Sunday, 12 December 2010

Its an age thing?

England are doing well in The Ashes, so all is well in my sporting world.  Not so good if you follow football but since when has it been?

There is something a little miserable about shivering away at 3am watching people in T-shirts likely to suffer heat stroke if they clap too energetically but that is the wonder of modern media.

To compliment my Ashes watching I am reading Crickets Burning Passion. The story of how it all came about. (no it is a proper review not an effort to funnel you to my Amazon affiliate page)

As it is winter here in Blighty my reading matter usually tries to mirror the seasons, so it is polar adventure for me.  Walking Home Lynn Schooler.  A book I read in one long sitting, always a good sign.  Not sure if I stumbled on this book myself or some other outdoor blog had mentioned it.  Anyway its worth the read.  Middle aged man in crumbling personal relationship discovers time is passing.  Thankfully this is no ordinary middle aged desk jockey with a midlife crisis, this fellow lives and breathes the wild and going for a stroll along the Alaskan coast is just what he does.

Perhaps like a lot of people, I spend a lot of time wanting to be somewhere else.  Planning for the “next thing” which is usually down a long road and preferably ending with a muddy track.  This sort of changed when I read a book listing Britain’s wild places.  I happen to live in what is considered one of Britain’s top 50 wild places.  Not down the road, not nearby, about 5 minutes gentle stroll.

I have done for years, it is actually inhospitably wild protected by access problems.  Low lying saltmarsh that is pretty much useless for anything humans want to do today, unless they want to get stuck in mudholes which do kill you or get caught by rising tides which will drown you.  Fortunately you need some sort of boat to really get into trouble, but every year some fools have to be pulled from the mud on the periphery as they have sunk up to their middles.  Years ago of course you died, now you get busy on your mobile phone and pray you don’t die.

Its flat, bleak monotonous stuff to my eyes, but the birds love it.  So faced with this fact I have decided to expand my knowledge of birds beyond the seagull / duck / goose / wader / sparrow categorisation which has served me well for many a decade.

I am alarmingly ignorant of this stuff.  I know more about goretex and stoves made out of cans than I do about the natural world going on around me.  I have been putting the cart before the horse for rather too long when it comes to hiking.  Sure I have responded to the impressive landscape stuff, the sort of thing you see when overflying an area but I seem to have missed just about everything else of consequence.

Thursday, 25 November 2010

November.

Well October my computer failed me.  Specifically a hard drive failed me, the one that boots the machine.  I could have bought repaired it but it was time for a new computer.

When I say 70 quid on ebay bought me a better computer, you can well understand it was time to upgrade the old one.  I don’t play Call of Duty Special Ops, all I need is enough computing power to get man to the moon.

Anyway, it set my priorities a little differently as a connected up a string of dubious legacy hard drives with the images of years gone by and worded memories.  Backups exist and had to be redone to keep them current.

The weather turned from cold to miserable, to cold and miserable and then November arrived and added wet and windy into the combination.

The last thing meaningful I did was go into the woods and collect chestnuts.  This was just before Nov 5th of course, a spare afternoon where the sun was peeking out from behind a cloud.  Later it rained, but by then I was outside.

Being out in rain is different to going out in rain and I was under the canopy by then, foraging about in the leaf litter.

The strong winds had brought down a happy crop of chestnuts and they had obliging leapt from their prickly cases as well.  Collecting was very easy indeed, a seasonal pleasure.

This all lead to collecting more than totally necessary, or lets say, more than I ended up capable of eating, preserving, cooking, generally making use of.  The remains still await useful introduction to the local wildlife.

Anyway I am back to my fitful best and hoping the North wind at least dries or freezes the mud which passes for countryside all around me so I can get out there without the need to scrape boots and wash dogs.

Sunday, 19 September 2010

Swift, I am not.

Just before I left for my ill-fated Dartmoor trip I had a last bit of business to do.

Transport yourself back to the middle of August, it is where you find me now.  My backlog of potential blog/diary entries is rather considerable.

An unusual sunny day broke clear of the dross August has been. It was a reminder that this was late summer, 19th August not 19th Feb and the weather should at least be civilised. Shirt sleeve order, the sky was a clouded blue, strong deep like bulletproof glass.

I am crammed on the last vestige of land before England gives way to sea. At the base of south facing slope linking sea to sky, dotted with scrub but dominated by a large wild rose bush. The red rose hips stand out clear, a scene of strong colour. Bursting with health, nothing wrong with them.

It is the dozens of swifts which are skimming the slope which have attracted my attention. I am not alone on this patch of England but I am alone in watching the swifts. They seem invisible to others even as they come down the slope through them.

The swifts squeak as they wheel and cart through the sky, feeding on insects caught in warm updraft. The swifts themselves take on the appearance of a swarm, flying crazy lines, in out and around, they come close to everything but hit nothing.

So rare to land they are the perfection of flying. As I watch the display more things come into focus. There is a blackbird chucking leaf litter about under the rose bush. Industriously busy he seems oddly earthbound, not prepared to take flight among the swifts.

Not so a number of white butterflies, they flutter seemingly without concern going about the business they have and always will have. A group of wasps take the usual unhealthy interest in me. Wasps seem to take a naughty delight in the reactions they instil. I let them hover and idle about me, arm waving seems to increase their interest rather than deter them.

All this is and so much more I do not see is going on in a bit of land maybe 20 foot by 60 foot. It was wonderfully life affirming. Yes, a newspaper article has just told me the swift population has collapsed and the future will contain less of them, but right there, right then, there were enough to put on a marvellous show for me.

Was it because it is a common enough site that I alone took time to stop and stare or were people too busy relaxing to care. I was the only one there who had business to conduct, everyone else was there to relax and enjoy themselves.

It is just one of those simple scenes which weave themselves into memories fabric for reasons .unknowable

Tuesday, 7 September 2010

Tree hugging.

My stroll through the history of Furze Hill, guided by the efforts of those that had taken the time to record the girth of some ancient trees had been enjoyable. My eyes had literally been opened to new knowledge.

It seems like a geeky thing to do, but I am all for that. So embracing my inner geek, I thought it was time to give a little back to the community that is logging the old and commendable trees of UK.

In a churchyard a few miles from Furze Hill I had a recollection of a most wonderful tree. It is a favourite tree. I saw it a few years ago and the memory has remained. Given this is as close as I am likely to get for a while, I went where memory took me.

Old tree in churchyard means only one thing in my mind, Yew Tree.

The church barely has a parish to serve now, it is at least a mile from anything significant, but it seems to have congregation enough to remain viable. There is a pond on the outskirts of it and a graveyard of some size and much used down the centuries, generations of families from pre-mass transit days. The church must be linked with the manor house nearby.

The tree itself is as high as the square tower of the church, a good deal more wondrous too look at and shades a considerable part of the churchyard.

Some gravestones have been moved and cracked by the trees continued growth. The branches are thick and twisted and in places threaten to touch the ground.

There is something otherworldly about this. Dwelling on the nutrient source for its root system is not completely comforting. Is this what prompts such strange growth? At the same time I sort of like the extended lifespan being part of a tree confers upon you.

