Wednesday 30 May 2018

The Somerset Levels


Where there are mists there are stories, myths & legends created to promote fear and unease as well as the odd hero and villain, and the Somerset Levels are no exception. This area is packed full of stories, most of which are associated with the mists, marshes or the tor which is a natural outcrop that rises above the levels like an island. The tower that sits on the Tor dominates the surroundings and provides a useful landmark for the wanderer, a point to aim for if those fabled mists rise again.
Spreading across the levels are the Avalon Marshes with its nature reserves consisting of flooded peat pits, ditches and reeds, lots and lots of reeds. We set up camp a mile or so from the reserves in a field surrounded by rich pasture, the reason this land was drained in the first place, with the sound tractors rumbling in the distance. With the Tor acting as our compass just a few miles to the south west, we headed off to find what we find and see what we see. The sky was blue and there was a   slight breeze coming from the west, the air was full of birdsong and questions were asked about what we might expect to find as well as the state of the land we intended to wander.
It was clear that we were not to be on our own, these reserves are popular and well visited, but we found the paths that were less well trodden, and it was easier to disappear, well almost. The first day gave us a good idea of what to expect and while Hobbies circled high above feeding on a brand-new crop of dragonflies, Marsh Harriers patrolled the reed beds and annoyed the Lapwings. As for the soundtrack, well this was what we remembered the most!
From the start of our wander the call of Cuckoos seemed everywhere, this is a familiar sound to almost everyone and a sure sign of Spring. Beyond this though was another sound, one that we were both familiar with even though neither of us had ever heard it and one that signalled the presence of our target on this trip. The boom of a Bittern is impressive to say the least and it can be heard all across the levels. On a misty morning levels has atmosphere by the bucketload and the guttural boom of this elusive bird fits in well: it is easy to understand how mythical stories can arise from this otherworldly sound.
So for the next few days we would scan the skies for Hobbies and Harriers, the trees for Cuckoos and the reeds for Bitterns. The Hobbies and Harriers were easy, we were surprised at how many of these birds we would see albeit at a distance. If you believed the calls, Cuckoos were everywhere too but they were proving more elusive until we found a wooden fence that was obviously the favourite courting place for a pair. It was the first time that I had seen Cuckoos for any length of time and we had these strange looking birds in our sights, on and off, for quite a while. At first the mist that had created so many stories and legends was slow to clear and that made photography difficult but clear it did. For most of the day then sky was blue and a slight breeze rippled the waters. Bitterns however proved more difficult to find even though the wonderful boom that we had got so used to was almost continual. We had seen a few short, very low flights which took these birds from reed patch to reed patch but sightings were brief and could not be second guessed. It was with more than a little surprise then that my brother suddenly pointed out two dark brown smudges, within the reeds and the mist, quite a way away. For a short while then we had two Bitterns to watch as they walked amongst the reeds, stopped head held high or preened themselves. This was quite a moment and although the views were not the clearest it was possible to get a few photographs before they slowly faded into the background, lost forever.
By the end of the two days we had walk about thirty miles, explored an area that was completely alien to us and saw pretty well what we had wanted to see. There is always more though, an Otter would have been nice, a Kingfisher too perhaps but although we saw plenty of fish in the waters of the Avalon Marshes and the occasional Otter trail, these two were absent. The morning of the third day was cloudy and the Sun that we had enjoyed was not due to appear so we climbed the Tor and looked back over the land we had walked. It was easy to let your mind drift back to when the fertile green land below was the same as that which we had wandered with reeds covering every inch of water, secret paths weaving in and out and small islands rising from the mist each morning. Myths and legends only work if they are believable and a spiritual place will only remain spiritual if people wish it to be but regardless of that, the levels is a fine place to explore and any time spent here is going to be special.  

The Tor, from the reeds

Heron
Heron

A Pair of Bitterns

Bittern

Great Crested Grebe

Hobby

Marsh Harrier

Marsh Harrier

Cuckoo


An Appointment with the Badger Family

I see plenty of Badger tracks whilst wandering the Isle of Purbeck and and have found many setts but the last thing I want to do is draw attention to these by setting up cameras. So you can imagine how chuffed I was when I was invited on to private land to spend time with a new family.
Trail cameras have been set up and I managed a couple of shots but as the Sun had well and truly set I had to use the flash. These particular Badgers are used to a certain amount of light and noise but I don't want to use the flash too much even though they didn't seem too worried by it.
Once I had got these shots I packed up and left, not wanting to outstay my welcome, but being within two or three meters of these animals is very special.



Sunday 13 May 2018

No dancing, no Puffins and an invisible Deer hunter.

The haze of another beautiful morning still lingered at Dancing Ledge this morning but the clouds were starting to clear and little by little blue was replacing the white. Spotlights of sunshine roamed along the cliffs illuminating the quarries and giving a subtle hint of what the rest of the day would bring, all was quiet except for the birds and all seemed calm. This is a good time to be out and about but it was Sika, with her hawk eyes, that spotted the Roe Deer far below towards the cliff edge. She stiffened, ears straight up and eyes fixed at a point that I had yet to see, she reminded me that there is a good reason to keep a Lurcher on a lead up here! The doe, looking beautiful but just a little scruffy in her pre-summer coat, suddenly burst from her refuge before stopping, still quite a distance away, to give us the once over. She looked at us for a while but we were not the immediate threat, something else had forced her to break cover, something that we had not seen and whatever it was was still there and so she ran on. Then suddenly she was off, out of sight and all was calm again with still no answer to what caused her to run, it could have been anything of course but there is a big part of me that really needs to know these things. Now it was our turn and we had to leave Dancing Ledge and the ever expanding patches of sunlight, the incredible view that will include Puffins very soon and the invisible deer hunter, it was time to move on.



Tuesday 1 May 2018

That's More Like It!

This morning’s early wander was bathed in a warm Sun that has been missing quite a bit lately and before the wind picked up all was calm, quiet and very spring-like. Of course, regardless of the lack of sunshine signs of Spring have been popping up everywhere, it just takes a little bit of blue sky to put a smile on our faces and stop us grumbling for long enough to notice them.
It is not just the arrival of the Swallow and the Wheatear that signals the season but all along the cliff path insects are busy with the blossom, blossom brightens every hedgerow and every hedgerow is full of birds singing and eating insects. The age old circle of life goes on whether the Sun is shining or not.
That said, our world looks so much better when the Sun shines and suddenly everyone smiles more.





Quiet but never silent.

I missed the Sun this morning, not because I was late but because the early wander was done and dusted by the time the clouds cleared. When...