Showing posts with label Flora and Fauna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flora and Fauna. Show all posts

Sunday 29 May 2016

Emperor Moth*

* See below

FOUND: teeny ants had devoured its body!

I think it might be the female, but not being a lepidopterist, I am not wise. However, at my age,  I am proud that I remembered it's name and only consulted the infoGod to confirm and discover more knowledge.
http://www.wildlifetrusts.org/species/emperor-moth

various sites say 9cm to 11cm is BIG ... but this one exceeds those!!!!!!!

See comments below... EVIDENTLY this is a Giant Peacock Moth.


Sunday 4 October 2015

Bordeaux Botanical Gardens

Opposite the city centre where tourists abound are Botanical Gardens which can be reached easily by tram or if one steps out it isn't a long walk from the bridge. Our tram ride was from the hotel near the peripherique. It was dead easy to find a place for coffee before entering the gardens.
For some reason I am working backwards with the pics!
Alongside the river were poems and historical facts etched into stone.  When I read and translated the one, by Jean de La Ville Mirmont,  not only did I think about those who went on a journey away from their families and friends during the war, but I also thought of the many people today who are migrating or travelling for whatever reason, leaving loved ones and beloved things behind.  I am also reminded of the journey of life, when death is perhaps the ultimate voyage. Those who are left, those who are not travelling, not migrating, might perhaps feel abandoned or rejected.  There are those who can feel the depths of intense emotion, passion, pain and torture of 'an unknowingness'  when their loved ones pack their bags. Much later, even after divorce or separation, even after wars of a different kind there are those who are saddled with their baggage.  WE MUST remember the faces of our loved ones, happiness we once experienced...and all of all the rest.  My memory often remembers my gentle grandmother; her face, her voice, her demeanour and I know not what baggage she carried! Hearts remember. 
My own interpretation is: 
This time, my heart, it is the grand voyage. We don't know when we will return. Will we be more proud, foolish or wise? Whatever happens we are going to have to leave and part from each other.
Before we leave, let us pack and put into our baggage all the wonderful and beautiful desires that we have offered or that have been offered to us.  Regret nothing, except the faces and loves which console us.  Remember.  This time my heart it is the long, hard, grand voyage / journey....
Is he telling his own heart, his own self or his sweet heart and all the people he has loved or known?

It made me cry as someone walked away.  I stared long at someone who was on a long journey  in which I was not included.  I braced myself.  I know that people have freedom to do they have to do.  I am grateful there is no war currently in my own life. Well... there have been plenty of disagreements in the past and there was certianbly something from someone going on this day.  Little did I know at the time that the global migrant issues were gathering apace.
SAD! 
Back to the joy of the gardens:
At the end of the gardens nearest to the river were wonderful metal gates but not gates, at the entrance / exit. I was not sure if they sometimes were closed. It didn't appear so by observing the ground.

The gardens were fascinating because they presented all forms of global terrain and the plants that grew on that kind of soil.  My heart found water lilies... whilst I was looking for lotus blossoms.












Within the gardens were apartments: the idea is that people tended the community gardens near to their housing, but some plots looked quite neglected.  The gardens are surrounded on three sides by high rise habitations and on the fourth side by the road, a green belt for leisure, cycling, jogging, picnics and the river.
The border of the botanical gardens is a metre wide wall of timber felled in the tempest of 1999. If one were to calclulate the amount of timber here one could appreciate the number of trees felled by the storm yet some put to good use here.  They probably harbour earthly creatures as well as provide a boundary.


Friday 17 July 2015

Midsummer morning


It was Midsummer. An incandescent summer’s night and day. She’d gone to sleep with a full moon spreading its light at midnight. She rose with the morning lark, which she could not hear.  Six in the morning. Day had been awake for some time!

With the rising sun behind her she strode full of energy.  Overjoyed she always is to see her sweetpeas there at the roadsidc where they grow every year.   Stepping down ‘The American Way’ named after someone who used to live in that secret house hidden from view of the single-track footpath. There, with a full view of the sweep of the river, aloft on the cliff, his house stood without water and electricity. Owners have fought to have both installed. It is a protected heritage house.

