Tuesday, 24 November 2020

He Who Pays the Piper

 For 3 cosecutive mornings now the

dawn silence has been broken by the most welcome yelps of an unseen
LITTLE OWL
leading to hopes that it may have found something to sustain it
overwinter and maybe attract a pal?

Weatherwise, it remains fairly dull but still a few bits and pieces around to keep the interest up especially at the Moth Traps with

SATELLITE
MOTTLED UMBER
and
YELLOW-LINE QUAKER.
in numbers, being consigned to the log but nothing new.
At the main pond it was a case of
"if the Devil should cast his net" with a swarm of
MUSCOVY's to starboard and
EMU
to port but yet again with no sign of Rod Hull.

Not an unfamiliar sight at the Fencing Centre where at least 2 of these

Heavily Laden Lorries
turn up every day stowed well below the Plimsol Line.
On the Heath both
NUTHATCH
and
TREECREEPER
were seen and heard
which could be the case every day should we put the time in but then,
more than a mile from where they were last seen, the
wide ranging
and so photogenic
RED-LEGGED PARTRIDGE
were encountered once again.
We have towed a wide audience of sea-going vessels astern over the years with both
Harbour Tugs and Ocean-going Salvage Tugs
but never one of these - Tug and Tow.
All that could be seen through the tree-line along the Moors River was this lone
EGYPTIAN GOOSE
while in the
Solar Panel Compound
was found
a second flush of
GOLDEN WAXCAP
the first wave having disappeared weks ago.
To end, the pilot of this local
PIPER PA-28-161
was flying in ever decreasing circles above Slight Return II
without disappearing!

CALLS THE TUNE!

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