Categories
David

Pelargonium (geranium) leaves

Pelargonium (geranium) leaves

I ignored the showy flowers for the subtler colours of these pelargonium (geranium) leaves.

Categories
David

White tailed black-headed gull

ttps://www.flickr.com/photos/davea2007/44356325151

Black-headed gull swimming in the Severn at Bridgnorth. For some reason it appeared to have an untypical long, forked and white tail.

White tailed black-headed gull

Categories
David

Unidentified insect in church porch

Unidentified insect in church porch

Insect – I totally gave up trying to identify it. It was resting up for the day on the inner wall of the church porch at Chipping Norton, its colour blending with that of the stonework. If it hadn’t shifted slightly, it would probably have escaped notice.

Unidentified insect in church porch

Categories
David

gone … then back again (sandy stiltballs)

gone ... then back again (sandy stiltballs)

Sandy stiltballs, a very rare fungus – the current record stands at exactly 200 confirmed sightings ever in Britain. Even for a fungus, it looks as strange as it is rare. The tall stem resembles a series of long splinters compressed together, and already beginning to fray slightly. At the top what looks like damp sand compressed into a ball is actually a mass of spores. It prefers very dry sandy soil (half-hidden under hedgerows in the ones I’ve seen). So there are clusters of sandy-coloured fruiting bodies in a patch of sandy-coloured fallen spores, growing out of slightly paler sandy-coloured soil.

I recently posted about a patch of these stiltballs which I discovered growing by a lane in south Shropshire in 2011, and how they were last seen in 2014. Lo and behold, another patch, just a few miles distant. When these pictures were taken in late August, there were forty or so fruiting bodies by a south Shropshire roadside .

Categories
David

Shades of green: sweet chestnut seed ripening

Shades of green: sweet chestnut seed ripening

Shades of green from the leaves, stems and protective covering of this ripening sweet chestnut seed.

Categories
David

Robin’s pincushion at the end of a rose branch

Robin's pincushion at the end of a rose branch

Robin’s pincushion gall. A wasp has laid her egg at the end of a rose branch. In the process, chemicals have been produced which distort the normal development of the wood, producing a frizzled mass which protects the growing young wasp.