Singer
Starling with peanut
Same bird, different pose
Our neighbourhood's friendliest starling
Marvel
Partial scowlery
Peak rhodo
Eagle
Chives on the table
Eastern tiger swallowtail
Portent
Better late than never
Sleepy Cove mine
Spider on crackerberry
Red admirable
Bachelor's buttons
Harbinger
The moon on my street
Tomato
Truck's arse at a light.
Not a bumblebee
This year's first dahlia's arse-side
Some bug in the ragwort
Three-week fogs
Not the usual view
Guest in the sink
Carpenter
Stitched fog
Peak
Crow pondering
First picture on neglected roll
Yellow wahbluh
Little doubt
Singing outside the window
Waking from winter sleepover
Afternoon serenade
My first spring warbler this year
At the dry dock
Warm days, you catch the rays
Old highway
Checking the water
My walking companions
The view from Arthur's Hill
Early shrooms
The other goldfinch
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37 visits
At Mr Mundy's Pond
Fifty years ago, the ground around Mr Mundy's Pond was a kind of post-industrial nightmare with big chunks of metal and concrete and dumped construction materials lying around.
There are still signs of early 20th-century foundations but largely the area has been cleaned up, with plenty of mostly-native trees growing in along the paths. There are even trouters around the pond (though the trouter we spoke to said he doesn't eat the trout he catches).
And the birds love it. This afternoon (besides the newly arrived sparrows disappearing into grasses) there was a small flock of Yellow warblers, mostly in the more secluded area on one side, but also on the more open and windy side, too.
There are still signs of early 20th-century foundations but largely the area has been cleaned up, with plenty of mostly-native trees growing in along the paths. There are even trouters around the pond (though the trouter we spoke to said he doesn't eat the trout he catches).
And the birds love it. This afternoon (besides the newly arrived sparrows disappearing into grasses) there was a small flock of Yellow warblers, mostly in the more secluded area on one side, but also on the more open and windy side, too.
Denis Ve, William (Bill) Armstrong have particularly liked this photo
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