The tree turned out not a yew, it was not one of the few species I am capable of recognising instantly. Still it would only be a matter of leaf comparisons later. I took enough pictures of the leaves to help identification. The tree was looking very healthy and vigorous, no need to remove a leaf from it when a picture will do.

Measuring the tree was made slightly more problematic because a group of hornets were busy in a pear tree 20 foot or so away. Not good, but they seemed to be minding their own business. I had seen a broken wasp nest in the ground next to the footpath earlier. The occupants of the nest were not best pleased. It felt like I was pushing my luck a bit.

My shoulder is 1.5m off the ground, a good height for measuring tree girths, I was built for the task. Too add another level of geekiness I can measure a 1m length of string to a 1cm+/- relentlessly just by arm span. Hand for 10cm measurement. fingers for 2cm. Well everyone needs a hobby :)

None of this was needed as I had prepared a 7m cord with knots at 1m intervals. The tree was a warty rascal and had a girth of 5m 30cm, maybe a little more, but this can hardly be exact science.

There was still the issue of identification. Thankfully after some feeble efforts searching the internet I gave up and asked on the Wild about Britain forum. Within half an hour I had my answer, Holm Oak. Holm Oak Churchyard

5.3m girth put it in a category worthy of note so I placed it on the ancient tree website where it awaits verification.

It was a nice feeling to put this tree on the map, give it a bit of recognition the person that planted it could never have imagined possible. It is not much but it is a bit.

 

The Holm Oak sitting on the Woodland Trusts website, recorded, awaiting verification (I wonder if that will happen)

Thursday, 2 September 2010

Light as air.

Inhaler

Image by Neil T via Flickr

 

"Many a mickle makes a muckle". So said Gordon Jackson in an advert about supermarket savings in the 1970's. It had something to do with looking after the pennies and the pounds looking after themselves.

It is just as relevant when it comes to grams and kilos.

There are always savings to be made. I just reduced the weight of my psion 5 by 3 grams by changing the stylus. I could reduce it further by not using the stylus, the plastic tweezers can double up, or a small carbon fibre rod. I can reduce it further by removing the AA batteries and running it on the backup Lithium. I choose not too because it reduces functionality more than I wish. However I know the options and have considered them.

Not all 500ml plastic bottles are created equal. They all weigh slightly different amounts.

My tent pegs, similarly so, some are lighter than others. A gram or two, but why not take the lighter of them, they will perform the same practical function.

I suffer from asthma which means medication in the form of an inhaler. For whatever reason I cannot get just the refill bottles, the NHS hands out the whole container each time. I pay for it and am happy to pay for it, but I would be just as happy to pay the same and avoid the plastic pump mechanism.

The original plastic inhaler pump weighs in at 46grams. Once I had removed all the stuff that is not necessary for function this halves. Still though it is more material than I need to make it function.

Fortunately not one to ever throw anything away I had an older style inhaler. Attacking this with a pair of scissors and then attacking the remnants with a drill I get the weight down to 5 grams.

It still fulfils the same function. I could reduce the weight a little more but it begins to get potentially "un-functional".

46grams of equipment which could save my life doesn't seem a bad trade off. However with a bit of thought this can be reduced to 5grams of equipment which can still keep me alive. 

I used to scoff at these sorts of weight savings but it is remarkable how it adds up. It also represents a different mindset. The first, if I don't care about the few grams here and there I end up with a few kilos here and there and that is no fun carting around. 

To be constantly looking at ways of saving grams easily means a packweight which is always being refined.

Monday, 30 August 2010

Kit : Bandana

Maybe not the most hi-tech bit of equipment but if there is a prize for versatility this has to be a contender.  My love affair with the humble bandana can be traced back to Saturday afternoon.  Not a specific one, anyone, coz that was when they used to run old cowboy movies.  A cowboy without a bandana was some sort of effete town dweller who owned a suit.  The real deal wore a scruffy bit of cloth around their necks, Clint Eastwood in The Unforgiven is a perfect example.  The baddies hid their faces behind them when robbing banks and the good guys protected their faces from sandstorms when they chased the bad guys into the desert.

Morgan Freemans character seems to shun the bandana, bet he wishes he had remembered to wear one.  Clint Eastwood wears the biggest by the looks of it and the townies simply have become too “civilised”.

Anything a bit of cloth can do, a bandana can do.  It can do a fair job of keeping light weather conditions off your head much favoured by Les Stroud in survivorman.

Pour water on your bandana and it cools you, don’t and it warms you.  It can dry things like cloths are famous at, you can use it to pick up hot objects.

In the winter I tend to favour the larger bit of cloth about 2.5foot square as it goes around my neck twice and so is nice and warm.  Summer, the smaller version favoured by Les as it is slightly less flamboyant when on your head.

This is one of the very few bits of kit I am never without.  Its not very glamorous and while the marketing boys have done their best to create bandanas which are less useful and more expensive generally its not been successful.  I have used the remains of favourite shirts to create bandanas over the years.

When the sun is beating down hard I stick it in the back of my baseball cap and it hangs down to protect my neck and ears and depending on how it is arranged as much of my face as necessary.   This might look a bit daft, but not as silly as a bright red neck and usually there is nobody about to point and laugh.  There is something intrinsically humorous about this arrangement though.  As evidenced by the Outdoor Research Sun Runner Cap

The going prepared blogsite has the lowdown on the benefits of these things.  You pays your money and you takes your choice.

Sunday, 29 August 2010

Tendring Sentinels

Old Knobbley

Woodland strolls are very much in keeping with my tree identification theme for this year. Currently on my reading list is Richard Mabey, Beechcombings which demonstrates with enough knowledge there is a great deal to be discovered in a wood.

I am not going to assimilate a lifetime of learning in a few hundred pages but at least it will improve on my lifetime of ignorance.

There are an alarming number of tree species in Britain, well over 2000. Most are exotic imports, there are 35 native trees and if I can identify those reliably along with a few imports it will be a pretty good start.

For the last few years I have been vaguely following the Ancient Tree Survey work that has been going on in the UK. Thinking about all those great trees of national interest or local importance I could visit. Then going through the backlog of my local MPs blog, Douglas Carswell, he mentions the plight of Old Knobbley (image).

Old Knobbley is the oldest tree in the area, maybe 800 years old, but certainly old. Turns out the chap needs some help as it is being out competed by trees around it and in some distress, possibly dying. The council got to work to prolong the life of the tree by cutting back some of the trees around it.

Well clearly a visit to the oldest tree in the area before it died is a darn good idea. A look at the Ancient Tree website showed this was not the only noteworthy tree in this small wood. Actually the place was littered with them. I'd guess the highest density of them in the area. Cannot be sure though, its a 3 year project in its early stages and rather reliant on public participation I imagine.

I have walked through the wood previously as an early part of the Essex Way and saw some old trees in passing. This always reminds me to measure a churchyard tree that is not on the Ancient Tree register which as I remember it must be a fair contender.

The 1891 OS map shows an oak grove which was still there in the 1940s maps but no longer exists. The area to the south, The Beech Plantation is still there though.

I put the tree co-ordinates and details into my gps. It would be a shame not to visit each one recorded, although this rather smacks of munro bagging to the exclusion of all other hills. Checklists are of dubious value once walking but purpose is useful, the balance is the trick.

