The remnants of a collared earthstar, seen here some ten weeks after I had first noticed and pictured it. The fungus had looked like it had been around for a little time even on that earlier occasion.
Nuthatch, fatballs, West Park
Someone had wedged a couple of fatballs in one of the West Park flowering cherries. A pair of nuthatches were enthusiastically eating them, undisturbed as people walked past, or by me standing on the other side of the path, taking pictures.
Velvet shanks are a common fungus in mid-winter. I noticed these on a walk in the Smestow Valley on a cold morning.
Circular feeding: shovellers
Short video clip of shovellers on the lake at West Park. They are feeding by sifting the water immediately below the surface.
Often a pair will swim round in a tight circle, each one stirring up the water for the other’s benefit.
There was a lot of aggression between the drakes, with one incident caught on this brief clip. Breeding season approaches.
Seen on an early morning walk during the cold spell in January, frosted vegetation. Holly leaves, ivy berries and a thistle.
On the ice: Perton and West Park
As the cold spell was coming to in the area at the end late in January, the ice on roads and footpaths quickly melted away once the night time temperatures rose slightly above freezing. But the partial ice covers on some of the larger pools stayed in place for several days more.
During this period, some of the West Park mallards had gathered on the ice on the lake there, and appeared to be drinking from a puddle of meltwater. Meanwhile at Perton a gang of the black-headed gulls were just standing around in a group.





