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Red-throated diver
Black-throated diver
Great northern diver
Little grebe
Great-crested grebe
Red-necked grebe
Slavonian grebe
Black-necked grebe
Fulmar
Cory’s shearwater
Great shearwater
Manx shearwater
Mediterranean shearwater
Storm petrel
Leach’s petrel
Gannet
Cormorant
Shag
Bittern
Little egret
Grey heron
White stork
Spoonbill
Mute swan...
Black-throated diver
Great northern diver
Little grebe
Great-crested grebe
Red-necked grebe
Slavonian grebe
Black-necked grebe
Fulmar
Cory’s shearwater
Great shearwater
Manx shearwater
Mediterranean shearwater
Storm petrel
Leach’s petrel
Gannet
Cormorant
Shag
Bittern
Little egret
Grey heron
White stork
Spoonbill
Mute swan...
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And finally, we reached December and the 20th marked the start of the Christmas holidays and I celebrated by cycling down to Bentley Wood which turned out to be a good idea as I found Pholiota highlandensis, Mycena polygramma, Crepidotus applanatus and two wood blewits, Lepista nuda! What a morning! Then, finally finally I found three fairy rings of Lepista flaccida underneath the Cedar trees, 3 or 4 metres in diameter!
To finally finish then…..2008 has been a brilliant year...
To finally finish then…..2008 has been a brilliant year...
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Back to Winterslow for the start of November and I went into the Plantation to see what fungi was still growing. I found an old Flammulina velutipes, some Crepidotus variablis, Hebeloma crustuliniforme, Lycoperdon pyriforme and a few others. The next day we walked through Hound Wood and I found Clitocybe nebularis and Mycena epipterygia and sharp-leaved fluellen in the arable fields. On the 4th I went to Blackmoor Copse and found various bracket fungi such as Bjerkandera adusta and Daedalea quercina...
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With the flowers almost gone, the months seemed to get shorter and shorter wildlife-wise and into October we went. I didn’t get round to much before the 18th (I wish I had been out and about looking for fungi…) when we went down to Farlington Marshes on a nice day, but there wasn’t much around. I did, however, get photos of Canadian fleabane and spotted medick (not the flower). A few waders around already: redshank, dunlin, black-tailed godwits, ringed plovers and grey plovers. Quite a few shovelers...
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August proved to be a very fruitful month but next we move on…
…to September which started in the garden, with Dad mowing the lawn, and I found two female Roesel’s bush-crickets, which are quite rare, in the long grass.
On the 2nd I was lucky enough to be invited to Dean Hill Park by Pat Woodruffe who readily showed me the wonderful flora and fauna there.
There was quite a lot of red hemp-nettle (well - two patches) and I got some great photos!! Along the old railway we also...
…to September which started in the garden, with Dad mowing the lawn, and I found two female Roesel’s bush-crickets, which are quite rare, in the long grass.
On the 2nd I was lucky enough to be invited to Dean Hill Park by Pat Woodruffe who readily showed me the wonderful flora and fauna there.
There was quite a lot of red hemp-nettle (well - two patches) and I got some great photos!! Along the old railway we also...
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