The walk-in begins at Bradfield church, a building with a much repaired tower. The views across the fields to the Stour are inspiring on yet another baking hot day.

 

bradfield church

Image by drgillybean via Flickr

The walk goes past church remains. It is reputed the churchyard holds the remains of Matthew Hopkins, self-proclaimed witch-finder. A serial-killer and sadist essentially. It seems fitting any church would fall to the ground whose churchyard contained this poisonous character.

The track takes me past a stile that has no purpose, the fence it took you over no longer exits. Maybe it was a fence, but you can bet it was an ancient field boundary of hedgerow once. It does not sweeten my mood.

A torn leaflet is lying on the ground, I make out the fragments. Furze Hill is being thinned out, dogs to be on leads, dangers, stick to footpaths. The saving grace it starts tomorrow, it could go on for a month.

That is a stroke of luck. The wood is carefully managed and there is no need for significant alarm that the wood is being thinned. I am just glad I can wander without restriction or noise today.

It was thinned last time by nature and the 1987 Great Storm. The wood was planted in 1948, most likely to provide better cover for the secret govt bunker and buildings built around that time. The wood is much older than this. How old and why it exists is not totally clear. The great old trees could be what is left of a country estate.

The wood is generous, the old trees are just waiting to be touched and climbed if you wish. One oak has been cleaved in two at some date long forgotten. Almost a comedy cleaving, both halves of the tree lean away like a banana skin peel. Hollowed with age both trunks have a healthy canopy. I walk between the two halves just because I can. 

Cleft in two

There are many twisted and contorted trees, hollowed from fallen limbs, the remaining tree seemingly effortlessly defying gravity. One oak has massive growths on the base of its trunk. These burrs seem to be like a massive pair of hips.

Old Knobbley is the focus of the walk though, the oldest known tree in Tendring hundred. 600, maybe 800 years old. The area around him recently cleared to help this old timer find resources. He is splendid. I knew what to expect, in the modern age endless images and facts can be gleaned but until I stood in front of the tree I had no real sense of it.

Burr

I am not a tactile person but I had to touch the bark of that tree, to share part of the history. It was a tree of age when Matthew Hopkins was killing witches just down the road. The War of the Roses was going on when this tree had reached a maturity.

It is a timescale just on the bounds of my imagination for a living object. There are older trees in Britain but the age of these is beyond easy imagination.

The wood has a large pond at one edge, it was vibrant with birdlife when I strolled along one of its banks. Much youthful cheeping was going on among the water lillies. Trees of all ages, variety and slant were all around me. The woodland floor was sparse of plant life though. I look forward to seeing what the thinning process throws up in future years.

It is not a big wood, but there are so many interesting trees and the walking over the undulations of countryside is great fun. With a little extra knowledge, the helpful guide of the ancient tree study and its resultant shift in my focus, my entire outlook on this wood had changed.

Previously whenever I was here, it was something walked through on a point A to B exercise. This time the wood was the walk and it was great to give it the time for it to tell me a bit about itself.

Wednesday, 25 August 2010

I fought the Moor and the Moor won.

“What would the world be, once bereft of wet and wildness? 
Let them be left. 
O let them be left, wildness and wet; Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet”
Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-1889).

 

“Bloody hell does is it ever going to stop raining” Old Winter August 2010.

Well I am back safe and sound from a thorough thrashing at the hands of Mother Nature.  When I have recovered my equilibrium sufficiently to have something vaguely coherent to say on the subject I’ll say it.

If that takes a while I have a few strolls I took before Dartmoor to recount.

In the meanwhile I am going to sleep for a week and hope to wake up capable of enough limb movement to get out of bed.

Thursday, 19 August 2010

Away days

The bag is packed, it weighs too much as usual.  The gadgets are primed, batteries are being charged.  I even have a vague notion of where it is I am going, although the details are liable to change.

I be Dartmoor bound, barring national emergency, the North bit.  Hopefully I will not be blown up by left over munitions or drowned in a sea of bracken.  If I avoid that then just need to avoid the life reducing lymes disease.  I am less likely to be dragged away by the Baskerville Hound, be pixie led, or fall victim to the Hairy Hands, but you never know my luck.

Bag a few tors, wonder at the prehistoric motivations for stone building and generally enjoy being on my own out of earshot.  How long I am there will depend pretty much on how long I can stand it.  That will be a function of how wet cold and downright miserable I get.

Not longer than 8 days or so though and of course the much needed couple of days recovering.

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Tick Tick Tick

It's Tick Season - Please Respect Nature

 

 

Ticks are one of those things that are hard to love. Actually they are difficult not to dislike. You are wandering along minding your own business and without you knowing it a tiny hitch-hiker has stuck out a thumb and is coming along for the ride. So far so okay.

Once on-board they can wander about a bit, find somewhere nice warm and moist if possible. So this is the first hint the relationship is not healthy, your armpits and crotch are ideal holiday homes for ticks.

This is bad enough if they just hung about being a vague nuisance, but nope, they bury themselves into you head first, little legs wriggling. The wriggling legs give them away more than anything at this point. The size of a pinhead, not exactly easy to see, especially if via a mirror. There is something unsettling about spotting an insect burrowing into you.

If only this was their least unpleasant aspect. It is bad enough, but worse to come. The reason they are buried head first is because they are after your blood. Leave them long enough they can end up the size of a large pea or more, filled with your blood. They look decidedly ugly at this point.

If only this was an end of it, but in exchange for your blood they can give you rather unpleasant diseases. Lyme's disease being primary, it is not something you want. To add to the fun, symptoms can take a considerable timescale to develop and can be difficult to diagnose. Delightful isn't it.

Removing them as quickly as possible is a good plan. A diseased tick has a greater chance of passing on the disease the longer it is attached. Here the tick has one last little joke for you. Evolution has made sure tick mouthparts are ideal for hanging on. Basically they are not coming out, Pull a tick and its body will part from its mouth. The mouthparts remain in you to go septic. If that is not bad idea enough, in shock the tick probably vomited its stomach contents into you. Not great for disease avoidance. Burning them, covering them in meths etc etc have similar drawbacks.

So removing a tick fast and efficiently is a good plan. The best way I have found is with a tick removal tool and daily inspections where at all possible.

Not all removal tools are created equal. After failed experiments with a few (it is useful to have a small dog as a tick collecting device) I found the O'Tom Tick Twister to not only have the most flamboyant name but also the best results.

The device is simple, effective, efficient and small. Seems to have some eco-friendly credentials too boot. The Vetinary Record tested 4 different extraction tools offering different approaches to the same problem and the O'Tom was significantly better than other methods.

This is one bit of wildlife I am keen not to meet on Dartmoor.  I fully expect to be pulling them out of the dog at some point though.

Monday, 16 August 2010

Wild, I was pretty happy. Part 2

The Naze

  Looking “inland” from the backwaters to the sea and the Naze tower.  The sea is all around you here.

I continued to scan the horizon, the backwaters is made up of numerous creeks snaking among low lying islands. When the tide he water is all but level with most of these islands. It is not an alien landscape, but it is foreign. It's inaccessibility has meant rare species have been able to remain. One of the larger islands has permanent wardens on it to make sure things remain as they are.

