Showing posts with label grouse moors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grouse moors. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Muir burning .....
Muir burning in Teesdale yesterday - burning off the old heather stems so that new shoots develop, to feed grouse. A period of dry weather and light winds produced good conditions for these controlled fires.
Click image to enlarge.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Defending the Family
There are newly-hatched chicks everywhere out on the moors at the moment and different birds have their own particular strategies for deflecting attention from their offspring.
This pair of grouse, which we encountered on the moors above Blanchland in Northumberland yesterday, just stood on the wall a few feet away from us, hoping that we'd look at them rather than search for their chicks, but...
Labels:
Blanchland,
Curlew,
grouse moors,
moorlands,
red grouse
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
"Go back! Go back!"
People up here in the North East are famed for their warm welcome for visitors but red grouse could do with a bit of hospitality training - the parting shot in their alarm call when anyone encroaches on their territory sounds very much like 'go-back, go-back'
Mind you, since they're going to be shot at in a few months time I guess it's understandable....
There's another fine sound recording made in Allenheads, not far from where this rather more friendly female was photographed, here
This recording was made by Richard Dunn whose work is here on the wonderful Xeno-Canto web site.
Labels:
grouse,
grouse moors,
red grouse
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Muir Burning
The end result is a patchwork grouse moor landscape like this one between Edmundbyers and Stanhope in Weardale. When flowering time comes around in July you see a similar patchwork, but now in shades of purple heather flowers.
Double-click for a clearer image of this picture and the next.
The grey areas here were probably burned during winter and have yet to regrow - the umber areas are older heather with new shoots, in peak flowering condition, that will hum with bees when it blooms.
For a year of two afterwards there's often a flush of growth of sorrel plants in the fertile ash released by burning, which in turn are colonised by small copper butterflies. Some of the best small copper populations that I've found in the uplands have been in landscapes like this.
These upland areas are also breeding grounds for curlew and golden plover and hunting grounds for merlin.
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