Getting There.

That is us past the Spring Equinox, the clocks change twenty sixth, so let us hope Summer is around the corner, it has been a loooong Winter with a Spring of sorts. So good that daylight is now longer than darkness as it will save on putting lights on in the home and can start some good evening fishing.

23rd.

This fairly young Roe Deer Buck has been in the field in front of the house for a few days now, no sheep in the field so it is allowing him to chew on the new grass shoots that are coming up (that means the lawn mower will soon be out 🙁 ) and this morning he decided to just sit down in the early sunshine and have a rest. Note his antlers are still in velvet so as the breeding season will soon be upon him he needs to reserve as much energy as possible.

24th

Noticed when one of the (we think) three Pine Martins came for it’s nightly feed that it had a nasty wound on it’s back, asked some of the experts on a forum I am on and the conclusion is it could either be a fight with another Martin or even a bird of pray attack, though it would have needed to be a Golden Eagle or maybe a Buzzard.

25th

The weather forecast was for snow today but not seeing any or rain today, so decided to do some outside work. I have four wood stores and depending on the maturity of the cut wood depends on which pile is next. Decided to bring the first batch of next Winters wood into the old coal shed just to give it a final seasoning before it will get used. This meant wheelbarrowing it from outside our front gate to the side of the house, then stacking it. Moved eight barrow loads and that has been my workout for the day, if not the week, afternoon off me thinks.

26th

Clocks have gone forward, I lost an hour of my beauty sleep and we woke up to a very cold North wind and the saying was right we did have a flurry of snow. So it has been the same all day, cold wind, sunshine followed by a small fall of snow, not the day to venture out beyond doing the necessary chores.

Just wanted to show you how far we are behind with our Daffodils, most are in the state you see above, going to be good and sturdy bulbs, just not ready to unfold from their warm covers (bit like me this morning).

Some singular ones in sheltered places are a wee bit more advanced.

While others are trying their hardest to put on a show.

After all sitting in front of a glowing log burner is far more sensible.

27th.

This morning started off with a temperature of minus six, but the day turned out to be a super sunny one, with the temperature now plus eight, it felt the right time to go for a walk up Glen Fender. Just before we parked the car (you didn’t think I would walk up the steepest hill when there was a road available did you?) we saw another buck Roe Deer. So I walked back to get a few shots of it. If you zoom in or look carefully you can see it has a scar towards the back of its belly. Not sure if that was a scrap with another buck or jumping over a fence or something. If you think I got this close to it , look at the next shot and see the beauty of having a zoom lens on the camera, as this shows the distance away I was.

I did walk a fair way up an adjacent hill and got this wonderful view up the glen with Blair Castle bottom left.

28th.

Last night the planets were all in line something you will not see again until twenty twenty four, so as usual I set my camera up to late and by the time I looked up on this wonderful clear night sky, the Moon, Venus and Mars were still in the sky but no longer inline. I decided to take one of Venus hand held on a long exposure, bracing myself on the side of the house thinking I should be able to hold the camera steady with no need for a tripod. Below was the rather hilarious result.

Looks more like a cartoon of Roadrunner on the right and the Coyote just about to eat him on the left. Well nobody is perfect and lessons were learnt.

31st.

Went up to Blair Walker lochan today, and disturbed these two (I think they are Pink Footed Geese) , they were not happy with me and were very vocal, just to let me know it was their grass and water.

Up date on the Pine Martin, we have not seen it at the feeders since, but as there is plenty of peanuts for after we go to bed it might as a precaution be coming out later.

March Marches in.

First of all I apologise for not publishing anything for the second half of last month I had a fair bit on and not a great deal of time for photography. Even now I am playing catch-up for this half of March, as I write this it is already the eighth of the month and not taken a great deal of photos but the weather has been changeable for the start of metrological Spring. The first set of shots I took on the first day of the month, dry, sunny and not to cold.

1st

Primroses looking healthy and adding colour.

Beautiful Crocus showing off their wonderful colours and praying for a passing early Bee to settle. Love the pollen on the petals in the last shot.

10th.