On one of those islands lurks a rare plant. That rare plant is food to the Fisher Estuarine Moth. The island has the only viable colony of them in Britain. The island will flood at some future point, probably sooner rather than later. That flood will probably be the end of the moth.

Fishers-Estuarine-Moth_2365

Image by oldbilluk via Flickr

The area has an inhospitable bleakness about it, even under bright blue skies. I have long left behind the most adventurous of the waddlers, I have the place to myself.

The human activity is confined to the water where people fiddle with their boats. A boat advertising wild life trips goes past, it is full of people. I wonder what they may have seen, but for most being on the water surrounded by the landscape is probably treat enough. There is a lot to sea and hear, although due to the noise of the boat engine, a bit less too see and a lot less to hear.

I am always conscious of walking on the edge of the map when coast walking. Some Canada geese go overhead making plenty of din about it, they join some others in a field, some contented cows continue chewing.

I reach a point where the land runs out and I have to make a right angle turn to follow the coastline. The views are 360. I can see the square church tower of the town, and through the trees with binoculars I can make out two other church towers and various isolated farms and grand houses. Roads do not figure in the landscape, nothing mechanical moves for the miles the eye can see on land.

The one feature is Felixstowe docks, the loading/unloading cranes are impressive, it is difficult not to imagine them as an alien invasion force. The plucky Thunder-Child set sail from Harwich in H.G Wells, War of the Worlds.   The Naze being somewhere the aliens had chosen as an invasion point.  It was always one of my favourite moments in the book, a daydream takes over me for a while.

(1906 book illustration War of the Worlds)

Wish I had bought a map so I could identify all the features. I did not need a map to follow a coastline, all I have is a sketch and some gps waypoints. I do not even have a compass to take bearings and check later. I could have started getting inventive to determine the bearings but wasn't in the mood. Too hot for problem solving, even the most mundane.

Still no seals. A tern is trying to tell me something. A kestrel is using the offshore wind rising off the embankment to make his hover easier. I briefly hope the things that scurry in the embankment undergrowth keep their heads down. A job not made easier by the fact it seems to have recently been cut back.

The drainage ditch, which has the aspect of a river plays host to a coot and a family of ducks. Freshwater, it must be the source of the earth I am standing on, a tiny bit of deduction I am overly pleased with.

Briefly wild swimming bubbles to the surface of my mind. There is no safe place to get in and out (I tell myself) and this experience is put off for another day without too much loss of face.

 

Common Kestrel

Image via Wikipedia

Once I take this turn the terrain changes somewhat and seal spotting becomes increasingly unlikely. A noisy oystercatcher sitting on a tuft of grass growing out of the salt marsh gives me a send off.

Walking through dry grass I disturb countless grasshoppers, they leap in profusion just keen to escape me. Seldom have I seen so many. Along with these myriad ladybirds, they are suddenly everywhere, it transports me back to the legendary summer of 76 where we had a plague of the things, sweeping them off doorsteps. I hope they are our native ladybirds, those naughty imports are causing mayhem, lets hope this summer is not so generous to their numbers.

I reach the sea, a point at which the crumbling Naze cliffs sink into the sand, exhausted. I decide to strike out onto the narrow strip of sand which separates backwater from sea. The sand looks dry and the detritus aged, the sea does not wash over these sands often by the looks of it. The wind is weak, and the moon phase promises small tides. All suggests if I have guessed the direction of the tide (I consider it is going out) I am not going to be cut off.

Naze cliffs

Even if I have got all this wrong, there looks to be sufficient green tussock grass to suggest I could sit out my error till the tide went back out. If all that fails and embarrassed called to the local lifeboat, if that fails then maybe I drown. Its a long set of circumstances before that eventuality, more chance crashing the car on the way home. Still if you don't give these things respect they will teach it too you the hard way.

Onto the soft hot sand I step. There is always flotsam and jetsum in these sorts of places, mostly indestructible plastic water bottles and those useless plastic forks that don't have the strength to lance a chip but will last forever it seems.

I select a bottle to replace my meths bottle. Its got one of those clever cap designs which makes accidental spillage near impossible. Re-use is better than recycle. Some rubber, maybe wetsuit remnant, goes into the bag, near bombproof firelighting material.

Looking back towards the cliff I see small knots of people hunched over double. They are looking for sharks teeth. Some people seem to have spent a lifetime filling matchboxes with them. Others seem intent on filling plastic bags with seashells. Leave the damn seashells where they belong, take home the plastic bottles.

My eyes are scanning the sands for a seashell though. I am looking for a whelk shell that spirals in the opposite direction. Modern ones spiral one way, ones from the fossil record go the opposite way, or at least that is what I learnt as a small child in the land locked midlands. From the vantage point of my wooden lift top desk with generations of graffiti etched into it, the seaside was as exotic as it got.  The idea of children learning at ancient Victorian desks now seems exotic.

It gives me something to do, there is a limit to how much the senses can grasp of a flat land a few inches above a flat sea. My hat is pretty much the highest point for some miles.

Eventually without finding anything more than endless ladybirds, one of which I ludicrously saved from a small rock pool (well I could not let it drown) I ran out of land. I had reached the tip of stone point, or at least what the tide had revealed, to go further would be tempting fate for no gain other than taking a risk. Years ago I could have walked further, years from now I will not be able to walk this far, all in living memory.  Coastal erosion is something you can chart year on year in this part of England.

Time to turn back. I simply retracted my footsteps, easy to do, they were there in the soft sand along with bird tracks and the tracks of what I presume was the lifeguard 4x4 searching for some unfortunate.

I never did see a grey seal, but I saw a lot more and the place, despite my initial impression, had a natural wildness which was quite unexpected.

Saturday, 14 August 2010

That sinking feeling.

Selling Nature by the Pound. (with a nod to Genesis the rock group).
Seems Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs budget is being cut by 40%.
So much for the “green govt” credentials, presumably they meant forcing windfarms into existence. 
It looks like they are keen to sell greenery off as fast as possible.  This really is not what the people voted for.
Harold Macmillan accused Thatcher of selling of the family silver, that gone it looks like the next phase is to sell off the estate.
Privatisation of parts of the Forestry Commission.  Selling off National Nature Reserves and withdrawing grants from British Waterways.
Words sort of fail when faced with this sort of news.
Once again the govt has gone for the soft target.

Britains Landscape to be sold.

Wild, I was bloody furious. Part 1.

 

 

  

 

I finally got around to watching a program I recorded in Feb this year. Robert MacFarlane was sort of doing a TV version of his book, The Wild Places.  (youtube link to the program, 6 parts)

Sort of.

He was focusing in on one county to prove the point “wildness” is everywhere (well anywhere there are not a lot of people)

The county in question, Essex. MacFarlane speaks of Roger Deakin opening his eyes to the concept of wild. Or at least to appreciate a weed growing from a crack in the pavement has the elements of wild.

I am not really prepared to visit a toxic landscape by an oil refinery to be impressed by lichen on a grey wall even with MacFarlane egging me on. He does accept it is a wildness which makes you work pretty hard to appreciate it.

Hmmmm, well pupil is not ready to be master, so I am giving it a miss.