Careful she was not to slip on the dew-laden rocks and roots forming the well-trodden descent to the river’s edge. The flowing current could be heard magically in the morning magnificence before she caught a glimpse of shining water. Step around ‘Le Moulin de Merle’, a watermill where she noted the growing sandbank. Above the dam the waterlily pads conceal frogs which ribbet and croak amongst those green plants. All this has been witnessed during the passing of time, the thousands of years since an Ice Age formed vast cliffs called the Roc of Sorciers. Majestic, they look down.

At the road bridge she decides upon an extension to her walk. All is unplanned. She is free to respond to a moment, a whim, an immediate choice for her and for no one else. It was joyful to be alone at last and able to move her legs and arms to and fro in a rhythm of a roaming rambler. Her mind is excited at this unusual event to be out and about when no one knows where she is or what she is doing for she has seen no one.

Along the banks vegetation encroaches upon the one-person track towards absolute primeval stillness, though she knows that the sun moves as it rises in the sky stretching shadows along the ground. Miniature flies float in morning sunrays as gossamer spiders float their webs preciously. Along and along, as birds sing-a-song and flutter tree-to-tree, leaf-by-leaf, woodpecker taps a different rhythm. Cuckoo calls, still singing in tune at the end of June, for July it will fly. By August it must be gone to Africa.  Woodpigeon rool-rool---coo-coos reflecting the languidity of a hay-mown scent of summer.

Darker it gets. Trees reach for the light above the canopy. Moss hangs on every branch above rock and stone where ferns, bracken and other humid hugging plants thrive.  In dappled morning light, She feels safe not seeing a soul in the Devil's grotto.  Ah, unexpectedly, she hears a cough!  A trace of humankind. Is someone wild camping?  No, ‘tis a jogger!
How dangerous to be moving quickly across such rugged rocky ground, where footfall or rainfall dislodges crumbly, gravelly stones even though larger and heavier boulders dig deep. Tread carefully. She has learned by experience.
'Bonjour.. fait attention!'  but she hears no reply and suspects he is not French and thinks they would be too sensible to be running in that place in such early morning warmth.

The land is rising upwards out of woodland which has been like that since probably the Magdalenian era. Rising upwards into agricultural land where the single track opens to allow tractors to travel along the grassy chemins.
Again she delights in looking at hedges and trees of walnut, holly, oak and beech.  A sign says ‘Private’ but she ignores it as she has always walked by here around the Pigeonnier and indeed has seen French persons doing likewise. Out onto the road, feeling the morning heat rise from the tarmac. Let her cut across another chemin and another harvested field and wend her way back along lanes to the village where people are queuing at the boulangerie. Everyone shares happiness. Then to discuss with a fellow inhabitant what is to happen to that huge acacia tree at the end of her garden.  She shares her concern about the ever-increasing number of acacias popping up in her garden. There are more than ever before. Clearly they enjoy the drought and heat.  Autumn will be the time when the woodman will arrive to cut it down but how will he and she poison the roots left in the ground in her garden. They have drained the goodness from her potager and caused much extra labour.  She will wait.  She can wait.

With cheerful pride and self-ennoblement she breezes home for coffee and croissant at half past nine, breakfast time! What a wonderful three hour walk!


Wild sweetpeas at the roadside verge
Under the bridge a new sculpture has appeared!
Wall art!
Garden art
I still haven't returned at an appropriate hour to dig up this mystery.
River art


Moulin du Pré has a new owner and is being renovated.
Natural art!

Thursday 9 July 2015

Building Bat

BUILDING
Normally the gates are closed on what I believe is a former butchery or charcuterie.  It's the house with a wine bottle sign above it.  With recent renovation commencing I passed with camera at hand!! SNAP! I had no idea all this was hidden from public view.  The builders enterprise looks an excellent one.
BAT
Oh dear, this little feller got himself stuck in the shutter hinge, maybe on a night when the wind blew the shutters open... now it is dessicated.  I think it is a Common Pipistrelle, smaller than mon puce, my thumb, a measurement of one inch. I felt sadness.

Friday 8 May 2015

Les hérissons

When my family were here we went out at night to see the stars and explain to little one why we often cannot see them because of light pollution! My daughter who has very good eyesight spotted two hedgehogs. I grabbed a torch and camera!  I was so pleased to see these creatures in my garden. My grand daughter was very excited at the event!

Sunday 26 April 2015

Waste paper basket trespasser

This wee beastie rather spooked me when I emptied the waste paper basket on return from being on the road.  Obviously a type of Longhorn Beetle... I didn't wait to fully identify it!!!