Tags
bird's nest, birds, Common Frog, cowslip, daffodils, ducks, fish, flowers, frogspawn, garden, Great Tit, ground-ivy, hazel, Hazel bud-gall, horse chestnut, lichen, Mallard, marsh marigold, moss, pond, primrose, primula, spring, Suffolk, sweet violet, tadpoles, trees, Water Mint

Ground-ivy (Glechoma hederacea). Many of the newer leaves are purple and the plant has a slightly unpleasant minty scent.

As I have mentioned before, when we moved to this house there were no Primroses (Primula vulgaris) in the garden at all. We now have a few plants here and there on the banks of our ditches.
The house next door to us is the former village school. I am not sure when it closed but a friend of ours from church used to attend it during the 1940’s. Where our house and garden is now, there was a meadow full of wild flowers and our friend walked across it every day to collect the milk for the school from the farm next door. These wild flowers we have in our garden are all that’s left of the hundreds that used to be here up to about 50 or 60 years ago. I hope that we can hang on to these few and perhaps, by not using chemicals, encourage them to spread.

This is our parcels and newspaper box at the end of our drive. We noticed during the winter that it was starting to rot and needed replacing. It appears that we weren’t the only ones to notice the state the box was in. I opened it the other day to find something had made a hole in the back of it ( you can see where the light is shining through just below my thumb as I lift the lid). The next day I found this straw and moss had been put in there. Richard saw a Great Tit (Parus major) flying away from the box so I suspect this is a Great Tit’s nest. I carefully peeped into it a day or so later and found the whole box stuffed full of moss and we can also see lots of straw sticking out from where the box sides are coming away from the base. We have tied up the box and put a ‘not in use’ sign on it and we now await the happy arrival of baby Great Tits.
I knew that Tits nested in holes and I also was aware that Willow Tits excavated their own holes but I hadn’t realised that Great Tits also excavated holes to nest in.

The top of the brick gate-post at the end of our drive is covered in moss and lichen but because we haven’t had much rain recently, it isn’t looking as good as usual. Birds have been collecting the moss for their nests too.

I took this photo of the daffodils round the pond over a week ago and I am glad I did. On Tuesday and Wednesday of last week we had very warm weather (24 degrees C on Wednesday!) and the daffodils that had come out earliest began to wilt.

Earlier this year I posted pictures of these Hazel (Corylus avellana) bud galls. I went to look at them again last week and noticed tiny flies sitting on all of the galls. I wonder if these flies had hatched out of the galls.

This photo of our Horse-chestnut tree was taken on the same day. These leaves are higher and get more sunlight. I was pleased to see that the flower panicles (candles) were growing nicely.

I saw the frogs spawning but unfortunately didn’t have my camera with me. I took this photo of the spawn later in the day. This is the first time I have found frogspawn in our pond and was surprised at how late in the year it was. We have a windswept, exposed garden which may account for it.

There were lots of eggs and I was glad that the fish that live in the pond hadn’t come out of hibernation yet.
Two days after this the tadpoles had dispersed but I had also seen the fish swimming in the pond and leaping to catch flies. They were probably feasting on tadpoles too.
I found a dead fish on the path round the pond again – I found one last year that had been caught by the Heron who had been disturbed by one of us. I don’t know what had caught this year’s fish as there was no stab mark on it. It is interesting to see the workings of the food-chain. We are part of it as we get bitten by the flies that the fish eat!
Thank-you for visiting!