But in another segment MacFarlane is waterborne in an old wooden canoe willed to him by Roger Deakin. He is in Walton backwaters where there is a colony of grey seals. This looks to have more traditional elements of wild. Another book about wild places in Britain gives the backwaters high praise putting it in the top 50 or so places harbouring wildness.

I am cutting it fine for a trip to the coast, this is primetime seaside holiday period. Fine if you are a fat drunk conversing with your kids as if they are in another county via subtle variations in the F-word, not so great if you walk upright.  Nothing ventured, nothing gained and Mr MacFarlane seemed to be having a very pleasant secluded time communing with seals.

The backwaters could be found behind a large grey shed of a building, The Columbine centre, built on a flood plain 200 yards behind a sea wall, its the local swimming pool, cinema, indoor bowling club, theatre, car park, eyesore, built in the municipal mundane style.

Behind it, beyond the overflow carpark, is a large earth embankment and once I got to the top of that, I was greeted by a small sewage works, some stinking mud and static caravans.

 

Backwater mud

Image by Phil Gyford via Flickr

The stinking mud is what I had come to see it transpires. Given I saw MacFarlane gracefully paddling over limpid waters gazing at basking seals I was glad I did not take the oil refinery option. Gawd alone knows what mouth of Hades that actually is.

Oh well, I am here now. I walk along the top of the sea defence bank. Boats are languishing in the mud, the tide is out. Some boats look as if an incoming tide washes over them rather than float them. Neglect is the impression, this could be a tough sell.

The Twizzle snakes off to do its thing, whatever that might be.  In fact the whole low lying area is snaked with water, my walk is taking my along the Walton Channel up towards nowhere much.

Once I am past the caravan site. which was not bad, just unexpected, things pick up. Flat and essentially treeless would be an uncharitable impression Across the farmers field, golden with crop, is a headland and a navigational tower. The tower is a focus of a lot of ineffective hand wringing. Coastal erosion is eating the cliff at quite the rate. Earlier versions of the town have slipped into the sea over the centuries.

It is a landmark tower, ancient and unique, maybe that will be the reason they get the sea defences they need. Probably not is my guess, there are a lot more things to throw money at than a social security hotspot.

Naze Tower, Walton-on-the-Naze. This distincti...

Image via Wikipedia

The view is impressive, golden crops, green hill, deep blue sea water, a large ferry going into Harwich, a larger container ship going into Felixstowe. Bold colours for bold ventures.

The farmland is protected from the higher tides in the backwaters by an earth embankment which is strengthened on the seaward side by small concrete blocks, much overgrown. The bank is in excess of 12 foot I guess and there is quite a large drainage ditch which runs around the farmland, I guess that is where the soil came from. On top of the embankment is a low wall made of concrete slabs, much weathered and failing in a number of places. Perhaps this was put up after the 1953 flooding of the area. It is either carefully worked out or just something slapped on the top as an after thought. It looks very after thought right now.

Among the flotsam I spot a jam jar, it has paper contents. A message in a bottle, so more akin to jetsum. I go over the knee high wall on the top of the embankment, noticing it had yellow lichen on it. Within the bottle is the block capitals of phone number. Its from the far off shore of Dovercourt, maybe 2 miles away.

Still it might have age on its side if not mileage. I will contact him and he will remember wistfully the far off days when he had teeth and had thrown this jar into the sea.

The lid of the jam jar said, best before 2011.

Oh well, I bunged it into the mud where the next tide would set it on its travels, purposeful litter, sort of. I make penance by picking up the nearest 3 plastic sports drink bottles.

I notice a large blue tarpalin draped over the wall, could not miss it. Also a blue sleeping bag. Looks like someone has been wild camping and left in some haste. Bright blue is not the fugitive colour in this landscape, unless his quick exit was via police escort. Still I gather 7m of paracord and a tin of baccy. I want the tin, I could buy one for no money, but its got no memory, this one is better. My guess, rain stopped play and they headed back to whatever caravan they were meant to be in, suffering the banter of his mates/family, a future Ray Mears returning to mere mortal.

A beautiful Red Admiral sits on the low concrete wall. It is the butterfly all of its species should be judged by. The brightest of colours, it really is striking, but it is a shy beauty and refuses to be photographed. It will grow impossibly perfect in my memory, and why not. The baccy tin, gathers another association instantly.

Bird life is noisy and greedy, all manner of things are wheeling overhead and poking about in the mud. Specialist stuff by the looks of their beaks and all impressively clean. This looks like the sort of mud you dump bodies in. You would have to be daft to go out on it. Needless to say the coastguard cheats Darwin every so often and saves someone from the mud.

Moving along I see a duck boat lying in one of the many folds of the coastline, it is drapped in weed, unloved the tide must flow over it. Long low and built with purpose it seems a shame to be allowed just to rot into nothing. It has resisted the sea for quite some time for that much weed to have accumulated. It is part of a past we don't need now, but one day we will wish we had not been so neglectful of such things.

I look out over the grey mud with some grey sea running between it. No grey seals, but it is early yet and I've not got my eye in.

In part two, will I see a seal or will it just be a blubber stomached tourist floundering in the mud.

Friday, 13 August 2010

March of Tech

 

 

How things change over the years. This trip to Dartmoor is dominated by digital preparations. Partly because the other elements run on well practiced lines.

The digital march has no new tech, but it does have much more extensive use of that tech. My Psion 5 carries a dozen or so Dartmoor related texts and a great many notes to improve my understanding and interpret what is being seen. It actually has ludicrous quantities of information including decades of Victorian moor archaeology.

With the best will in the world it is impossible to remember it all and it is a relief not to have too. It is all stored away digitally and at no extra weight.

The Psion also is capable of a game of backgammon or chess if need be.

I have been updating my Dartmoor gpx files and sorting out the 500 most relevant waypoints for this trip. My old Garmin Etrex, a discontinued model is showing its age now but it performs its essential task well.

Always annoying to have missed a curious stone by a few hundred yards, which happens more often than I would like. The waypoints reduce the possibility of that.

There is so much to see and seeing something in the landscape with your own eyes beats all.

Waypoints give a different perspective to a map and I confess a lot simpler to check quickly than unfurling the map.  Effectively it is my map with the things that are relevant to me on it.  Bogs being one of the things which are easier to spot on as a waypoint than on the map.

The start of the River Avon of South Dartmoor....

Image via Wikipedia

New SIM for the phone so I have a choice of networks, hopefully this will reduce the chance of being in a deadspot. This might not be an issue, or it might be a matter of some importance.

The phone trebles up as camera, it is quite good enough to capture my memories of Dartmoor, and mpeg4 player. The Hound of the Baskervilles travels with me in written word, spoken word, radio play and two film versions. Again overkill, but it is there if I want it and the phone weighs no more for the extra contents.

Without tech most of this would not be possible at all. The books would be possible, if I did not mind walking about with a couple of dozen.

Tech has revolutionised the way I conduct walks generally and it is an enhancer. Rather than cut me off from what I see it allows me to see and understand more of it.

Thursday, 12 August 2010

White Admiral

 

 

Was reading about the big butterfly count for this year and was reminded I had a bit of butterfly hunting left over from last year.