I think the above three images show how we progressed into the month, though unlike the area surrounding us and down South we did not get the downfall of snow, in fact my snow shovel remained at the back door unused throughout the cold snap. We have had crisp, sunny days ( proper weather for this time of the year) with overnight temperatures going down to -12,-11 and getting warmer-9 last night..

11th

I just wanted to demonstrate the wonders and resilience of our Snowdrops. this first shot was a clump of Snowdrops flat on the ground covered in frost at ten o’clock this morning at minus 8C,

By eleven thirty and at minus 3C they are starting to recover as a bit of sunlight hits them.

By twelve and +3 C they were back up to their full height again. Now they have done this for at least the last week with overnight minus temperatures every night. What wonderful hardy little plants they are.

Lazy Saturday afternoon sitting in the living room looking out with camera in hand and captured these two, the Collar Dove sitting perfect for me and the Jay trying to hide from me.

12th

Why did I put on paper that my snow shovel had not been in use, this morning we woke up to two inches of snow and the snow shovel got worn down a bit more. I cleared the drive to the house and also down the steepest part of our road out for over an hour doing it, now the temperature has risen and the roads are clear, so I should not have bothered.

Following yesterdays blog on the versatility of Snowdrops look at these with a good covering of snow today.

The driveway clear.

Plus the steepest bit of road up to the house completely passable compared to after Christmas.

16th.

On the bright side, we get such beautiful sunsets this time of the year and as you know, I love taking sunsets.

17th.

Just to finish this first half of the month on a real positive note Buff Tailed Bumble Bee on the heather today along with a fair few Honey Bees, so good to see.

Are Things in the Garden Moving Yet?

I see from photos in the south of England that Daffodils and Snowdrops are out in bloom and though things in the garden are starting to move I would not dare say that Spring is here in the Cairngorms National Park, but signs of encouragement are showing.

Firstly let us admire the plants that have given us a smile throughout the Winter(well except when they were covered in the white “stuff).

3rd.

These three have been a great addition to the dull Winter colour.

Now small signs of life heading (hopefully towards Spring.

Snowdrops poking through the soil and blooms in sight.

White Heather that will soon be out.

Azaleas slowly coming into bud.

Clematis surrounded by dead stems and leaves showing some movement.

Even a few of our Daffs are trying hard to come up.

But a great find is the fact that there was a Thrushes nest well hidden in one of our shrubs and only came visible when the plant lost it’s leaves.

12th.

Went down to Dunmore Loch to see if the water was still frozen, all clear but a couple of trees are down, but found a couple of very unwanted visitors on the water, a pair of Cormorants, which no doubt had been feeding on the smaller fish in the Loch. Allowed them to stay long enough for me to get these two shots of one drying out on one of our platforms, before it got hastily frightened off, hopefully never to return.

13th.

What a difference ten days of good weather makes, in the entry above on the third I showed you the Snowdrops peeping through. Now look today there they are in full bloom and making you smile every time you see them.

Also looking great are a few Primroses adding some most welcome colour to the garden.

15th.

Wow what a surprise, my eagle eyed wife spotted this in the field three hundred yards from the house. The first time since we have lived here that Mr (I think it is a dog) Fox has been seen by either of us this close to the house. The first shot it was sitting eating a mouse or vole, that happened while I was setting up my camera, the second shot was when I whistled, it stood up and was looking for me. He was limping on one of his front legs as it walked away, so it did have some sort of injury.

16th.

Just to finish off this very optimistic blog, I would like to quote a statement about Scottish seasons that I found on the internet.

The order is:-

Winter

Fools Spring

Second Winter.

Spring of Deception.

Third Winter.

Actual Spring.

Summer (maybe)

False Autumn.

Second Summer.

Actual Autumn.

Early Winter. (repeat)

A Long Month.

I saw an article the other day that started of the rhyme about how many days each month has, you know, “Thirty days has September, April June and etc” and after February it said,”plus January that has one hundred and ten”. Which is exactly how it feels, especially up here as since New Year we have had some pretty cold spells, down to minus ten fairly regularly and you really do not feel like venturing out except for essentials. At last today the thaw has commenced with an overnight temperature of plus three the snow (at our level) has all but disappeared and the ice has started to melt.