A lovely post and especially exciting about the Great- tits nest ~ hope all will go smoothly for them ~ Life springing up in every corner it seems and all things very busy there now ,it appears! Thank you for another lovely and interesting post.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you Val – my pleasure! We are very excited about the Great Tits even though it means we have to get a new post box and try to find somewhere to put it without disturbing the birds!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks for sharing your beautiful garden, Claire! I always love to see the Mallards drakes.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you Jill! I enjoy watching the Mallards in the garden. The drakes don’t have much to do now that the ducks are sitting on their nests, so they hang out together and relax.
LikeLiked by 1 person
You shared some great photos! We have the violets, or at least something very similar, in our woods. Love the tadpoles, the daffodils, the mailbox nest, and the marsh marigolds.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you, Aggie! I hadn’t realised you had woods on your property too. They must be lovely to go to on hot days.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It will be nicer now that Lou has whacked down all the brush and vines. We are thinking of building a little house back there. Do you have poison ivy in UK?
LikeLiked by 1 person
I know I replied to this comment of yours days ago but I can’t find my reply anywhere! I must have not sent it or clicked the wrong icon! We are fortunate not to have poison ivy here; it sounds terrible stuff! The worst we have are stinging nettles and the stings are fairly easily dealt with. A little house in your woods would be wonderful! If ever you get the time for relaxing in the summer, it would be a lovely place to go on a hot day.
LikeLiked by 1 person
First WP lost your posts, and now your comments. Nuisance. Thanks, Clare!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Beautiful tadpoles! I have fond memories of checking in on frog egg masses and toad egg strings when I was a child. A world of turtles, amphibians, small things underfoot in the swamp and marsh in back of our house. Redwing blackbirds on cattails, calling. Haven’t seen a marsh marigold in many a year. Also part of those memories. Thank you!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you, Lavinia! Your memories sound wonderful! My childhood home was in the middle of a town with a small garden. We went off to the country for walks fairly regularly and had camping holidays too but there wasn’t much wildlife at home.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Spring is certainly in full swing there!
That’s funny that a bird would take over your newspaper box like that but it must have seemed like the perfect spot. With the hinged lid you should be able to bet a good look at the hatchlings later on.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the flies did hatch from the galls. many insects over winter in galls and then hatch in the spring.
It’s nice to see the marsh marigold. I’ve looked everywhere and haven’t ever been able to find any here.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you Allen. The Marsh-marigold isn’t that common here either. We were given a piece of someone else’s plant about five years ago and it settled into our big pond very happily. I noticed a new plant growing in damp ground near the pond last year and it’s back again this year which pleases me.
We were very surprised when we realised we had a nest in the post-box. It is only about 2′ above ground level and I would have thought it would be quite vulnerable there.
LikeLike
Lovely post Claire, how exciting to have Great tits nesting in your garden, we have Coal tits and its all I can do to stop myself peering into the nest box.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you, Julie! Coal Tits are lovely aren’t they? I’d find it hard to resist looking into their nest box too. We have them come to the garden but as yet they haven’t been interested in our nest boxes.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Love the mallards in particular but all the photos and your writing is a great snapshot of your garden.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you, Rachel! I love the Mallards as they are really amusing birds.
LikeLike
I don’t recall how I found your blog, but, as an anglophile, I really enjoy it. We have a bird like your Great Tit – called a chickadee, but with no yellow. Ours is small, is your a large bird?
Your marsh marigold looks like our buttercup – it’s nice to see these similarities, but your knowledge of nature is greater than mine. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hello Lisa! Thank-you so much for commenting on my blog. The Chickadee is a member of the same family as the Great Tit which is the largest bird of that family we have in this country – about 5.5 inches long. I think the Chickadee is about the same size. We have buttercups too and they will be in flower in just a few weeks. The Marsh-marigold belongs to the same family again. Since I began blogging just over a year ago I have really enjoyed reading posts written by people from the States and like you, comparing the plants and animals we have with yours. I am not sure if my knowledge is very great – I am trying to learn all I can and I am improving but I’m terrible about remembering names!
LikeLike
I hope the nest box works out. It is always good to have nesting birds about.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you. We hope the birds successfully rear their chicks too.
LikeLike
Thank you for sharing your amazing garden! I love the pictures. Spring is such a beautiful time of the year. I also spend a lot of time gardening and keeping track of the new blossoms. 🙂 It’s a lot of fun! Have a great day!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you Lucy! Yes, it is a wonderful time of year! I hope you have had a great day too. Best wishes, Clare 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
all Spring, all beautiful promises! Love the frog spawn…so exciting to see those black dots evolve to frog!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you Johanna! I was so pleased to find the frogspawn. I hope some of the tadpoles survive too!
LikeLiked by 1 person
It seems there’s more than a ‘few’ things to see in your garden. It’s bursting with interesting sights. It’s so wonderful you can preserve some of that former wildflower field, and that you are happy to let the great tit family repurpose your letter box. Imagine how pleased the birds must have been to find it. 🙂 🙂 And with all the furnishing ingredients readily to hand/beak
LikeLiked by 1 person
Your comment made me laugh! It is fortunate that we had already decided to replace the postbox (well overdue!)
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s very lovely around your house, I do hope that the wildflowers you spoke repopulate the fields. It’s also good to hear that the great tits are recycling your post box, new life springing up all around you!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks Jerry! We are very lucky to have so much to look at in our garden. The local farmer is trying hard (for a farmer) to conserve the wildlife. He has left wide strips uncultivated and unploughed around all his fields. The wild flowers are returning there and lots of birds and animals use these areas to feed and as highways to get from place to place.
LikeLike
What a lovely potter through nature, I love how animals will use anything as a nest and it is wonderful that they are so inventive at reusing and recycling. I wish I had some nature around my place that I could photograph and take pride in.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks Ste J! I am very lucky, I know. In the past I lived in places where I was lucky to see a bit of sky with a seagull flying past so I know what it’s like.
LikeLike
Thanks for sharing all the activity going on in your yard-it’s so fun to see life returning to the garden!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you Karen! The weather is still a little erratic but we are gradually warming up and everything is starting to look beautifully green.
LikeLiked by 1 person
There was a baby frog gallantly climbing the steps in our garden, which are made of old railway sleepers, the other day.
I love seeing your garden, it’s helping me look closer at my own.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I would have loved to have seen your froglet! Thank-you for your kind comment.
LikeLike
I love your blog Clare, it’s like stepping back in time as you are so in touch with nature. May you and the Great Tits have many happy hours in their new home, with you watching over them. I don’t know, but I am guessing that cowslips and primulas are from the same family…your cowslips are obviously thriving. I love this time of year when the forget-me-nots are underneath the daffodils for about a week. So much blossom about too…thank you for sharing your garden and your memories. It’s a real treat to visit. ❤ and hugs xXx
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank-you Jane! You have reminded me that I had been going to plant some Forget-me-not seeds this year! There are a few wild ones in the garden but I wanted a cloud of blue this spring! Too late now – maybe next year:D Hugs to you too ❤ xx
LikeLiked by 1 person
❤ xXx
LikeLiked by 1 person