It started at the turn of the year - robins everywhere, coming up close, singing right in my ear. And they do lighten my mood as I stomp about, trying not to brood about the state of the world.
And now we're on the verge of bluebell season, and garlickry, and that will be all I'll be able to think about, so before that glorious interval, some early walks as spring unfurls - gently, as it turns out.
We've only been back to our habitual walking place - the Field of the Hollowing Oak - once since the shock of it being trashed by the golf club, who have rented it for five years, to turn it back into a practice field.
In my previous post about this special place, I noted the lies we were fobbed off with, about who owns the field, which council is responsible for the right of way, and the route of the footpath. As we entered it last time, a further lie - that the golf club were going to leave half of it as it was for the wildlife, also became evident.
The Northerner mentioned going there again recently, but all I can think of is that at this time of spring in previous years it's been full of cuckoo flowers and cowslips, and last year I sat in the grass and watched the orange-tip butterflies mate, and it breaks my heart just to think about the desecration, let alone witness it all over again, so we've stayed away. I miss the lovely oak, though, and am glad it won't be missing me (because it's a tree).
... and the badgers kindly dug up two tiny bits of blue and white hoggin for me and left them at the entrance of their sett (bottom right, both photos).
And I was really pleased to spot these hedgehogs that seem to have evaded the vandals, unlike almost all the other carvings in Badock's Wood.
I felt a bit guilty when I saw Cwtch's face upon arrival at Blaise Castle, as it was wearing that look of delighted incredulity she always has when she goes somewhere new, and I realised that although we've had her four and a half years almost, this was the first time she'd been there. Which is ridiculous because it's very lovely ...
... except that every time I go there, I relive the disappointment of a five-year-old, who remembers driving across the newly-built (now old) Severn Bridge and through Chepstow (wow!), has heard her parents mention the word ‘castle’ on the way here, and can’t believe this toy in front of her is actually it. (Of course, Bristol’s own, real castle was destroyed by Oliver Cromwell. The meanie.)
And we walked to the viewing point ...
... and through the woods with their magnificent trees and steep drops ...
Then down to Hazel Brook, which joins with the River Trym further down the valley. We walked a little way beyond Stratford Mill but not too far, as I also wanted to head in the opposite direction, towards Henbury.
Hazel Brook bridge
Stratford Mill
Spring squill lining the banks of the Trym
View of St Mary's Church, Henbury, from the far side of the River Trym
Blaise Museum
Cwtch and the blackthorn
Above the Trym valley, Kings Weston Down runs almost as far as Avonmouth, with lovely walks through the woods, so we headed there too.
Kings Weston House
We saw a heron fly over while we were walking; the second time this has happened this spring.
The Compass Dial at Penpole Point
View of Avonmouth and the River Severn
The other valley Cwtch and I have visited repeatedly is the Frome Valley, also in north Bristol.
We've had a good fossick along the river and also up and down the old, mostly walled lanes that drop down into the valley.
An old sign on the scrap of land off Ham Lane, that reads DANGER UNFENCED CLIFF, where there are now houses
View of the Frome from the steps leading down to Snuff Mills from Ham Lane
Lane up from the river (a much more pleasant alternative to the steps)
Gothic gateway in Wickham Glen
(Cwtch is auditioning for a role as Mrs Danvers)
Squeeze-belly stile leading onto Park Road
There's something about this section of the Frome valley, between Snuff Mills and Eastville Park Lake. It's quite deep and shadowy, especially in winter, and it always feels to me like a place of ghosts. Many ghosts. I grew up with the story of two children, June Sheasby (aged 7) and her brother, Royston (aged 5), who left home to visit a horse that was grazing in Wickham Glen one summer day in 1957, and were murdered by someone who was never caught and brought to justice, and it's impossible to know whether that dark episode - especially frightening for an over-sensitive, pony-mad little girl growing up just a few years later - has coloured my impression of the place, but whatever the cause, it's somewhere that makes me shiver ...
... even on bright, sunny mornings in spring.
Wickham Bridge
I've learnt from my friends on the canal that it's a foolish endeavour to count ducklings, as so many are lost to predators.
Down in Eastville Park, the hornbeam that fell in January and is now lying partly in the lake has come into leaf, and is full of moorhen and coot activity.
The cormorants are still hanging out in the same tree I saw them in previously, but the most exciting thing on the river right now is a pair of little egrets puddling in the water. Let's hope there'll be the patter of tiny great big yellow feet soon.
Eighteenth-century Beech House, which was called Stapleton Grove when Indian reformer and writer Raja
Rammohun Roy Bahadoor lived - and died - there, 1829 - 1833
Linden House, formerly a farmhouse with a tower that was part of a folly called Stapleton Castle
And finally Purdown, which has become my go-to place following the loss of the Field of the Hollowing Oak. It's not in the least bit wild, but there's a horizon, lots of trees and plenty of space for a small collie to run ...
... although not anywhere near Duchess Pond or the dew ponds, because there are water fowl that don't want to be chased there.
Holm oak
When trees have been coppiced, it can take a bit longer to appreciate how magnficent they are.
In Barn Wood, at the end nearest the Dower House, I came across a chamber pot, positioned as an outside toilet for a fox den in the roots of a tree.
It's made me wonder if this area of the woods was used as a bit of a rubbish dump by the previous dwellers, given the large number of potsherds I've found there. Of course, it's the best season for finding hoggin - winter mud diminished, leaf litter rotted, undergrowth not yet grown and earth not yet baked so hard you can't dig it out. Here's what I've found on our walks during the last month, along with some lengths of pipe stem.
I love willow pattern, so was delighted to find the tiny sherd with the faces of the doves on it (bottom right). And I'm rather taken by the marble and the piece of slipware too.
As for the piece with the crest and partial motto (top left), I did a bit of research: in full, it reads 'autem in nomine domini' and appears to come from St Vincent's College in Castleknock, Dublin, which is odd. What on earth is it doing here, in Stoke Park, Bristol?
As for the piece with the crest and partial motto (top left), I did a bit of research: in full, it reads 'autem in nomine domini' and appears to come from St Vincent's College in Castleknock, Dublin, which is odd. What on earth is it doing here, in Stoke Park, Bristol?
'Maybe a woman got pregnant in Ireland and the Church sent her over here to be locked up in the Dower House,' the Northerner suggested, 'and before she left, they gave her a souvenir mug.'

And here are the flowers so far: primroses, violets, marsh stitchwort, white violets, alkanet, comfrey, cuckoo flower, cow parsley, celandines and ... yes, just starting, the bluebells.
Plus, wood anemones, which have really flourished locally this year. I loved these, still going strong despite the tree they used to grow under having fallen.
And fungi, including a dishwasher's worth of scarlet elf cup, which are as cheering as the robins (though less tuneful).
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