The first fledging of the year in the garden yesterday - a very demanding magpie, with two harassed parents that were feeding it with worms and insect larvae collected from our neighbour's lawn.
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Feed me! First magpie fledgling of 2026
The first fledging of the year in the garden yesterday - a very demanding magpie, with two harassed parents that were feeding it with worms and insect larvae collected from our neighbour's lawn.
Thursday, April 9, 2026
Wood pigeons: the mating game
The wood pigeon breeding season in our garden never seems to end, but it reaches a peak in spring. Show-off parabolic flights, ridiculous chasing, bowing and tail-fanning courtship rituals, bouts of violence between rival males - all part of the endless pageant of ornithological entertainint when I look out of the window.
Here are a few pictures from a recent performance.
A seemingly disinterested female looks on while rival males slug it out with wing blows, until one is knocked off the fence ..... but wait, he's not deterred ...
.... he circles back, swoops so low over his rival that he's forced to duck his head, sees his opportunity and descends on the female ...
.... who is taken by surprise while his alarmed, outflanked rival looks on ..
.... but she bats her assailant away with her wings...
----- whereupon the outflanked bird seizes his opportunity
... and so it goes, most days in March and April
Monday, March 16, 2026
Dog's mercury and the perils of colloquial plant names
Everyone looks forward to finding the first primroses,
violets and bluebells blooming in spring, but the flowering of dog’s
mercury Mercurialis perennis never gets a round of applause. But what
it lacks in beauty, it makes up for with ecological gravitas and toxicity.
Dog’s mercury is common in woodlands almost everywhere and
spreads via an underground rhizome, so large patches tend to be good indicators
of very old woodlands and hedgerows. There are separate male and female plants,
with the former being rather more common. This is a male plant, with stamens
protruding from the tiny flowers.
Old colloquial plant names, like mercury, can lead to potentially
dangerous confusion. The pot herb Good King Henry Chenopodium
bonus-henricus also goes by the old name of English mercury and it is
edible but dog’s mercury is most definitely poisonous. John Gerard, referring to it as
French mercury in his herbal of 1597, seems to have confused the two,
which may be why he wrote that it ‘cleanse and scour away the excrements and
other filth contained in the guts. It serveth to purge the belly, being eaten
or otherwise taken, voiding out of the belly not only the excrements, but also
phlegm and choler.’






