Friday 1 November 2013

Sloe Gin - Joe Bonamassa

There is little annoys me more than these endless, contrite cooking/baking type programmes on the TV, each vying for position of being most ridiculous. Strawberries with Mackerel or Hedgehog Ice Cream just flies in the face of proper cheffing and would suggest if any station would like to take up the offer, Harbins Farm House is where you can find the 'Real McCoy'.
My Friends HUGH and JANET
never seem more content than when they are drumming up some delicious dish or any other culinary delight. Arriving home late afternoon yesterday this is the scene that met my eyes, both busily 'pricking' Sloes for the production of
  SLOE GIN
clear when bottled but by this morning begging the question
"By the Way Which Ones Pink" - Floyd!
If a second example where needed, I had already 'prepared' the
Pheasants for the oven leaving Hugh to produce yet another
delicious dish!
With overnight temperatures hovering around the 12°C mark there was still hope of a good return from the Moth Traps which started with the arrival of
HYDROPHILUS PICEUS
which I had initially identified as
 Dytiscus marginalis
before being corrected by my 'mentor' John Gifford.
100's of CADDISFLIES
 and dozens of HOUSE FLIES
are still being captured daily with the highlight of today's haul being
CYPRESS CARPET
 plus a much better marked
CHESTNUT
With a number of interesting things on the various County Bird Lines worthy of a little effort to see, I set off this morning initially to try for a look at c2 Water Pipits at Lytchett Bay in Poole Harbour but my journey was curtailed firstly by meeting Hugh who had just found this
LITTLE GREBE
on the Parley Pond (the first returning bird)

then by road works diverting me in the opposite direction. Deciding to cut my losses and head for another attempt at LESSER SPOTTED WOODPECKER at Okers Wood, I was to be disappointed there too. It was only then that it dawned on me there could be a chance of the Pipit at the nearby Watercress Beds at Waddock Cross, amazingly there was! Always nice to see these
'pale' little birds return to their winter quarters.
Onward to LODMOOR to search for other 'goodies'
with first to show being this distant

MARSH HARRIER
quartering the reed-beds.
When was the last time you saw a Marsh Harrier fly past your window?
The 'target' bird here was Long-tailed Duck, but the news was bad,
"it flew off at 08:15" from one fellow birder!
More common fare on the Moor included
not very obliging SHOVELER
distant COMMON SNIPE
and flighty LAPWING
Still no sign of the Duck along the Western Path
but there was an addition to the Year List in the shape of
COMMON GULL
MEDITERRANEAN GULL
MOORHEN
and WIGEON
were also present there, but time to take a look at the sea.
 
From PRESTON BEACH all that could be seen were
The Isle of Portland
KAYAKERS
and this TANKER
During this time I, or the car, were seen by no fewer than 3
of my mates (informed by E-mail this morning) but had disappeared
before they could catch me up.
It took a re-visit to the Moor a little later to catch up with the
LONG-TAILED DUCK
which was now in the distant pools close to Overcoombe Corner. Flighty, as it was also seen from Beachdown Way during the day. The last ditch attempt had paid off. The photographs, taken in Barrow, Alaska, are from the archive just as illustration.
STONECHAT
Feel like a 'little weep' before bed time?
Click this Link to see The Master at work!
Sloe Gin - Joe Bonamassa 
at the Royal Albert Hall, London
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