Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Heads above the clouds

Tues.10th Nov. 09.
      It's coming up to the season that I enjoy if only for one reason..... Winter Walking. Looking back in my picture folders there's one walk that will always remain in my memory not only for the spectacular scenery but also to have been able share it with some of my best mates, it was the walk that I also filmed with my video camera in Jan. 2006.








All  pictures ... David Ashworth
                                     
The Brocken Spectre

  Images below are frames from my video
 


               


       Kirkby Stephen Station the end of a memorable walk      

                                                        
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    The walk (led by Eric) started off from Garsdale Head railway station  on a cold, foggy, frosty morning in the Pennines, but as the day unfolded it turned out to be one of the walks of a lifetime and I called it...." HEADS ABOVE THE CLOUDS". The 13 miles walk followed the high ridges  along  the Pennines  over Wild Boar Fell and down into Kirkby Stephen. 
      The Highlight of the walk was the sighting of the "Brocken Spectre" the ghostly shadow of ourselves being projected down on the clouds with a halo around us, probably a once in a life time experience. I hope that we can repeat it but sadly we'll never be able to experience the same weather conditions unless we're very lucky.

Monday, 9 November 2009

A sunnier day at last



Old Boots (Tree Creeper)

Sunday Nov. 8th 09 
                  What a change this morning sunnier skys and colder clearer air. Today I've been on a short six miles walk with a few of my friends. The walk started from Langcliffe in the limestone area of  Upper Ribblesdale north of the small town of Settle.
Langcliffe
Hoffman KilnStainforth stepping stones


Stainforth Foss
                                                                                                    (images from video camera)                      





Langcliffe weir
Langcliffe weir




 It was a walk full of interest, firstly through an industrial heritage site of old limekilns  then on to the village of Stainforth before returning along the banks of the River Ribble and the locally famous Stainforth Foss  which is well known for watching the salmon leaping up the falls and then  finishing up at Langcliffe weir another viewing point for salmon.



Thursday, 5 November 2009

My Wild Live Garden...... Being less tidy.


Thursday Nov.5th 09.

                  Traditionally  Nov. is the month for tidying up the garden..... but not my garden, wildlife gardening gives me the perfect excuse to be less tidy. Dead foliage, seedheads and all the garden decay are best left over winter for all the hibernating  insects to overwinter in.and it also leaves a structure for those frosty and snowy mornings when the garden is transformed into abstract shapes that give the garden such an attractive appeal during the cold darker months of Winter.
         Looking around my garden this morning dodging the heavy showers the pond seemed quiet lifeless, there were no pond skaters, the water lilies were dying back and the shoals of sticklebacks and minnows had gone into hiding in the deeper areas of the pond under the water weed, but I did see some frogs digging them selves into the mud at the bottom of the pond. 

      All my orchid spikes have dispersed their seeds and only their skeletons remain,so on this cold November morning the garden is quickly shutting down for winter.

 

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

Autumn run of the Salmon







               
Mon. Nov. 2nd 09


   After the heavy rain and gales yesterday the weather is kinder today  but colder 7c. The heavy rain has brought the level of the Lancashire River Calder up 2 feet and this encourages the Salmon and Sea trout to move upstream to their spawning grounds in the higher reaches of the river but there is one big problem.....  and it's here at Padiham Weir, the weir is too high and until the environment agency and river authority do something about it (there is talk of a fish pass) this is as far the fish can ascend, its frustrating and sad to watch these fish constantly leaping to clear the lip of the weir only to be washed down again onto the stone sill at the base of the weir.

         The shutter on my small digital still camera doesn't respond quick enough to capture the fish leaping out of the water so the images of the fish are movie frames from my video camera. 

Monday, 2 November 2009

Another opportunity


Monday Nov. 2nd 09
           Sat.31st Oct     Another filming session for my "garden on the moor film" the quiet weather we've had over the past week was coming to an end with gales and heavy rain forcast for the following day. This was my last opportunity to record the beautiful colours of Autumn in this magnificient garden before the onset of Winter and I wasn't disapointed.





Tuesday, 20 October 2009

Our regular visitor

Tuesday October 20th 09
                            Since the end of April this year we've had a regular visitor to our garden,he's a handsom male pheasant but I'm not quite sure what type. I know there's nothing remarkable about pheasants being seen on farmland  but it unusual to see them in  back gardens where I live in the Pennines of North East Lancashire,he comes almost every day waits at the back door and doesn't go away until he's fed.
   There's no female about as far as I know, so it looks as if we've got him for the winter,he's living in the undergrowth between the surrounding gardens.