Showing posts with label #30DaysWild. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #30DaysWild. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 July 2019

A Full Rundown of This Years #30DaysWild


In a bid to reduce how much time I spend on social media and my laptop in general (it is slow and old and frustrating to use), I haven’t been doing my usual regular updates for #30DaysWild. I was planning to do weekly updates, but that hasn’t happened either, so here is my end-of-the-month-roundup!

Day One: went barefoot on the lawn with Taffy-cat for company. I like not wearing shoes as often as I can, and ‘grounding’ may be beneficial to mental health.


Day Two: admired the clematis in the back garden. This was my Nanny Whitlocks plant and it now in Momma P’s garden. The floral display this year has been absolutely gorgeous!


Day Three: my new book arrived; Wonderland. I am trying to read one day at a time, so I started the book on June 3rd and was reading it daily, though I am now reading it every three days instead as I don’t like reading for such a short time scale.


Day Four: spied this wee bee in my bee house!


Day Five: today I got very excited by the wee babby courgettes on Momma P’s plot. They look like little bananas.


Day Six: bought some napkins purely for decoupage art reasons. No idea what I’m going to do yet, but it is going to have a bee theme!


Day Seven: picked a wee bee up off the path at work and put her on some flowers for breakfast.


Day Eight: identified a seven-spot ladybird larvae


Day Nine: taught my regular volunteers how to weave a hazel fence to act as a windbreak


Day Ten: counted the common spotted orchids at the Lickey Hills. I do this every June – so far this year I have counted 184. (End of June total was 235!)


Day Eleven: sat out on the back step in the sunshine, listening to the birds, talking to Taffy-cat, whilst waiting for the tea to brew. I really enjoy this little routine of ours.


Day Twelve: saw the first peas on the allotment!


Day Thirteen: went to Ironbridge and admired a large swathe of wildflowers


Day Fourteen: saw the allotment fox! She is poorly so I put her some food out. She let me get quite close and she spent the day snoozing on the black plastic.


Day Fifteen: watched a honeybee hatch!! So fascinating. I love watching bees.


Day Sixteen: worked at Gardeners World Live. Found a bee on the floor, picked her up, she walked up my arm, across my shoulders and onto my head! A colleague had to untangle her.


Day Seventeen: pulled my first onion!


Day Eighteen: added another little solitary bee house to the allotment collection. This one is just bamboo canes bundled up with string.


Day Nineteen: my compost bin trough planter is growing! This has been seeded with mesembryanthemum, nasturtium, and tagetes.


Day Twenty: saw five types of butterfly, not bad for the so called ‘June Gap’. 

Small Tortoiseshells

Mint Moth

Speckled Wood

Comma

Painted Lady

Day Twenty One:  dug a pond with some volunteers!


Day Twenty Two: undertook a Lantra tree training course and learnt about basic tree inspection techniques


Day Twenty Three: sowed some parsnip seed tape – my last ditch attempt to get some parsnips this year!


Day Twenty Four: spied some harlequin ladybirds beginning their pupation


Day Twenty Five: watched the swallows at work before my volunteers arrived. They are SO hard to photograph!

Day Twenty Six: spied my first ever asparagus stalk poking through the compost


Day Twenty Seven: ordered ‘The Bumblebee Flies Anyway’ by Kate Bradbury


Day Twenty Eight: counted four swifts flying over the garden – we only had three last month

Day Twenty Nine: started a new gouache painting with a plan for flower-themed inkings

The lack of ability to rotate photos is incredibly annoying!!

Day Thirty: had a day at work and admired a different allotment site in Birmingham. They had so many huge poppies in flower, blowing around in the breeze.



It’s a funny one this as I think I have a pretty good outdoorsy type life and job anyway, but I do sometimes find this month a challenge to do something out of the norm.

Friday, 31 May 2019

#30DaysWild 2019


It’s that time of year again! The annual Wildlife Trusts campaign, 30 Days Wild is back. The idea is to challenge yourself and your family to do one wild thing a day, be it growing veg, walking barefoot in the garden, watching a bee, putting up a bird box for next year… Whatever. Get a little bit wild, be creative, have fun and learn something new!

