Showing posts with label hazel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hazel. Show all posts

Monday, 9 April 2012

Spring trees

It's not just flowers, butterflies and birds, the trees are waking up now as well. Birch always seems to be first off the mark:

DSC_3783 Birch

DSC_3782 Birch

But Hawthorn is catching up fast:
DSC_3786 Hawthorn

Hornbeam is a bit slower, but is now coming out, with the characteristic pink around its new leaves:
DSC_3800 hornbeam

Hazel seems to be in different stages, for example the stools that were coppiced a year ago are just opening their buds:
DSC_3792 Hazel

while the more mature specimens are coming into leaf:
DSC_3798 Hazel

Sweet Chestnut is much slower that the others, but is starting to come out now:
DSC_3807 sweet chestnut

But having talked about the trees, I really should mention the Wood Anemones again, which are building up to their peak now:
DSC_3794 Wood anemone

There should be some interesting developments in the patch of woodland next to ours soon. There's been some fairly major coppicing operations going on there for a few years now, so there's a big area with 0-3 years regrowth in it now. It looks quite drastic as it's a much larger area than we cut each year, but this is what the ecosystem here is used to, and depends on, so I'm expecting it will look great in the coming years:
DSC_3787 cut coppice woodland

Finally, the wild boar have once again decided that our 'pond' is a great mud bath:
DSC_3805 wild boar bath

Though they don't seem to be looking after the dam which is needed to keep it there:
DSC_3803 hoof print

It's mean to be wet today, as it's a Bank Holiday, but we do need the rain...

Mike

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Sunday, 8 May 2011

Woodpeckers and butterflies

When we arrived at the wood yesterday, I saw a black and white bird take off from near our camp. At first I thought it was a Magpie, as we do get them there occasionally, but when it landed in a nearby oak I realised it was a Greater Spotted Woodpecker! Sadly the light wasn't that great, but I still got some of my best photos yet of this bird, and it was great to see one down in the coppiced area by our camp - a first since we bought the wood.

DSC_7709 greater spotted woodpecker

DSC_7714 greater spotted woodpecker

DSC_7713 greater spotted woodpecker

Later on the sun came out, and with it the butterflies. I was pleased to get my first photo of a Red Admiral this Spring, and also this was the first time we've been able to take a photo of one at the bottom of the hill in Sweep Wood, as the coppicing has let the light in:
DSC_7793 Red Admiral

DSC_7790 Red Admiral

They're not the only things flying around though - there's swarms of St Marks Flies up the hill in Sweep Wood (thanks to Patrick Roper for help with the ID):
DSC_7779

The dangling bits are just their legs:
DSC_7772

Here's a male one landed:
DSC_7735

Their name comes from the fact that they're often seen around St Mark's day - 25th April.

Also in Sweep Wood are lots of flowers, including some new ones since the coppicing. The Bluebell flowers are fading now, and the seed pods are swelling:
DSC_7724 bluebell seed pods

But they are being replaced by some white flowers:
DSC_7727 woodland flowers

Not sure on the ID for these, any comments welcome!
DSC_7731

The Foxgloves are preparing to flower, though I expect we still have a few weeks to wait:
DSC_7745 foxglove bud

There's also this new one, which I think is a Stitchwort, but not sure about that:
DSC_7750

DSC_7751

The Buttercup is another new arrival, though I guess it will only last until the trees close canopy in a couple of years:
DSC_7755 Buttercup

The plum tree at the top of the hill finished flowering a while ago, and a strange thing has happened - not only has it been growing fruit, it's also grown some strange pods, which are now going a bit mouldy. Any comments on what's going on here would be appreciated! Here's a pod next to a fruit:
DSC_7761

Some fruits and a pod on their own:
DSC_7766

DSC_7764

and here's the inside of them:
DSC_7759

Back in our camp, the pears on one of the fruit trees are looking more conventional:
DSC_7798 Pear growing

The trees in the part of Sweep Wood we coppiced in 2009/10 are doing really well now. The trees we singled to grow on as possible future standards have a lot of side-growth, now there's more light. Here's a Sweet Chestnut and an Ash:
DSC_7740

DSC_7742

and even the Hazel that got chewed by rabbits last year is having another go at growing:
DSC_7767 Coppiced hazel

The whole area is really looking amazing now, a bit of a low-level jungle!
DSC_7756

Mike

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Monday, 17 January 2011

Working in a different woodland

This weekend I went over to visit our friends Rich and Penny and work in their woodland. We're actually doing a swap - Rich will be coming to help me put some solar PV panels on our roof in a couple of months - but it was also fun to go and see their wood and work in a different setting.

