where I had a bite to eat and watched as a couple of youngsters fished off the rocks.


My book says this is a field digger wasp.
So ended my beach walk.

On Thursday I took a walk up to Glenamour.
There's a lot of lillies on the smaller Glengarren Loch


Here's a parasol mushroom and a welsh poppy.


Two pictures together of Glenamour Loch almost creating an optical illusion.


Lots of water lillies on Glenamour loch too.


Back in Newton Stewart the river is low. Normal levels will be resumed after today's downpour.
At least the weather forecast for our group's walk tomorrow looks good.  
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Morning deer

Morning deer
is someone watching me