22nd.

Some interesting things happening on my pond, these three shots illustrate the slight thaws and the freezing of the water. Today there is a thin layer of ice on the surface , then the white sections are trapped air in between the layers where the ice was frozen but melted around the edges allowing the air to get under the ice, then froze again, helped by me pouring water on one particular spot to allow a breathing hole to oxygenate the water. The small bubbles below the ice in the last shot, I am not sure where they come into it but they are below the top thin layer of ice. As you can see six of my eight fish survived, but my two biggest Goldfish didn’t and I removed them on the last melt.

25th.

Just up the road from us is the famous House of Bruar retail development, they like to call themselves “Harrods of the North”, though expensive they do have some really cracking “stuff” and this includes the fishing department. Above is their impressive display of game flies, Salmon and Trout, beautifully laid out and many patterns that I have purchased one of and then copied any further ones myself. One of my favourite hobbies is fly tying and nothing gives a fly angler more satisfaction than catching a fish on a fly that you have tied yourself.

26th

A clear night and a great view of the Moon, it is called a waxing crescent phase and according to my moon app, is thirty eight percent full.

27th.

This weekend is the “Big Bird Count” in the U.K. run by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) where households are asked to do a bird count in their gardens etc. Though I do not take part it gives the RSPB a rough idea of how bird populations are getting on. So I went out and fed the birds this morning and then came in and sat in the warmth of the kitchen and photographed some of the birds that came to the feeders opposite the window in a five minute ( the bird count is for an hour normally) and see what birds came to the feeders. here are some of the shots that were “okay” to show you, some were rubbish as the birds were quick to feed and get away before I could focus.

A female Chaffinch and a landing Blue Tit.

Male House Sparrow.

Male Blackbird saying “why are you photographing me?”

A patient Sparrow.

Female Chaffinch and Great Tit.

Male Chaffinch.

Coal Tit

As the cup get’s lower , the Blue Tit can just sit inside and eat all it wants.

Before the count on this cold morning we had this hungry Jay stay in the garden for a while.

1st February.

That is it, the loooong month is over and we are into the shortest, days are longer and Spring is around the corner, we hope.

Happy New Year.

Well all we can hope for is that 2023 improves from last year . Both in easing of the pandemic, cost of (sort of) living, industrial disputes and up here ,at the moment, the weather.

1st.

With regard the weather we woke up this morning to four inches of snow and minus six temperature, as you will see below.

My poor old car, when I eventually got the car back home a couple of days ago, I couldn’t get it in the garage so had to leave it out, unaware we were getting so much snow, hence this is the result.

Just to prove we had four inches here it is stacked on my wing mirror.

Looks stunning but only the four wheel drive and snow tyres will get you up the hill.

No collection of recycled material for a while me thinks. These are not all my bins the whole glen has to use one central spot for the recycle and household waste.

This grand old oak tree looks so wonderful with snow on it.

2nd

The sun has risen on this beautiful clear day, with present temperature at minus nine C, so we have still got all our snow. The first two shots are of the mountains to the right of our house as viewed from our bedroom and the last are the mountains to our left. Log burner will be on the minute I am dressed. brrrrr.

13th.

For the first time in a few days we have had some sun instead of continuous rain. So went up the hill to see the Munro’s, unfortunately the low cloud was still covering some of the tops but took a few shots anyway.

The first shot you can see the cloud , in the second the slightly lower hills were below the cloud cover, but you can see from these the snow level at the moment and the cover. It is slowly melting and the rivers have really been in spate.

The melt continues on the lochs as well, as you can see from the first shot beneath the trees no ice, in the second a small bay by the bank is ice free the remainder (a bit whiter) is still frozen.

When walking a ridge in the field I spooked six Roe Deer, by the time I got my camera up I just captured ones backside, can you spot it?

This looks like my neighbours back garden (sorry Rod) but is in fact another “mole city” up on the Glen Fender meadows.

Went off to Pitlochry after above photo’s and called into Loch Dunmore, where this huge Pine tree has fallen into the water onto the ice. As this is a very productive place to fish we are hoping Forestry and Land Scotland can get it cleared before the start of the season.

