Tuesday, January 13, 2026

More Paxton Lichens

I did a short walk to the edge of Redlands on Saturday to photograph a few more of Paxton's lichens - these on the twigs and fallen branches of the Oaks, Hawthorn, Field Maple etc  and the very sandy dry soils. The most interesting find was the first photo a lichenocolus fungus species (Zygzygomyces physciacearum) - the brown blobs!- which grows specifically on Physcia adscendens, (Lichens themselves are a symbiosis between fungi and lichens where the fungus partner becomes lichenised.) The various Cladonia lichens I photographed are definetly the most attractive genus

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Some of Paxton Pits Lichens

Lichens are one group that I haven't attempted to survey at Paxton Pits so 2026 is their year! 
Here are the lichens we found in a group of Hawthorn bushes at the end of Heronry North with preliminary identifications. It will take some attempts to even decide which are different species or different stages.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Toft Wood After the Snow

Yesterday, as soon as the sun was high enough to thaw the icy bit of Miller's Road for walking, I headed down to Toft Wood with my camera. There was a combination of a light layer of snow on the grounds and trees augmented by frost in the damper parts by the Bourn Brook - a very magical look with the reds of the berries and autumn oak leaves. After half an hour exploring, I headed out of the wood and round to the allotments via the Badger Sett. Very pleased to see plenty of characteristic very broad flat badger footprints at the entrance to the hole (with Rabbit and Pheasant)

Monday, January 5, 2026

Great Crested Grebes

 Very pleased to see two Great Crested Grebes at Paxton Pits already paired up and performing mini displays. Beautiful light yesterday afternoon to birdwatch but difficult for photographs.with so much contrast and reflections. One of the pair came quite close and caught a very large fish which it eventually managed to swallow.


Sunday, January 4, 2026

A Winter's Day

Yesterday was clear skies from sunrise to moonrise. I walked up to Hardwick Wood to help with the annual coppicing (something I have taken part in for more than 60 years in West Cambridgeshire! The ground was still very frosted but out of the wind pleasant in the sunshine. Lots of tiny leaf fungi around but no larger ones. The Spurge Laurel, a local wildflower special, is coming into flower. The walk back into the wind was not so good! 

It was a supermoon last night - known as the Cold Moon, a good description so it was a brief walk round the village to view it.