The White Admiral is found in very few sites in Essex, until the mid-90s it was reputedly only to be found in one. This was where I was heading, Stour Wood. It is near the River Stour of couse, but not as close as Copperas Wood, which is close by.

Copperas Wood is worth a mention as the treeline goes right down to saltmarsh. I believe this is the only such instance in Essex. This is prime bird watching territory, which I guess will be on my list of things to know more about.  (image of the destruction)

Back to the butterfly.

I have left it a bit late for seeing the white admiral, mid-June into July is primetime. Given the alternative was waiting till next year it seemed worth the effort.

The White Admiral is not a rare butterfly but numbers are declining and its a high priority for butterfly conservation. Spotting one in a rare location is more fun than spotting them where they comparatively abound.

Also breaking in a new pair of boots, so tree gazing and butterfly spotting seem suitable activities. Modern boots don't need the sort of breaking in period of old but it is still a good idea to not destroy your feet as they get used to boots.

Driving down I spotted a cherry tree with a lot of fruit laying underneath it. I made a mental note to visit my favourite cherry picking haunts.

Before I actually got to the wood, I stumbled on a small meadow which seemed to be filled with Holly Blue butterflies. So many one hung around obligingly to be photographed. Maybe they had just hatched out into the sunshine and getting their bearings. I marked it as a good omen.

The walk begins at Ramsey. There is a carpark at Stour Wood but the walking in is part of the deal.

Ramsey windmill blades loom from behind a bush which would never have existed when it was working. The mill has not ground flour for a long time, but it still looks out over the fields whose crops it must have once milled. 

Image via Wikipedia

Windmill at Ramsey, Essex

The windmill was moved from its original location in Woodbridge to its new location in 1842. A working mill till World War Two, it fell into dis-use and was saved by volunteers in 1974 at which point it was a collapsing derelict.

The signpost pointing out the long distance footpath, The Essex Way sported a new style of flash for the walk. Good to see if it represents an overall maintenance program of the walk but I cannot help thinking replacing everlasting plastic flashes is a regular waste.

Going off The Essex Way, heading west, the impressive chimneys of Roydon Hall come into view. It is marked in gothic script on the OS, non-roman. What stands there now is a late 16th century building but the site goes further back than that. It stands in isolation.

Onwards to Stour Wood which covers over 130 acres and is actively managed, it was coppiced until the 1970's and is being done so again. It enters the written record as being coppiced in the mid-1600s. As with all things there are people willing to say the Sweet Chestnuts date all the way back to their introduction by the Romans.

The fact the wood is named after the river rather than a landowner suggests age and sweet woodruff along with other plant indicators underline this. There do not seem to be trees of any massive age within it that I am aware of though, although coppice is not giving away its age easily..

There are a good many well defined footpaths through the wood along with many rather more ad-hoc looking affairs. The northern edge of the wood is bounded by the railway line which runs on an embankment at near canopy height. Very odd to hear a train go past high above your head. The river is a little beyond that.

On my walk I was pleased to see one of the few surviving small leaf limes which remain in the wood. Squirrels were having a field day among the Hazel trees. I eye the hazelnuts hoping a few will be left for me when they are ready.

One tree on the edge of the wood was bursting with activity and remained so when I went back to it a couple of hours later. The birdsong gave the hint and then i saw them silhouetted, tiny little birds smaller than the leaves with the distinctive long tail, the long tailed tit.

Good too see them, not rare, but I rarely see them because they are so damn small. These birds made it into the top 10 garden birds in 2009 but chilly winters can kill 90%, it was a cold winter, they did not make the top 10 in 2010.

 

 

Long-tailed Tit, a common resident.

Image via Wikipedia

 

 

Many trees lay where they had fallen in the great storm of 1987, shooting up new growth from their horizontal rest. In nearby Copperas Wood 25 of the 34 acres were flattened that night. It was a shocking destruction I remember well. Trees are not easily destroyed though as evidenced from the coppiced hornbeam sprouting from stumps cut to within a few inches from the ground. Apparently regularly coppicing gives a tree an almost limitless lifespan. This is not a wood tidied to within an inch of sterility, dead trees exist, lots gets to live in it.

Humanity was present in the wood but huddled around the car park for the most part, noisy. Within the wood it was easy enough to forget the world outside.

Butterflies were not exactly in abundance, I saw very few and was giving up hope of spotting the White Admiral when sitting in splendid isolation I saw exactly what I sort. Sure it was a bit ragged and somewhat dull but it was The White Admiral and I was very pleased to see it. I wondered if I might see another having seen one but I did not.

 

White Admiral in southern Maine.

Image via Wikipedia

I explored happily for a few more hours and took a circular route back following The Essex Way back out to my start point, it leads me out of Stour Wood along the banks of the river itself and into Copperas Wood. The bushes along the riverbank had many sloes in them, testament to how vile they are to it. Some blackberries looked edible but barely were.

Copperas Wood had a last little surprise for me with a litter of small crab apples just as I was leaving it. They looked the very definition of bitter.

On walking back to the car at Ramsey unaccompanied singing was coming from the spartan Weslyn chapel by the footpath. Quite a congregation, it sounded tuneless and heartfelt and put a smile on my face, it was good to hear. The end of a pleasant five or six hours.

 

 

Saturday, 7 August 2010

Break in the clouds

Work clouds that is.  An multiday trip to Dartmoor had to be put off earlier in the year because of work commitments.  This worked out okay as the weather was positively dreadful at the point in the year things should have been getting better.  I don’t mind poor weather, but there is no reason to actively seek it out when there are alternatives.  I promised myself I’d get to the moor the moment there was a suitable gap in the work schedule.

The problem with not going on a break is you don’t get the time back and if I was too busy in spring, chances are I was going to be too busy through to the autumn months.  All well and good having time on my hands in Feb but I can always think of better alternatives to being half frozen out on the hills miles from nowhere.  Usually half frozen closer to home is the option taken.

But it looks like a break in the schedule is coming up.  Uncomfortably close to the August bank holiday but take the chances when they come, there might not be another.

I am at the kit evaluation stage.  Most of it is good to go.  New boots, but they are pretty much what I had before, they work, I will let others guinea pig the latest space age nano boot tech.

My trangia is being retired for this trip.  It has done me good service, the military version, it is pretty well bombproof, but the weight is testament to the indestructibility.  The replacement is the whitebox stove.  Don’t ask me why its taken so long to make an obvious decision put it down to the devil you know.  Other considerations might have been, “I’ll let others guinea pig this space age nano cooking tech”.  Or, “its a bloody crushed can”.  Still it looks to be a well reviewed robust bit of kit, its a field tested and proven bit of kit.

New cooking pot is needed, nothing space age, its a camping saucepan with lid, folding handle and a base broad enough to handle the flames coming out of the white box stove.  Nice and light, you don’t need much to boil water and cook beans lets face it.

After the trangia, it all seems a bit like a child’s tea set.  My main concern is stability issues but I am a reasonably competent adult so I suppose I will get along.  The website says it does not need a pot stand, but that might be like saying I don’t technically need two legs as I could hop.  Nobody seems to be making a big fuss of stability issues other than saying “stability issues”.  Reasonable care seems to be the thing to apply.

