CityCyclingEdinburgh Forum » Leisure

Wildlife highlight of the day

(7166 posts)

  1. Min
    Member

    Yeuach. Wildlife lowlight.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  2. SRD
    Moderator

    just heard that the panda's pregnant....

    Posted 9 years ago #
  3. Cyclingmollie
    Member

    I also saw Germander Speedwell on my way down the Brunt and Tormentil as I struggled my way up towards Whitecastle. Themed flora.

    Edit - the panda's pregnant? That's big news.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  4. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Yeuach. Wildlife lowlight.

    Gives you an insight into the gamekeeper mentality. They hang crows up on fences because crows are clever, and can and do take the hint. Moles, on the other hand, are not very smart, have terrible eyesight and live underground.

    Moles need to be controlled because stones in molehills break the blades of combine harvesters, but there is no need to display the corpses other than as a Deliverance-style "Careful now, townies" display.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  5. chdot
    Admin

    "just heard that the panda's pregnant...."

    Not as such -

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-edinburgh-east-fife-28212994

    Posted 9 years ago #
  6. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Last night on the way home, I saw a bird which, while not uncommon, I haven't seen since I was a teenager.

    Bridge eight on the canal towpath, where there's a random chicane, a male blackcap was hovering over the reeds in a shaft of sunlight. I stopped to see what was going on, crept up to it and found the fledgling it was feeding. The fledgling took one look at me and demanded food.

    A very friendly passing Kiwi lady asked if my bike was OK. It's quite a community that towpath.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  7. fimm
    Member

    I understand that dead moles are strung up on fences because in the past the molecatcher was paid per dead mole, and needed to display the evidence. I don't know if payment per mole still occurs.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  8. twq
    Member

    I've been looping past Dunaspie loch the past week or so on my way to work. I've seen a heron up there every morning looking for breakfast.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  9. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    @fimm

    Payment is per mole, evidenced in the past by the skins which went to making trousers. I have an academic book on moles at home - it's one of my all-time favourites. There's a mathematical formula that lets you calculate how often a mole will dig an air shaft in a given horizontal tunnel and an x-ray of a seagull that died after the live mole it swallowed burrowed through its chest wall.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  10. acsimpson
    Member

    A rather stressed looking roe deer running parallel to me on the old A90. It was stuck in the Agilent site presumably looking for a way to escape all the heavy machinery.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  11. gembo
    Member

    Saw a blue whale today and a T. Rex, natural history museum was stowed out

    Posted 9 years ago #
  12. amir
    Member

    RB merganser plus two exceptionally cute chicks in Muessleburgh

    Posted 9 years ago #
  13. chdot
    Admin

    [+] Embed the video | Video DownloadGet the Video Plugin

    Posted 9 years ago #
  14. Greenroofer
    Member

    Would you please bow your heads for a minute's silence to acknowlege the passing of the Kingsknowe water vole rat, much beloved by @IWRATS.

    This morning it was stretched out dead beside the towpath...

    Posted 9 years ago #
  15. chdot
    Admin

    "
    Public butterfly count aims to check countryside health

    "

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-28319856

    Posted 9 years ago #
  16. jdanielp
    Member

    @Greenroofer I also spotted that, although I fear that you are perhaps being a little bit too optimistic when referring to it as "the" rather than "a" Kingsknowe rat ;)

    Posted 9 years ago #
  17. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    @greenroofer, @jdanielp

    Had I not been in the midst of a Tour fantasy, I'd have carried out a brief interment ceremony for the scaly-tailed water vole Ratus edinburgensis who has passed from our lives this morning in the glossy-coated prime of his all too brief life. He brought us joy and some excitement as he scurried around the banks of the canal. He will be missed by both a generation of cyclists and Maximum Spaceman's dogs. He is survived by eighteen ratlets and seventy three great-ratlets. No flowers please, but discarded junk food containers can be left floating in the canal.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  18. acsimpson
    Member

    Perhaps he wasn't missed by maximum spaceman's dogs and that was how he came to find himself stretched out at the side.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  19. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    @acsimpson

    A very good point. His border terrier has the look of a ratter. I'm now wondering if the gloves and the tartan shopping bag on wheels are actually discreet pest control equipment.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  20. Uberuce
    Member

    I am hopeless at spotting wildlife, so usually have to content myself with spotting wilddead.

    On the weekend, saw a not-so-fresh fox by the side of the road, and badly underestimated how long one should refrain from breathing in, after passing such an olfactory insult, when a tailwind is present.

    Also saw two fresh hawks or raptors of some kind anyway, both roadkill. Oddly enough not near any other roadkill that would presumably be the only thing liable to tempt them onto the road?

    What I did see alive was either a bluddy huge buzzard or an eagle, between Banchory and the Cairn O'Mount, and a young deer that wasn't in a hurry to get off the road as I approached in Montreathmont Forest.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  21. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    bluddy huge buzzard or an eagle

    The Cairn O'Mount is a bit far east for a Golden Eagle, but not impossible. Youngsters wander to odd places in late summer, but it's a bit early for that.

    Unless it was a tourist eagle, what you may have seen is a white-tailed eagle. They have now been introduced to the east coast and nested in Glen Clova last year. The first time I saw one it reminded me of a Lancaster bomber. They are gargantuan and cumbersome, while golden eagles, though big, are incredibly agile when they get going.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  22. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    I did a double post.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  23. Cyclingmollie
    Member

    I am hopeless at spotting wildlife

    Me too. So it was helpful that the wasp that landed on my arm the other day alerted me to its presence by stinging me continuously as I barrelled down a hill in traffic, unable to do much about it.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  24. twq
    Member

    Yesterday going through East Lothian I discovered corn lice. Others called it blackfly, or bogfly. Not exactly a highlight.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  25. wingpig
    Member

    A rat, scuttling across the path towards Lochend pond on Saturday morning, mere inches from the 2010 child's front wheel.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  26. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Walking through the centre of Aberdeen yesterday - sleeping on a tenement entrance quarter light - a swallowtail moth. Beautiful, and, according to the book, 'rarely spotted by the non-enthusiast'.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  27. chdot
    Admin

    Were you a "non-enthusiast" before you spotted it?

    Posted 9 years ago #
  28. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    I'm not yet a moth enthusiast, but this one was jewel-like. A shard of luminous jade trying to hide (or possibly just show off) on grubby granite. I am an enthusiast for unexpected beauty.

    Posted 9 years ago #
  29. chdot
    Admin

    "I am an enthusiast for unexpected beauty"

    Nice!

    Posted 9 years ago #
  30. kaputnik
    Moderator

    A rat, scuttling across the path towards Lochend pond on Saturday morning, mere inches from the 2010 child's front wheel.

    Saw a fat rat scuttling across the path right infornt of me, headed in the direction of Pirniefield on the Restalrig - Seafield path.

    Posted 9 years ago #

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