Tales from the Riverbank
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
1d ago
  All it takes is half an hour in the sun in early May, just a hundred metres from home, and our early morning stroll delivers a feast of wildlife delights!     Ceanothus was looking amazing, forming billowing blue clouds studded with pale gold stars, like a thousand EU flags. It may not be a native species, but it is certainly providing for our bees… Moving to native plants, ‘Pocket plums’ – Taphrina fungal galls on Blackthorn’s developing fruit – were more numerous than we have ever seen before…. No sloe gin for us this year! A micromoth Elachista argentella ‘unhiding’ in ..read more
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#WildEssexWalks: The Bluebells of Wivenhoe Wood
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
4d ago
Always a staple in our catalogue of walks, this year we embraced our Bluebells on three separate walks over a week and a half, and this blog is an amalgam of them all. Given the unstable weather this spring, not surprisingly we had a mixed bag, from lovely warm sunshine to cool, cloudy and wet… In fact the season started early (a symptom of our largely frost-free winter) with the first sign of blue coming in mid-March: we were concerned that the main event would be over before our walks even started. But then the gloom of April and cool northerlies slowed things up, and even by our final wa ..read more
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A garden of medicinal plants and Regent’s Park
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
1w ago
Our latest trip to London was in direct response the book we reviewed a few months ago about the botanical origins of modern, prescription medicines. The book told us about the garden of medicinal plants created by the Royal College of Physicians and the monthly guided walks around it. When we found that the May walk was to be led by a good friend of ours, our May Day out was inevitable. The gardens may be small but they are packed with interest, hundreds of species with connections to medicine. While there are some crossovers with the Chelsea Physic Garden, that is rooted in herbalism where ..read more
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Three days by train: Gloucester and Hereford
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
2w ago
Well the forecast for our April short break was for rain, but in the event it turned out sunny with blue skies much of the time, albeit with a chill north breeze and very low temperatures overnight. We headed west this time, taking in Gloucester and Hereford, one night in each, and rail journeys throughout. Parts of Gloucester felt very familiar: some of our favourite places are regenerated, rejuvenated docks and waterfronts (Glasgow, East London and Salford spring to mind, along of course with Wivenhoe). To corrupt the album title of folk-rock grandee Ashley Hutchings – by Gloucester Do ..read more
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The Wild Side of Beth Chatto Gardens: among the April showers…
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
2w ago
The weather wasn’t looking good for my first ‘Meet the Wandering Naturalist‘ event of the year at the Beth Chatto Gardens today: frequent heavy rain and gusty winds made it touch-and-go (they are always advertised as ‘weather permitting’!). But in the event we were lucky: the torrential rain stopped half an hour before the walks commenced, and largely stayed away for the full two hours (despite some ominous thundercracks), with the sun even coming out for a few precious minutes. Following the rain, the gardens were relatively quiet, so the 18 wanderers I took out on one or other of the walks ..read more
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A wander round Kew Gardens
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
3w ago
Kew is always a delight, and even during really busy times (such as Easter holidays when Bluey is in town) it is always full of photogenic subjects. This time though, with somewhat inclement weather, many of the photos were taken in the glasshouses. No words, just pictures: flowers, foliage, fruits and architecture… But for the first time we saw the gardens through the eyes and camera of Eleanor, our six-year-old grand-daughter, on her first visit to Kew.  Here are some of her images from her own unique viewpoint: we do forget that someone only 120cm tall is so often looking ..read more
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Travels around Sussex, Surrey and Hampshire
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
1M ago
Away from my usual haunts for a couple of days, I ventured south of the Thames… I was first introduced to the surprising sandstone outcrops of the Weald last summer in the grounds of Wakehurst Place – see blog here. When the chance came again to head south of the Thames last week I resolved to seek out more of these geological features, and headed to the Sussex Wildlife Trust reserve of Eridge Rocks, just south of Tunbridge Wells. I was not disappointed! The rock bastions here are even more impressive, set amongst extensive Beech and Holly woods from which (thankfully) Rhododendron thicket ..read more
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The Wild Side of Essex with Naturetrek: a windy Naze
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
1M ago
Very strong, and unreasonably (given the direction) cold, southerly winds greeted our arrival at the Naze, an exposed headland and breezy at the best of times but particularly wind-lashed today, with sea-foam tumbling up the cliff. At least the forecast rain largely held off, for most of the morning it was sun and blue skies, and even got quite warm in the shelter of the scrub. First it was down to the beach to make the most of the spring-tidal window. The cliffs of London Clay, Red Crag and loess are magnificent, actively eroding after the recent (indeed winter-long) rains, telling the stor ..read more
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Fun on the Fylde, Sefton Coast and Wirral
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
1M ago
For the third of our 2024 monthly short breaks by train, it was our usual mix of quirky attractions, art and architecture, food and drink, and of course wildlife, this time in north-west England. First stop, an hour in Preston gave us chance to take in the bus station, recently threatened with demolition but now listed. Described as Brutalist, the curves added by Ove Arup to the car park above lend it a more Modernist feel. And the rest of Preston also impressed us… so much so we resolved to return after the Harris museum and art gallery reopens in 2025: On then to Blackpool. No surprises ..read more
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#WildEssexWalks: Signs of Spring around Alresford
Chris Gibson Wildlife Blog | Wildlife and Nature Photographer
by Chris Gibson
1M ago
Spring was certainly in the air for our latest WildEssex walk… but so was quite a lot of rain and drizzle: April showers two weeks early…!  We began at Alresford Old Church, the ruins lit up with transient sunlight and as impressive as ever. The churchyard is one of the best in this area for the richness of its flora, with Common Dog-violet and both Red and White Dead-nettle flowering, a swathe of Wild Daffodils (or a close approximation thereof) and the delightful citrussy-mint aroma from Lesser Calamint leaves. While the rest of us were looking at flowers, Jude was finding insects ..read more
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