Showing posts with label Southwold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southwold. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 January 2019

Seasonal Visits to the Suffolk Coast

Crow at Felixstowe
A very happy new year to all ...

and here are a few sea snaps taken along the Suffolk coast over the last couple of weeks. 



Pier Parade, Felixstowe
iii
The beach at beautiful Bawdsey

Bawdsey
Common Whelk eggcase, I think, found at Bawdsey (I always thought these were Skate egg cases...)
Cuttlefish cuttlebone, Bawdsey

Catshark eggcase, I think, found at Bawdsey


Dried-up Catshark eggcase, I think, found at Felixstowe
Whelk shell, Felixstowe
Beach huts, Southwold

Pebble assortment

I wonder which sort of weed, Southwold

Turnstone, Southwold

Southwold, sunset light

Southwold

Have a Wild and Wonderful New Year!



Saturday, 11 August 2018

Lound Lakes, Southwold Beach and A Pair of Late Visitors of the Spiny Kind



I'm a sucker for a boardwalk, and when I read that there was one at Lound Lakes, owned by Essex and Suffolk Water and managed by Suffolk Wildlife Trust, I was keen to go and find it. As it turned out, it was not particularly long (the boardwalk at Wicken Fen is my favourite ... and it has lizards), but it offered good views of one of the lakes and the very active dragonflies. We heard a lot of splashing but failed to see any jumping fish.


This shows the view from the start of the boardwalk ...






We had hoped to see butterflies, and indeed we did see a few. David also spotted this rather handsome Dock Shieldbug ...


Do you think this would be an owl box? I felt the hole was rather small. 




The butterfly above is a Meadow Brown and the one below, a Gatekeeper. 



The photo above was the view from our picnic bench, looking out across the countryside in this area where Norfolk and Suffolk meet.


Eagle-eyed David (below) spotted this grasshopper (above). Such good camouflage!



I can hardly believe that I saw two more Silver Y moths today. It is proving to be a good year for them. 


The butterfly below was very skittish: I was longing to get a photo of it with its wings out, but this opportunity eluded me. It seems to be a Holly Blue from its distinctive underwing dots and dashes. I am guessing it was a male as the black border was hardly noticeable. 


We left Lound Lakes in the afternoon and reached Southwold at about 5.30 pm. I have not seen so much sand on the beach before and have certainly never seen such a marked sandbank. 


I suppose Saturday is 'change-over' day, but for a warm August afternoon, the beach seemed surprisingly empty (though there were plenty of cars in the carpark). 


We visited the beach at Southwold quite a lot during my teenage years, and I have always felt that it is one of the best beaches for pebbles.


I got quite good at identifying some of them at one stage, and am delighted to find that The Pebbles on the Beach: a Spotter's Guide by Clarence Ellis has just been republished by Faber. 


I couldn't resist including the next photo: it isn't a colourful pebble, but its markings reminded me of the fossils found on Charmouth beach during the recent BBC4 Beach Live: Jurassic Coast programmes presented by Lucy Cooke, Dan Snow and Niall Strawson, which we have been watching (a month late!) this past week. It also reminded me (well, just a bit) of the Sea Potatoes that have been washed ashore near Penzance.


And just to add at the end of this somewhat rambly and diverse post that when we went out to look at the sky with Perseid showers in mind, not only did we find cloud and rain but also a tiny hedgehog. Thankfully when I went back to look, there was a large adult as well, presumably the mother. I suppose the rain had brought out the slugs ... I didn't want to alarm the youngster with flash photgraphy, so here is a photo of a previous visitor enjoying our garden under cover of darkness ...


Wednesday, 21 January 2015

In advance of the Big Garden Birdwatch, my 2015 Bird List to date


Goldeneye, Essex Wildlife Trust's Abberton Reservor Reserve

These are my 2015 January lists, thus far. I am only counting each species once, even if it is spotted in several locations ...


Birds

Home Patch
  1. Blackbird (about five)
  2. Blue tit (small cluster) 
  3. Buzzard (one - a first!)
  4. Chaffinch (one)
  5. Common Gull (about eleven)
  6. Goldfinch (small flock)
  7. Great Spotted Woodpecker
  8. Great tit (about four)
  9. Grey Heron (one)
  10. Long-tailed tit (about eight, possibly more most days)
  11. Magpie (about five)
  12. Robin (one most days)
  13. Song Thrush (one - and also one in the park)
  14. Starling (five)
  15. Wood pigeon (plenty!)
  16. Wren (one)
Abberton Reservoir, Essex Wildlife Trust
  1. Common Gull (a few) 
  2. Goldeneye (two)
  3. Greylag Goose (a flock)
  4. Lapwing (colony)
  5. Mallard (quite a few)
  6. Mute Swan (about twenty)
  7. Tufted Duck (ditto)
Bawdsey
  1. Barn Owl (one)
  2. Carrion Crow (one)
  3. Kestrel (one)
  4. Lesser Black-backed Gull (one)
Christchurch Park
  1. Redwing (about seven)
Southwold
  1. Turnstone (twelve)
  
Current total of bird species seen: 29



Mammals

Home Patch
  1. Grey Squirrel (one on several occasions) 
Bawdsey
  1. Muntjac Deer (one)

All species can be found on the RSPB site here.

If you live in the UK and would like to take part in the 2015 Big Garden Birdwatch, you will find details here


Monday, 22 December 2014

A Winter's Day on the Beach at Southwold



We always enjoy a visit to Southwold, with its breaking waves and brisk sea breeze!  


The sun was low and there was a lot of spray and sand blowing about. 


This was 20 December, one day before the shortest day, shortly after 2pm. 


The spray was mesmerising ...


... but it was not the only thing to catch my attention ...


The photo above is a close-up of the egg cases of a skate ...


... and there was a discarded mermaid's purse lying about a metre away.


The beaches at Southwold are known for a variety of semi-precious minerals such as carnelian and agate that can sometimes be seen on the shore after a stormy tide. Amber, a fossilised tree resin, can also occasionally be found. 

I noticed an orange pebble, which you can see in the photo below. It was light, but not particularly light. David held it for me to allow a photo before we let it fall back into the sand. I wish I had known or remembered that amber floats in sea water ...


The 'pebble' above was not the only item that stood out on the shore. The small pebble below also caught my eye. Perhaps they are both pieces of carnelian (see photo here), but I shall never know for sure. 


It seemed to be a day for finding sunset-coloured objects along the shoreline ...


The Turnstones near the car park looked pretty miserable. I think they may have been waiting for scraps of cone from the ice cream van.


We were just leaving when this spectacle of airborne geese caught our attention ...