Forget snowdrops, celandines and dandelions ... spring begins for me when the first wood anemones start blooming, and here they are ...
... which means it's time to look back at our winter walks and bid them farewell till next time (don't come round too soon).
Not that I had to walk through the brunt of winter - for the last week of December and the first two weeks of January, I was laid up again with a bad shoulder. Which is unpleasant in itself, but happened to coincide with the coldest, darkest, grimmest days.
Even when I did get out, it was still gloomy.
This is in part due to the unremitting rain we've had, that has filled the rivers, created ad hoc ponds and left Eastville lake brimming.
River Trym at Badock's Wood
Above the Trym at Badock's
a winter pond on the Blaise estate
the Frome at Wickham Glen
Eastville Park lake
Despite the fact none of the winter's named storms gave Bristol more than a passing glance, we saw several trees downed, presumably as a result of stress following last year's hot, dry summer and the very wet winter.
Badock's Wood
Blaise
Wickham Glen
Snuff Mills
A sign, perhaps, of climate chaos was all these ladybirds on a single stone wall at Snuff Mills in January. (I saw the same phenomenon in the same place a couple of weeks later.)
There were, at least, some stunning skies. I did manage to catch one sunrise up on Purdown, which was glorious ...
... and back when my shoulder impingement meant I could only visit our local park, a double rainbow. (On another occasion, I actually passed through the end of a rainbow, which had never happened to me before - it was there, and then it wasn't. No photos because I was driving; no pot of gold because I was crossing a bridge over the M32 and it would have meant digging through a lot of tarmac and concrete.)
And also this sun halo, photographed from Purdown:
I suppose it's no surprise that walks out in the open on fine days are generally brighter than those down in the valleys or woods. We had a lovely walk a little further afield, though still in North Bristol, at Kings Weston House a week or so ago.
Kings Weston House
Daffodils!
Former quarry in Penpole Wood
And Purdown remains a wonderful place to get at least get above the city, if not away from it, the M32 being audible from a large part of the park.
Yet more trees have been felled from along the paths in Long Wood, which is hard to see, though of course woodland management is necessary.
There have also been attempts to restore some of historic landscape, with hedges of cherry laurel being laid around the woodland opening called, since the 18th century, 'the Saloon' - such an awful name for a magical place with the most beautiful light at any time of the year ...
... and also at the flat, circular site in Barn Wood where a rotunda stood until the 1950s, when it was pulled down.
I disparaged snowdrops, celandines and dandelions at the start of this blog, but of course they're a delight and comfort in the muddy dark, alongside daisies, sprouting bluebell and ramson leaves, dead nettles, primroses, hogweed leaves, violets, cherry blossom and dog's mercury. The year is turning.
fungi
scarlet elf cups
hoggin



































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