Thursday, 9 October 2008
Big Clear Up
Wednesday, 8 October 2008
Seeds and Berries
I wrote that there weren't any sweet chestnuts this year, and now have to admit to being wrong. Recent winds have brought leaves and unripe fruit down from the sweet chestnuts, and with less leaf cover we can see some fruit up there in prickly bunches, but whether they'll ever ripen is doubtful.
Still, at least it's there - which is more than can be said for rowan and holly berries. We haven't discovered any. The berries above are in our garden, and the only others I've seen have been in gardens, so obviously they aren't exactly the same as the wild native rowans. Likewise the hollies.
And does this mean we'll have a very mild winter? I'm not convinced that the trees can plan in advance according to their own internal weather forecast. Especally as the garden varieties seem to have a different view of the future months!
However, the planned walk will gather a good selection of other seeds and berries, and we'll be handing out collecting bags and instructions and hoping that people will successfully grow a selection of good native trees for planting later when they're sturdy little miniature trees. There's a good demand for them and we'll be suggesting Forest of Bradford as a future home for our Buck Wood babies. CA
Sunday, 5 October 2008
Looking up and down
But looking up into the tree tops demonstrates how the autumn leaf fall seems suddenly to have changed to bareness, at least in the case of these birches which are on the top of the ridge and less sheltered than most.
But all the rain gives me a chance to use a favourite word, splorroch, which Joseph Wright, Thackley's most famous son, defines in his Dictionary as 'the sound made by walking in wet or mud'. I think we'll be doing a lot of splorroching during the next few months!
CA
Wednesday, 1 October 2008
Bouncing acorns
But while the signs of the wood dying back and settling into winter are all around, there's still evidence of how resilient nature is, and that it can recover from the worst that age and bad weather combined can do to it.
This oak tree broke apart in gales two or three years ago, the top was sawn off to prevent further damage, and since then it seems to have flourished, albeit in a most un-oak-like shape! And the broken trunk lying nearby has fostered a succession of different fungi, including an impressive growth of Black bulgar, Bulgaria inquinans. Now it's almost covered by brambles, and this years fungal growths are too well-hidden under prickly branches to photograph.
CA
Sunday, 28 September 2008
Autumn Life
This moth can appear in either of these two forms. It was thought that during the 19th century it had evolved into the dark form in the north of England so as to merge in with the sooty background. As the air pollution has cleared it was thought the moth would revert to its original lighter pattern. However there must be some doubt about this theory as you still see both variations.
NA
Friday, 26 September 2008
No sun - no chestnuts!
Tuesday, 23 September 2008
Acorns - and oaks
This first photo shows the acorns of the Sessile Oak, which is probably the commonest in our wood. The acorns fit snuggly against the branch, and have no stalk, which is what 'sessile' means - although to complicate matters, the leaves do have a stalk.
Of course there's one that's easy to identify, and that's the lovely whiskery cup of the Turkey Oak acorn. We might only have one or two of these trees now, as I suspect some were cut down the clear-felling under the power lines, but I live in hope of discovering more, and that they'll regenerate. But if you see these very distinctive rounded acorns you can be sure that it's one of Buck Wood's Turkey Oaks!
Monday, 22 September 2008
Ladybugs
Sunday, 21 September 2008
Autumn's coming...
Thursday, 18 September 2008
Abundant Amethysts
Wednesday, 17 September 2008
Very common earthballs
Tuesday, 16 September 2008
Hard life underground
Monday, 15 September 2008
Fungi at the Open Air School site
The site also seems to be a good one for fungi this year - these 'Dead Man's Fingers' are growing around a couple of ground-level stumps. They're very dark now, but when they first appeared they were brown with slightly pinkish-brown tips, and spookily realistic.
Our Centenary Day on Saturday was successful, and the sun even shone for a while. It was interesting that many visitors had been at the school either when it was a special school or after the war when it was a temporary school for many children. Everyone had happy memories of being there.
CA
Tuesday, 9 September 2008
Reflections
However, the foot is improving, and the walks and blog will resume eventually. And I shall hope for better weather when my woodland walks begin, and that the torrential rains haven't put paid to the diverse autumnal fungi that I'm looking forward to finding.
Meanwhile, a picture to show that even when it rains Buck Wood can be lovely.
CA
Thursday, 21 August 2008
OPEN AIR SCHOOL CENTENARY
This year is the centenary of the Open Air School that was established in Buck Wood in 1908, for delicate children from Bradford's slums.On Saturday September 13th, from 11a.m. to 4.p.m we're having an Open Day at the site of the school, when we'll be showing people around the site.We'll have displays of photographs (such as the one shown here, of some of the earliest pupils in the school having lessons in the Wood), and of objects that the Friends have found while excavating the site.We'll also be selling the new book published by the Friends, 'The School in the Wood' which tells the story of the School and its pupils.Other parts of the event are still being planned, but we're hoping for good weather on the day, otherwise we'll be squeezed under a gazebo trying to keep everything reasonably dry, and realising what the Open Air School pupils sometimes had to put up with!CA