16th.

Not the greatest of shots, but this is a sight you do not see very often. About a mile away from home on the opposite side of the glen from us was this herd of Red Deer stags, I zoomed in on my screen and though very blurred I counted roughly one hundred and eighty deer, which is a fair old herd. With binoculars I could see they were all stags which is normal this time of the year as they congregate after the rut, while the females go off by themselves before they have their young. The reason the herd is this side of the hill is because with the sun being so low this time of the year the other side does not see any of it, so is frozen most of the time , where this side does get some sun and therefore it is easier to get at the ground below the snow. Does not matter how many times I see this sight it still excites me.

Break Time.

This is for most of us a busy time of the year and I am no exception to that, this year we are going over to East Ayrshire top spend the Christmas break with my son and his partner, plus our son is flying in from New York . Therefore this will be most probably the shortest post I will send out.

21st

With my eldest coming in to Edinburgh Airport he thought it would be great if we spent a couple of nights in Edinburgh in an extremely good hotel, which we willingly agreed to (obviously). So a pre Christmas break where we ate well and enjoyed a great time with our son.

Edinburgh was full of Christmas and many establishments in George Street had some wonderful displays plus an ice rink and this frightening ride that seemed to go very close to the buildings on either side of the closed off road.

The next two shots are the stars in the new St James shopping mall.

The next two are from Princess Street Gardens where the Christmas market was. I was a bit disappointed in this as it was mainly all food and not enough gift stalls.

Christmas Eve we went for lunch to Troon Harbour and had a fantastic meal overlooking the marina.

27th.

On our way home after having a wonderful family Christmas we had snow all the way from Glasgow and the journey home took us an hour longer than normal. Well I say home we made it , but the car did not. The following sequence of the journey up our single track road roughly two hundred yards from home. The secret to driving on compacted ice and snow is to keep a constant speed in the appropriate gear. We had good speed and got up the hill for three quarters of a mile, but this double bend was the end of our cars journey, so we had to park up in that turning on the left of the shot and walk the essentials up a very slippy road to home.

Bearing in mind these shots were taken the next day, you can imagine how bad it was with falling snow on it the day before. I managed to get around those two bends, but only twenty five yards further before having to “sort of” park it up the verge opposite that outbuilding.

29th

At last got the car home.

Our landscape with the mist rising off the river.

Well silly me I said I would not have much content for this blog, turns out I was wrong. See you next year.

Getting Closer.

What is getting closer? Well we automatically think of Christmas as we enter December and that is not many days off and I am sure if most of you are as organised about it as my wife, you could have it tomorrow, cards purchased,(tick) . Cards written and posted (tick) Turkey purchased and in the freeze, in case there really is a shortage (tick). Decorations down from the loft and mostly up (tick). Christmas tree picked out of the garden but not yet felled in case it looses to many needles early (tick). So yes she is organised and it is definitely closer for her.

More important to me is the weather is getting closer to proper December weather instead of this abnormally mild conditions we have been having. a North wind will blow and later this week we SHOULD have snow, let us see.

9th

It has happened our first snow at our level of the season, so just for you I braved the cold and went out with the camera and took these few shots below, all before I went in and lit the log burner.

Just showing you what the temperature was at eleven this morning, having been (as you can see by the reading) minus five overnight it is still sitting on minus four at this hour.

First job after snow is feed the birds then straight into clearing our driveway, the road had already been gritted by ten thirty, so it was just the drive.

The Goldfish do not eat much in this sort of weather so fairly deep down in the pond, with the pump keeping a channel from freezing right over.

Guess who never put the car in the garage last night?

Just to show you our single track road had been salted by the gritter, one great service we get to enable the school children up the glen to be picked up.

A few shots follow of a (not to long out and about) walk I took and the things that caught my eye, including this fence post.

The barbed wire .

A couple of seed heads.

Plenty of berries for the birds to feast on over winter, but I honestly think they prefer the sultanas we feed them.

Lastly an optical illusion, this looks like a branch well buried in the snow, it is in fact a twig growing out of the parapet of our road bridge and about six inches high.