You can read all of my previous #30DaysWild and #7DaysOfWildChristmas posts by clicking this here link. I also used to post daily photos on Instagram, but I don’t use that anymore, so this year I am going to post a weekly roundup blog of my 2019 attempt.

Share your photos online with the tag #30DaysWild and get inspiration from the world around you! 




 


I like bees.

Friday, 4 January 2019

7 Wild Days of Christmas; Days 6 and 7!


Day six I spent at Sheldon Country Park – helping to tend the animals! I spent lots of time with the piggies because I love them, but then when it came to sweeping their poop I mysteriously disappeared to talk to the cows…


For day 7 I didn’t do anything. I had some sewing to catch up on to finish making a toy unicorn, so I had an indoor day. To make up for this, I did a three mile walk on New Years Day (technically day 8, but who’s counting). I planned to go on the walk with the Park Rangers as that’s what I like to do, but I ended up being given a hi-vis and a radio, and being asked to back mark.



Saturday, 29 December 2018

7 Wild Days of Christmas; Days 4 and 5


On day four I whipped up some more jute twine scrubbies. These have replaced the little green sponges in the kitchen in an attempt to reduce plastic usage. I have crocheted them using garden twine, and when they are at the end of their working life they can be composted, or buried in the garden to rot down. Jute is a natural plant fibre which is strong and holds its shape when wet.



For day five Momma P and I went for a walk – we have decided to start walking on a Saturday in a bid to get fit and lose a bit of weight – so we went up to the allotment to put the turkey carcass out for the fox and top up the bird feeders. While we were there I noticed that the first of the bulbs are starting to push through!



Friday, 28 December 2018

7 Days of Wild Christmas; Days 1, 2 and 3.


My first three days of the Wild Christmas challenge are fairly simple. I am an outdoorsy person anyway, so it isn’t hard for me to get outside to do something, but I have liked having a reason to do so. I have lots of crochet projects and other craft things going on, so it’d be very easy for me to avoid the outside world this week.

Day One; Momma P and I went up to Plot 31 and fed the birds and fox, and I also hung a homemade suet, lard, cheese, mealworm, peanut & mixed seed feeder. We made it in half of a coconut shell.



Day Two; David and I went for a walk to a new part of Cannock Chase (new for us). We saw a buzzard flying low over the heath, and looked for deer tracks in the mud. We have both been ill and I had a wee hangover so it was only a short walk.



Day Three; Another day, another walk. This day was our two-year anniversary and instead of doing what we usually do (a mooch around the Wren’s Nest in Dudley so I can get more fossils that I don’t need) we decided to go for a walk up Kinver Edge. I’ve only been here once before and I didn’t walk anywhere, so it doesn’t count. David and I did a circular route along the top of the sandstone ridge, saw a small cloud inversion, spoke to some dogs, and I admired some long yellow catkins. I love catkins, they remind me of my childhood.



Four days left! I am posting my daily pictures on Instagram and Twitter. What are you doing to have 7 Wild Days?

Sunday, 23 December 2018

7 Days of Wild Christmas


You may have heard of 30 Days Wild, an event organised by the Wildlife Trusts to get people out and engaged in nature for the month of June. This year, they have given us a festive edition – the 7 Days of Wild Christmas! Running from December 25th to 31st, the aim is the same; get outdoors into nature even if it’s only for 15 minutes, and see what you can see. Stop and listen. Feel the sun on your face or make patterns in the frost.

Simple things can include feeding the birds and given them fresh water, or going for a cold wintry walk in a local park. It could also be recycling your real tree, watching a sunset, spotting natural clumps of mistletoe in trees now that the leaf cover is gone, or making items from things you’ve found – natural wreaths, suet bird feeders, or bug houses for example.

I will be taking part as I need a reason to get out at this time of year. I hate the festive season, so having something to focus on will help me massively. I will be posting pictures over on my Instagram and I’ll try to blog every day but it may not happen as I’ll be in places without internet.

You can get more ideas here from the Wildlife Trust website.


Highgate Common

Doncaster

Charmouth

I can't remember.

Attenborough Nature Reserve

Rushcliffe Country Park

Plot 31

Rushcliffe Country Park