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David

Growing in mortar on garden wall

Growing in mortar on garden wall

This little plant was an inch or so high. It was growing from the mortar between two of the stones on the top of a front garden wall.

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David

Redwings on branches, Bantock Park

Redwings on branches, Bantock Park

Redwings in Bantock Park. They had taken refuge in trees when a man with a dog came a little too close to where they were feeding on the ground (see yesterday’s mistle thrush post).

When they had been on the ground, it was really obvious that the mistle thrush was a lot bigger than the redwings. his size contrast was magnified when they had flown onto branches: the redwings were it trees farther from where I was standing.  They were also closely surrounded by a maze of twigs, harder to spot than the bigger bird which was against a background of the open sky.

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David

Lone crocus, not quite open

Lone crocus, not quite open

Isolated among the litter of the leaves which fell last autumn, a lone crocus with a flower just on the point of opening.

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David

Mistle thrush on branch: Bantock Park

Mistle thrush on branch: Bantock Park

As we went through the entrance to Bantock Park, there was a mistle thrush on the ground, looking for things to eat in the short grass. nearby, a handful of redwings were doing the same.

As I was getting my camera out, someone walking his dog came towards them. The birds retreated to the safety of nearby trees.

The mistle thrush stayed on the branch, watchful and occasionally preening.

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David

After it flowered: yucca, West Park

After it flowered: yucca, West Park

Yuccas in parks and front gardens across Wolverhampton flowered around the turn of the year, I think for the second time. This is what was left after the flowers had shrivelled on one of the plants in West Park.

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David

Just caught ’em: scarlet elf cups

Just caught 'em: scarlet elf cups

Probably scarlet elf cups are my favourite fungi. Cup fungi fruiting bodies have a distinctive shape. These in particular have a bright colour not often seen in nature in the depths of winter, when they appear.

They grow on dead wood, usually fallen twigs and branches, and they are a centimetre or two wide when full grown. So despite their vivid colour, they can be easily missed among the leaf litter and other detritus.

There’s a patch of the Smestow Valley Nature Reserve not far from the Newbridge access points where they have been for the past few years. I’ve managed to get down to see them every year, but this year I left it so late that I thought I might have missed them.

Caught them just in time, although these, in the Paddock, look like they would be unlikely to be around for much longer.