11th

Last night the snow was washed away at our level by rain and sleet, but up on the Munros it fell as snow and added a bit more white to the scenery. A sunny morning but still at minus three.

The distant hills towards Rannoch are that bit lower than a Munro so as you can see didn’t get the same level of snow. Still a cracking view though.

The cairn on the hill opposite us has just a dusting, waiting for a bit more depth so that we will see the stags coming to this spot to feed.

Twenty past ten in the morning and the moon is still visible for another half hour or so.

12th.

I am sorry if this next batch of photos bore you but I am so fascinated with them that I could not decide which ones not to show you, so you got the lot.

The temperature overnight dropped to minus twelve degrees C and when I took these shots around ten am it was still minus ten. The first two are our external wood shed door, with the frost making incredible patterns.

These next TEN are baubles hanging from my trees and lights, the patterns are not printed on the balls, they are genuine frost collected on them, making them even more special.

13th.

This weather minus thirteen last night, sure gives you some wonderful photography. I can only manage twenty minutes or so before I have to get in to the warm living room with the log burner, but that time is well spent. Though this first shot was taken through the d/g of the bedroom.

A beautiful Fieldfare taking advantage of the bumper berry crop this year, looked straight at me for the shot , thank you Fieldfare.

The weir on the River Fender that allows water to be taken off to the hatchery that used to be the tank for the trains to fill up on down in the village. The green canvas at the top of the shot is protecting that flow from freezing up to continue to feed the hatchery.

Close up shows the water coming over the weir is mostly frozen with a flow coming over the top of the ice.

Even closer shows the balls of ice that look like giant cotton wool buds.

Rain Instead of Snow?

If the first three days of the start of this blog are anything to go by it could be a very wet finish to the month. We have had torrential rain all three days and as you will see from the first set of shots below the rivers are reflecting this. Our county even got a mention on the national weather forecast this morning as getting the worst of the rain. It is at least getting colder, a bit nearer the average temperature for the month, but no sign of snow on the hilltops, let alone at our level.

18th.

During a short break in the rain (well just a drizzle compared to overnight) I went out in the car to photograph all three of the rivers that flow within our village boundary.

Firstly comes the little river that is fifty yards downhill from our home the Fender. This at the bottom of our hill joins the ——

River Tilt which is most probably double the height it normally is. This river about two hundred and fifty yards further on joins the ———

River Garry, in fact if you look along the river you will see the water line where the Tilt joins.

Due to the weather I didn’t go any further along the Garry’s course as this outside Pitlochry joins the River Tummell, which then goes on a further ten miles and joins the mighty River Tay.

Not wanting to be left out the small lade that feeds the watermill (the one with the cracking cafe that I always go on about) has a fair bit of water in it also.

22nd

So what happens three days after the above post? Below is what happens.

Our two nearest Munro’s get a good dusting of snow and the temperature drops down to minus three at night and did not go above five during the day for the next three days. Though a memory on Facebook tells me eleven years ago on this day we had four inches of snow on the drive, so not fully back to normal conditions for this time of the year.

27th.

The weather soon reverted back to rain and more or less hasn’t stopped for the last two days and nights, so looks like this could be our normal pattern with global warming. The River Fender (that I showed you at the beginning of the blog) has not captured the water off the hills yet but still had a good flow on it as these two shots show from this morning.

Looks so peaceful here just before it hits the small weir.

This is it before and after the weir. You can tell the power it does have when in spate by the size of those trees hanging over the weir, that had been washed down the river.

2nd.December.

These last two are from a trip fifty miles East, well out of the Cairngorms, but I wanted to show you a contrast. Exactly twelve years ago today (according to my Facebook memory slot) we walked half a mile up from our house and stood in knee deep snow. Today we went along Loch Tay to Killin and it was eight C and a calm mild day, foggy and not even on the “tops” was there any snow.

Loch Tay from Kenmore.

We stopped on the way back at The Inn on The Tay for some lunch, here is where the International canoeing slaloms takes place and plenty of water in the river for that today. The wires are for placing the poles that the canoeist have to negotiate.

The In Between Month.

