Unnatural weather. We have had very, very little frost and they have snow in parts of Spain where they usually grow courgettes at this time of year!
And Trump doesn’t believe in climate change!
(click on images for full size).
Defnyn dwr ar hen marblen coed, sy’n edrych i fod wedi amsugno rhai o’r pigmentau planhigion - Water droplet on old marble gall, which looks to have absorbed some of the plant pigments.
On i’'n synnu bach i weld pryf ar y ddeilen coeden bytholwyrdd - I was a little surprised to see a fly on the leaf of an evergreen tree.
It is a Clivia, which is a close relative of Amaryllis. Usually it has umpteen flowers in Summer but it has produced just two in February. Poor, confused, wee thing! The only flowers now open in our garden are snowdrops!
I’ve been away from home for a few weeks, & was keen to see if the lambs - ŵyn - had started arriving. I wasn’t disappointed, but this was the only one who wasn’t camera shy.
madfall cyffredin cyntaf y flwyddyn hyn.
Don i ddim yn disgwyl gweld yr un tan y mis nesaf.
Mae’r cyntaf yn wastad yma oedd y gallant ddringo i fyny ar ben y hen deiars ac yn gynnes yn yr heulwen.-
first common lizard of this year.
I was not expecting to see one till next month.
The first are always here were they can climb up onto the old tyre and warm in the sunshine.
Note: mae o wedi colli cynffon.
Nodiad: it has lost it’s tail.
When I read this, I had a “you learn something new everyday” moment as I had never erioed heard of it before, then within a couple of days I saw this!!
I didn’t know that fungi could cause galls (on account of not really understanding or knowing much about galls).
Myrtle orange fungus from Tasmania. Rhyfedd a thlws dros ben. Amazing & very pretty indeed. A few of its stages here. Tybed if the pryf copyn, I wonder if the spider, was passing through or lives in there??
**No images of spiders here - just gwawn - threads of web.
From Wikipedia.
Cyttaria gunnii.
A specific parasite of myrtle beech trees. The fungi form globose woody galls on their host trees, though they do not appear to spread through them. They are perennial and produce crops of fruit bodies annually. Globular or pear-shaped, these can reach 2.5 cm (1 in) in diameter. They are covered by a membrane that bursts, uncovering a network of concavities.
Sometimes individuals coloured to stand out because they need treatment or special attention
Whole colour also, attempt to prevent theft
Before showing, much less strong colour, accentuating breed characteristic. (I suspect this is cheating! I know my friends were very naughty to use black dye on white spot on ‘black and tan Cavalier’! - what is naughty for dogs is surely so for sheep, but a lot of white-enhancement goes on with all animal breeds!)
Marks with colour are used to determine if mating has taken place. Ram has bright colour on front and leaves marks on the backs of ewes!
Marks also used to declare ownership, each farm having a different colour/pattern combination.