Part of their wood is a bit hillier than ours, and has more of a stream in it, enough to warrant a foot bridge (under construction):

P1080396

and a bridge to drive over too:
P1080402

It was along the side of the stream we were working, using a tirfor winch to pull some large chestnut away from the stream as they were felled.
P1080406

We had a nice spot for lunch each day, and it didn't even rain on us!
P1080399

Under another tarp, I saw a nice shave horse Rich had made, and a lovely Hazel chair Penny had done as well:
P1080404

P1080405

We should be back in our own wood just for a day in the next week or two, to deal with those two big Sycamore near the neighbouring barn. We've actually just started burning the Sycamore from a year ago, having exhausted our 2-year seasoned supply. Next year I think we'll get right through the winter on 2-year old wood though.

Mike

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Saturday, 2 October 2010

Start of coppicing 2010

Last weekend our friends Dominic, Katharine, Ivy and Giles came up to the woods to try their hand at coppicing. We made a start to this year's work in Sweep Wood, working on some Hazel and also the windblown Ash you can see in the background below.

Coppicing in the woods

We split into two teams, mainly for safety reasons!

Coppicing in the woods

Coppicing in the woods

As well as felling the Hazel, we were also using billhooks to clean up the stems so they can be used for something later on.
Coppicing in the woods

There was quite a pile of brash after a couple of hours work:
Coppicing in the woods

After lunch we burned it all up to make space for the next day of coppicing:
Coppicing in the woods

and took the opportunity to toast some marshmallows once the fire had died down:
Coppicing in the woods

I'm looking forward to getting up there again to do some more work, though things are pretty busy for the next week or so...

Mike

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Thursday, 1 July 2010

Last weekend in the woods

It's been a very busy week at the Ashden Awards, which is why it's taken until now for me to post the photos I took last weekend...

The area near our camp is now swamped by a carpet of green:
The fruit trees are coming on well:
but one particular birch tree is having a tough time with caterpillars:
Don't know the species though - leave a comment if you know what they are.

We've got yet more new plants moving into this area as well. I think this one is Hedge Bedstraw (correct me if I'm wrong), which we've not seen before:
Another one that's nice to see is Elder:
The thistles are back, and we have at least two varieties, judging by the colours of the flowers:
What's quite amazing is standing at the boundary of the area we coppiced in 2007/8 and taking a photo in each direction. Here's the coppiced area:
and here's the view in the other direction:
You can see the huge difference in the variety of ground flora. This is why it's important to keep cutting different bits of the wood each year, so there are a variety of areas in different stages of growth, with different plants and habitats in them. It also works well for harvesting the wood, which I guess is why people have been managing woods this way for thousands of years!

Anyway, time for a Sweep Wood update, where everything is growing like crazy! At the top, the logs we sat on to eat lunch last winter are nearly hidden by nettles:
Hazel stools are growing nicely:
as are the Sweet Chestnut:and so are Sycamore (though we won't let these grow to the point where they seed, we have quite enough of them already!)
A new one for us is Ash - this is the first time we've been able to watch it grow after coppicing. The speed of growth is amazing:
especially when you look at how thick the stems are already, way ahead of the other species:
Down at the bottom of Sweep Wood there's a fungi on an Ash tree, in the same place as last year (which is not surprising):
Any ideas on the name? I wasn't sure...

Heading back to our own wood, the pond is looking good:
OK, you may not think that's good, but look closer:
there's other little creatures in there too, but I couldn't get a clear picture...

Down at the end of the path we coppiced in 2008/9, the honeysuckle we carefully protected is in full bloom:
which is a treat for the White Admiral butterfly. We saw two of them near our entrance, the first recorded sighting in the area this year:
Other insects are out and about too, there's loads of dragonflies around in the wayleave:
and last but not least, first picture of a Meadow Brown this year:
That's all for now...

Mike

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