Unusual for this month as by now we have normally had snow on the peaks of the Munro’s, so far nothing, but the weather is very unusual for November. The first and second day are prime examples as I will now show you.

1st.

Starting at the top of this sequence, when I drew back the curtains this morning it was daylight because the clocks had gone back, so the birds were already active. The first thing I saw and heard was this male Chaffinch singing his heart out trying to attract a mate?? Then I looked at where the noisy Sparrows were on the garage roof. There were in fact seven Sparrows and they were fighting over their hotel nestbox sites, in fact one was even taking dry grass into one of the holes as though they were nest building??

We then had a morning in Dunkeld in temperatures up to twelve Centigrade, sun out gorgeous sunshine and I went off to Loch of Lowes to see if anything was about to photograph. Nothing more than a bunch of Mallard, but decided to show you the empty Osprey nest across the loch (centre of the shot) if you zoom in you will see the cctv camera that you can watch live all day and night when the Ospreys are here.

On the way home spotted this herd of Fallow Deer next to the road just enjoying the warmth and good grass.

2nd.

What a difference a day makes overnight the temperature went down to minus four and a crisp sunny morning, proper weather for this time of the year, but I expect it was a wake up call for the Sparrows and Chaffinch of the previous day, no sign of nest building today. The sun soon burnt the frost off, but it remained a cold day. As you can see even Mr Mole felt the chill.

9th.

The photographers curse, I heard this flock of Geese coming from my left to the right, grabbed my camera (which for once had the correct lens on) tracked them in a straight line for about one hundred yards, expecting them to head a further one hundred yards to Blair Walker pond. What did they do, turn their backs on me and head off to a distant field behind the trees on the left. Typical.

10th.

Today was that kind of day, sunshine and showers, sometimes delivering the two at once to enable me to get this great rainbow shot from our garden.

15th.

You drive the thirty miles into Perth for a morning’s shopping in misty cloudy conditions, a s soon as you get there, down comes the rain. The wife also has a haircut due, so you had planned a trip down by the river for a bit of photography looking for the Kingfisher. But the rain gets heavy and the wind gets up, so I sit in the car reading my book instead.

A thoroughly miserable morning with even heavier rain all the way up the A9 to home. But when you get out of the car the sight in the two shots above great you, our Pyracantha hedge and the Azaelea hanging onto their beautiful colours and the world is okay again, especially when you have unpacked the shopping and got the log burner roaring. Sorry about the rain spots on the lens but it was still pouring down (the things I do to provide you with photos)

The End is Near.

As we come to the end of the month we are getting closer to the end of the year as well, the dreaded advertising is entering into the shops for the festive season and the colder weather. Also we are only a week away from the end of The Enchanted Forest, that I get so much pleasure from being involved in, I have been to the show for the last time this year last Friday (21st) and so the last batch of shots from it. I have not had chance of much photography apart from at the forest as I have been decorating our living room/dining room space. Well overdue according to my boss, though not a lot of difference in colour from last time, but it had to be done as we have also replaced three windows in the dining room end.

21st.

A vast show at Enchanted Forest, but such small details as this shot is what I really enjoy, simplicity, but effective.

On a still, slightly misty evening even though there were hundreds of folk around, scenes like these two are truly magical.

I decided that I would try some experimenting with some different camera techniques. All three of these last shots are taken at a five second exposure moving the camera and getting these affects. This first one is actually of the leaves in the shot above this one but slowly moving the camera from left to right during the exposure.

These two are a set of maybe a thousand fairy lights in amongst the trees (hence the vertical line down the middle of both shots), first one left to right, second just a slight movement . Love to know, was it worth it?

25th.

I make no excuses about loving Autumn and the colour it brings to the garden, it is my favourite season and I hope you do not mind me indulging in some more photos from within it. Couldn’t choose my favourites so I have put most of what I liked on here.

Just some of the colourful leaves close up.

The Acer is starting to lose it’s leaves but still look good piled up on the ground.

The Heathers still looking good.

The tub at the front door gives a warm welcome.

No real colour in the sky but the Birch brings gold into the garden.

The colours at the bottom of the field cheer you up when opening the curtains on a damp morning.