Here are a few more photos from PAWS survey work on the west coast at the start of this week.
Friday, 27 May 2011
Wednesday, 25 May 2011
VIDEO- If you go down to the woods today.......
This was an interesting find out in the woods this week. People had hung all sorts of cuddly toys, garden gnomes and trinkets from trees over a large area, often in very ingenious and interesting ways. "Prayer trees" are often found in parts of the Highlands.....this area was a variation of that. Each person is obviously trying to out-do the rest, or devise their own particluar interpretation. The overall effect is quite remarkable. I I had not been trying to do some surevy work, I could have stayed for hours.
This was interesting.....six little wrens hanging by threads from the branches, turning around in the wind.
Will blog some more tomorrow.
This was interesting.....six little wrens hanging by threads from the branches, turning around in the wind.
Will blog some more tomorrow.
Salt burn
Large parts of Scotland got hit by fairly extreme spring time storms on Tuesday. On the west coast, the wind was laden with salt, and this has had a big impact on young vegetation
The fronds of this fern are blackened, withered and droopy
These hazel leaves look as if Autumn has arrived already, all yellows, browns and muted greens
Blackened & withered ash
This year's growth on the oak tree is still clearly green, however the leaves are all black and shrivelled.
The fronds of this fern are blackened, withered and droopy
These hazel leaves look as if Autumn has arrived already, all yellows, browns and muted greens
Blackened & withered ash
This year's growth on the oak tree is still clearly green, however the leaves are all black and shrivelled.
Sunday, 22 May 2011
PAWS surveying on Loch Arkaig
Here are some pics of a very wet day surveying plantations on ancient woodland sites (PAWS) on Loch Arkaig, north of Spean Bridge.
Next door.....
PAWS plantations have been cleared on neighbouring ground. Broadleaves are left standing, but there are not very many of them, and this approach does not really retain woodland conditions. However, thinning these remote plantations is usually out of the question. A lot of broadleaves are being planted here, and hopefully much of the ancient woodland interest will survive, and there will be greater flexibility in the next generation woodland on this site.
Survivors.......
If the above stands were cleared quickly, the result would be like this. The priority should be to clear around the oak trees and stabilize them before clearing the wider area. In this situation thinning of the woodland is not really an option.
Thursday, 19 May 2011
springtime fiddles?
Friday, 13 May 2011
The Last Root Collection of the Season
Monday, 9 May 2011
Oaks on Mull
Here are two contrasting types of oak found within a couple of hundred yards in a woodland on Mull. Above looks as if it is an open grown tree: the branches spread in all directions, and the main trunk is short and stout. The trees in the background have the same characteristics.
Whereas this stand is more typical of the old oak coppice woods of Argyll: lots of oak stems all crowded together and forced up to find light.
Wednesday, 4 May 2011
Birds nest orchid
A first for this wood in Argyll, here's a close up of a flower stem of the birds nest orchid
..& one showing where it is growing on a ride through the wood. It's an unusual flower in that it does not depend on the sun for energy, collecting energy from dead vegetation in partnership with a fungi instead.
..& one showing where it is growing on a ride through the wood. It's an unusual flower in that it does not depend on the sun for energy, collecting energy from dead vegetation in partnership with a fungi instead.
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