Sunday, 1 August 2010

Part 3 : The Dragon's tail

St. Andrew's church, Wormingford, Essex. The n...

Image via Wikipedia

The day has settled into the familiar weather pattern, the sun beats down. It has been a wonderful summer. It cannot compete with past summers because nothing can compete with things gone. In memory though it will be very special.

"They" say August will be hot, the first six months have been as dry as anything since the 20s.

The track curves away from Bottengoms and towards a pond. Our progress was hidden by trees and startled a young duck. He went for the safety of home at comical speed, everything flapping as he ran across the water. A gust of wind nearly sent my hat skidding across the pond after the fleeing duckling, that would not have done at all.

A bit of road walking was coming up. A country lane really. that happened to have been surfaced some time ago. I guessed quite some time ago by the amount of plant life that had forced itself up through the tarmac. It reminded me of the life after people TV series and how time limited so much of what we create is without continual vigilance.

These sleepy country lanes, sunken with poor visibility, make me nervous. My ears strain to hear approaching motors, they can be on you fast, too fast. Getting yourself to safety against the steep earth banks can be tricky, an added complexity when you have small dogs on leads. A stress which doesn't allow me to really enjoy these little sections of walk which are very nice to remember once the danger is behind you. Empty roads are a pleasure but they always hold the memory of swift travel unless they are very decayed.

Soon back to billowing countryside and a sign warning us there is a bull in the field. Marvellous, and limited views through undulating fields cannot disprove it. No fresh cowpats can be seen though. I venture on. 600 odd years ago something more than a bull was worrying the locals around these parts.

I am surprised by the sight of a glider, it is quite low to the ground, appearing above treetops. It is coming into land, there is a landing strip nearby which I had forgotten about. It was a quick reminder of the day I saw them from a greater distance when walking a section of The Essex Way, south of here. 

I am close to The Grange, and entering dragon territory. The views across The Stour Valley are very special, devoid of almost everything but agricultural enterprise.

The tale has a few tellings but lets go with the account written down by a local monk, John de Trokelowe, which was written at the time. 1405. This has the dragon emerging from The Stour at Bures. The dragon did considerable mischief to local sheep and scared a good many village folks. Richard de Waldegraves bowmen made a concerted effort to rid their lordships land of the miscreant. However they found arrows bounced off the back of the great beast and they had to make a retreat.

A local posse was formed and legend has it the dragon on seeing this went into the local mere never to be seen again.

Wormingford is of course, ford of the worm. Worm being another version of dragon. The mere is now in the grounds of Wormingford Hall. There are plenty of versions of the tale with one identifying the dragon as a crocodile which had escaped from The Tower of London. The monk describes a vast body with tufted head, saw-like teeth and a tail immeasurably long. Combine this with a back that deflected arrows and perhaps this is what it was.

Whatever the truth the area has thankfully not drummed this up into a theme park or tourist trap. Wormingford church has a 500 word plaque recounting a version of the story and elsewhere there is a stain glass windows depicting events.

This version suggests the legend of St George and the Dragon may have had its roots here. The passage of time has lost the absolute truth of what happened here, but something odd did.

We arrive at Wormingford church itself, Norman tower built partially from recycled Roman materials. A north isle of 14th Century construction is the modern extension.

Opposite the small road by the church a house proudly proclaims its construction date of 1750 with a large plaque contemporary to construction by the looks of it.

The church wall has a treat, a set of stone steps which go up and over the wall, which is maybe 4 foot high. It saves opening the iron gate next to it. The dogs like this and make repeated use of it. I wonder if it was used as a mounting block.

The churchyard holds the mortal remains of John Constables relatives who worked locally, as well as the artist John Nash and his wife.

The Norman church is the epicentre of the walk, John Nash lies there, Ronald Blythe preaches there. I can imagine the villagers praying for salvation from the dragon. To the NW near the mere significant prehistoric remains have been found when in 1836 a barrow was opened where 'hundreds of urns in rows' were found.

On the old flood plain at a bend of the River Stour can still be found the flint tools of our ancestors, a walk for another day.

Walking on a skylark hung 15 foot or so above my head and sung his liquid song. It had been the soundtrack of the walk My late start had caught up with me and Bures was not going to be my end destination. Rather than a circular walk back along the St Edmunds way it was back along the Stour Valley walk.

Almost at the very end of my walk was an old deeply weather-worn kissing gate, thick wooden beams were curved as a barrel. The whole structure speaks of more effort than needed, built stronger with more craft but clearly rustic. I cannot recall the last time I had seen a gate quite like this. Hopefully it will be many years before it needed a replacement even if in keeping like the one at the start of the walk.

A beginning and an end. Time to turn around and see things from another angle.

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

Midges.

US Navy 100506-N-7498L-152 Sailors assigned to...

Image via Wikipedia

Seems the boffins have been busy when it comes to Scottish midges, but I guess it applies to all nationalities.

Midges are more likely to bite tall men and fat women. 15% of the people appear to produce a natural insect repellent and this has a hereditary aspect.  Oddly fat men are just as likely to be at higher risk to midge bites, but there were not enough male fatties signing up to the study for it to be provable.

Carbon di-oxide and lactic acid are midge attractors and it seems fat people are producing more of it.  If you want to suffer fewer bites then your body better start producing geranylacetone and methylheptenone.

Mixed in the right quantities this is a great repellent.  Already efforts to manufacture it are under way and should be on sale in Asia shortly.  Within a couple of years it is expected to be available in Europe.

The old standby of Deet has a few drawbacks, one of them being 60 percent of mosquitoes can become immune to it.

And just for a bit of cheer peak midge season in Scotland is June to Sept and a hectare of land can contain 25million biting midges.

 

I am not clear if standing next to a tall heavy breathing sweaty fatty  would mean less bites for me, or if the insects would be in such a frenzy anything near them would be dinner as well.

 

Full article here in the Guardian.

.

Sunday, 25 July 2010

Here be dragons (Part Two).


River Stour at Nayland. The 42-mile long River...
Image via Wikipedia

 
 

I park badly in the main street which is Nayland. I regret this almost instantly when a large double decker bus hoves into view and makes hardwork of navigating the narrow main road with cars parked randomly on either side. Regret it, but do nothing about it, I could have tried to cram the car 4 inches closer to the curb but I will take my chances. Odds are I will scrape the tyre walls and bust the hubcaps on old fashioned high curbs. It only represents a problem to the reckless, they will slow down to a legal limit or hit it.
A recent very expensive redevelopment of my local village saw the removal of fine old high curbs. All old curbstones come from Dartmoor in my imagination and so the removal of them breaks an imaginary link with my favourite locale. .
The old town planners knew what they were doing though as everytime it rains now the shops on one side all flood as water pours over the new low profile curbs. The developers have trousered the EU grant and are long gone, tearing up someone else's high street having pulled the wool over the local council eyes, or more likely crossed their palms with silver. Now the few pedestrians that did care if they were in the road or on the pavement are no longer sure. Be dangerous if the road system was able to allow people to do the legal speed limit but a gridlocked crawl between expensive and pointless traffic lights is all that is allowed..
Thanks for nothing and back to the walk.
 
