Paul Leyland – Early Bumblebee

Paul writes: at the start of the new year I get to thinking about spring and when the first hibernating insects will appear. Some of the most visible starters are bumblebees. Despite its name the Early Bumblebee (Bombus pratorum) is not necessarily the first to appear but it usually awakes from hibernation in early March,…

Wild food (27) – Sheathed Woodtuft by Ian Carter

I’ve taken a few calculated risks when eating wild fungi over the years but with this recent find I inadvertently pushed the limits well beyond my comfort zone. They were growing low down on a pile of cut logs at the edge of an old meadow. I initially thought they were Velvet Shanks, a common…

Sunday book review – A Shadow Above by Joe Shute

  This book, by a Sheffield-based journalist, is about the Raven and its comeback.   It’s a good read as the author travels around the country visiting places where Ravens live, many of them places where Ravens have  recently returned. He interviews naturalists and land owners from Orkney to Kent, and has also done a good…

Tim Melling – Severtzov’s Tit-warbler

I first encountered this species in the Tien Shan Mountains of  Kazakhstan about 15 years ago when I thought it was the most beautiful species I had ever seen.  It reminded me of a Lilac-breasted Roller, but in miniature as it is even smaller than a Willow Warbler.  It is in the same general family…