Blackening Brittlegills
There are Blackening Brittlegills here on Dartmoor. They are fungi which live in broadleaved, mixed and coniferous woodland. They really do like …
There are Blackening Brittlegills here on Dartmoor. They are fungi which live in broadleaved, mixed and coniferous woodland. They really do like …
There’s a flock of Canada Geese, Branta canadensis, here in The Regent’s Park. They were introduced in the late 17th century as an …
There’s a strange group of fungi on this dead tree stump in the grounds of Exeter University. I’m out again on a …
It’s not very often that you can experience wilderness in England. Contrary to popular belief, we’re not lovers of wildlife and nature …
There are fungi I don’t recognise in the woods. They look as if they’ve been given a little too much bicarbonate of …
There’s a Fieldfare at Emsworthy Mire. It’s a thrill, as they’re truly wild and difficult to get close to. The ones which …
How many people know what Pontefract cakes are? Surely not just people who live in Yorkshire? Maybe some people who live in …
Here’s a thrill. It’s the pupa of a moth, which has been been infected with a fungus called Scarlet Caterpillar Club, Cordyceps …
I’ve been enjoying looking through this 1947 copy of Edible and Poisonous Fungi from 1947. It has one of my favourite edible …
Here’s one of my recent purchases, Edible and Poisonous Fungi. What’s this? Bulletin No.23? The Ministry of Agriculture & Fisheries? Published by …
A trip to London for work, with an afternoon free, means I’m changing out of my suit in a toilet cubicle and …
As a teenager, I went on a biology field trip to Borth on the west Wales coast. We had a minibus trip …
I’m not usually out early in the morning. You might have noticed that my blog contains many, many sunset photographs but precious …
I volunteer for a children’s charity and we’re having a meeting of our trustees in Oxfordshire. I check a map and see …
Adult Starlings used to be known as Stares. It was the juveniles which were called Starlings. By the 16th Century, they were …
There are Fallow Deer at Powderham Castle in South Devon. It’s not really a castle, with a motte and bailey, but more …
There’s a beautiful domed fungus on this lump of poo on Dartmoor. Naturally I have to pick it up and have a …
Dog Stinkhorns, Mutinus caninus, aren’t easy to find. It’s not just that they like growing in overgrown areas, it’s that they don’t …
To find wild mushrooms at their peak you really need to visit a likely spot for them every three days. As they’re …
We’re on an organised fungus foray with the Devon Fungus Group when our leader spots a Beefsteak Fungus, Fistulina hepatica, on a …
One of my favourite poets isn’t known today, and, when people do recognise his name, it’s not as a poet. Colonel John …
There’s a beautiful pinkish-white mushroom on the floor in this Birch woodland. It’s got a marvellous fuzzy-jumper top. Gorgeous, isn’t it? It’s …
When life gives you apricot-scented fungi, you’ve found Chanterelles.
Have you ever looked at a photograph and seen something in it which you didn’t see at the time you took it? …
Each year at Einar, the Linnets build their nests and raise their chicks. It takes two weeks from laying to hatching and …
I took so many photographs of Puffins this summer that I’ve not published even a fraction of my favourites, so here are …
A Puffin’s dinner is an Arctic Skua’s dinner. Arctic Skuas are hunting Puffins for their fish on Westray and they’re having intermittent …
Black Guillemots remind me of pigeons in their attitude and body shape. Maybe it’s the position of their wings? Maybe it’s the …
There’s an adult Lapwing calling near the farm track as we bobble along it. That’s odd because they normally just fly away. …
Fulmars are my favourite birds to watch flying. They have an effortless confidence on the wind, and glide with stiff wings as …