View map of Wormingford, Colchester, Essex, England, CO6 3 on Multimap.com
Get directions to or from Wormingford, Colchester, Essex, England, CO6 3
Dogs and I have to cross the Roman Road which is now a multi-lane A road. On the other side sits a large converted barn, now some swish commerical enterprise. Traffic was light, we were soon across, that makes a pleasant change.
This bit of the walk starts with a new wooden kissing gate, a renewal and promise of a future. It is good too see things are cared about. A bit of string marginally too short is used to fasten the gate. It makes securing it difficult, but the last person through had made the effort. It is a good start.
An electric fence seperates the walker from the empty field. This was actually a theme of the walk, a lot of low cost fencing, electrified, or barbed wire. The dogs were off the leads and free to wander. Sometimes they might get more than 12 feet from me, but its rare and not encouraged. They are not strangers to leads, nor are they slaves.
Almost instantly I met an elderly woman with a young outlook walking a young dog who was as old as the hills. The dogs name was Reggie. We soon put rural England in it's place (high), "Nowhere else like in on Earth, look a the wind blowing in the willows". I did as told and was rewarded by seeing a little bit of the world as this lady saw it.
Having agreed on it really being a green and pleasant land we chat as dog owners do. I am not sure what the dogs are saying, but it involves a lot of arse sniffing. The walk is going to cover 16km and within the first 50 yards I will have seen 33% of the humanity I am going too. I get about 3 words out of the other 67%.
It never ceases to amaze just how few people you bump into once more than 400 yards from a road. I met none on a beautiful weekend on footpaths linking Suffolk villages.
Oddly the conversation with the woman had turned to religion. While the dragon tale and the OS map were the starting point, the wonderful Ronald Blythe was the living spirit of the landscape for me. Born 1922, a man whose faith is meaningful and informed. He has written many a book about where I walk because it is where he has spent a lifetime walking. His book Word from Wormingford is in my bag as I stroll.
Mr Blythe is the companion in my head as we walk. He has walked every step I will walk, many times.
Dogs and I left to our own devices, we are surrounded by the noises of industrious nature going about its business. Streaks of blue, long sleek elongated bodies zoom by. They look faster than they are, the common blue damselfly, well named. Water is nearby.
Then a gathering of banded demoiselle flap around us almost impossibly fragile, how do they manage?
Banded Demoiselle  (Calopteryx splendens)
Image by Lip Kee via Flickr
 
 
 
Butterflies are in profusion enjoying blackberry bushes by the look of it. Red Admirals are putting on quite a show, my favourite from childhood. The Painted lady, last years wonder, are not to be seen. I cannot help but miss them.
The first glimpse of the slow moving River Stour through trees. I take a well used track to the waters edge. Willow dips low and trails in the water, it literally brings the landscape to life. Water is also magical for the caveman ancestor within us all. Every cell in our body knows it needs water, it is a basic joy.
The River Stour runs in the valley, which is to say this landscape is not flat. It is surprisingly lumpy, in places positively corrugated. The views across this wide valley are fabulous. Winding my way through a field of ripening wheat I can look across a patchwork of fields and associated buildings. Although harvesting has started in my neck of the woods it seems not to have begun here yet.
The church tower at Nayland, is in plain view and will be even when I reach the turning point of the walk in 5 miles time. The church towers remain the tallest buildings in the landscape, commerce does not loom over faith here.
At Wissington, which according to a text is called Wiston by the locals showing a preference to its ancient name, I bump into my first moat as well as small Norman church.
 

St. Mary's church, Wissington, Suffolk. Apart ...
Image via Wikipedia
 
Essex and Suffolk are the English counties with the most moats. Hundreds of them each. Until I read Roger Deakin, Waterlog, my idea of a moat was the thing around a castle. Not so. It became quite the status symbol and would appear around farmsteads or simply barns. They need not be defensive as a good many did not encircle the property. They fulfilled a variety of functions.
If you are interested here is a link to Channel 4s Time Team mini site about moats
In the mid-1600’s a number of families left Wissington and took their Puritan beliefs to the New World and the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Religion seems alive in the landscape. I have remained immune to any organised religion but rather like malaria, just coz I don't have it, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
My path turns towards Little Horkesley but turns off before I reach this interesting little village. Another day for that. I am heading towards Bottengoms. We walk through a plantation of widely spaced but obviously regimented willow trees, some marked, presumably for felling. Others are saplings just beginning their journey.
In my mind all willow trees are destined to be cricket bats, it's a noble calling. So I don't know enough about willow trees, this much is clear..
Bottengoms is a house nestled in the surrounding countryside. So nestled its near invisible, hidden by the rolling landscape. Horses are in paddocks nearby as I look down upon it.
Bottengoms is ancient and I believe still without mains water. It was the home of John Nash from the late 1920's, the artist of international reputation. Now it is the home of Ronald Blythe having been bequeathed it on the death of his friend Nash in 1977. So I walk the land Mr Nash new so well and painted so wonderfully. I walk the land Mr Blythe writes about so lovingly.
I wonder what the war artist Nash would have made of the barbed wire which encloses fields nearby and hereabouts. My guess, not much.
What an enchanted spot, a nice place to stay for a while.
Part 3 coming soon enough.

Saturday, 24 July 2010

Identification leads to mystery.

The Sand Lizard (Lacerta agilis) is a lizard.

Image via Wikipedia

 

A small mystery was resolved today, but it opened up the door to another, greater mystery.

A few months ago I was strolling down to where I was working that day. A stretch of Essex coastline. A warm morning, the skies were clear, it was going to be glorious.

Out of the corner of my eye I saw movement and then scurrying in front of me was a bright green lizard, mottled with brown. He was in too much of a hurry to pose for a photo and I was to enchanted to care. He seemed to be maybe 12cm long. I had never seen anything like him. As delightful as he was unexpected. It brightened my day.

Getting home and hitting the reference books did me no good, a search of the internet came up with nothing that really looked like what I had seen.

The incident was put to the back of a cluttered mind.

I get in from work today and Alan Titchmarsh is boring on about UK wildlife in his rent-a-presenter manner. I am not a fan, but his demise by remote control was stopped by the fact he mentioned being in Devon, or Dorset. Where-ever it was, somewhere I would rather be..

Next moment the lizard I had seen was on-screen. A sand lizard, endangered, they live in colonies.

The interesting thing being the nearest known colony (there are 580 recorded in Britain) is about 80 miles from where I saw one.

The internet is a collection of small wonder. A quick search and I found the chap I wanted to email to tell him. The UK co-coordinator of sand lizard counting.

Turns out you need a licence to count these thing. Seems a bit of fuss, but doubt I have broken to many laws by having one run in front of me. If it does get legal I suppose I can fall back on the defence there was only 1, so not really any counting involved.

All joking aside I am actually more excited by this brush with endangered species in a place not apparently previously recorded than I expected to be. Not that I had given such circumstances all that much thought..

I was pleased to get it identified and thrilled it might represent an increase in numbers for an endangered UK lizard.  The chances of seeing it again, given the area I saw it is remote.

My only regret is I did not get a photo, but at the time i had no idea it was an exciting rarity which would be of significance to anyone else.

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