February 16, 2010
Stories in the Snow
With snowfall in this country there is often a limited window of opportunity to make the most of your tracking skills before a thaw sets in again. If you are tied to a daily job (I am lucky enough to be self-employed) you also need it to snow at the weekend! Still, it is worth persevering for a large amount of experience will come your way in a short space of time. There is more snow to come for many parts, so make the most of it.
Good snow, perfect tracking snow – settling all day to a depth of say 10cm and not freezing hard, nor melting at all at night when most creatures are active or all the next day while you are out in it – not only reveals exciting little details but also the big picture of what is about and where they go. The later in the season it falls, the more activity you are likely to encounter; the early winter lethargy of many animals will have passed and fat reserves run down, so food will take higher priority. Badgers, for instance, begin to move around more as pregnant females make space for themselves, perhaps evicting some other sows and younger boars from the sett in the process. Much seasonal activity is dictated by day length and that inexorably gets greater as we move towards spring.
The most recent snowfall (here in my part of Kent) spoke volumes. As I stepped out of my door I immediately learned that we have a Wood Mouse (or possibly the closely related Yellow-necked Mouse) or two, using our coal bunker as a thoroughfare. The curious cloven-hoof-like tracks of a mouse hopping in snow can be quite a puzzle if you have never encountered them before. In February 1855 large numbers appeared in the snows of rural Devon and were not generally understood for what they were. They caused such a stir that some folks thought they were the footprints of Satan himself and the incident was reported in The Times!
A close look, in most cases, will reveal the imprint of the tail. That said, a little while later, in the woods I found a hopping mouse trail with no tail drag. (see photos below) That trail also followed the mouse’s outward line on the return journey, making a confusion of prints that needed unpicking.
The direction of movement is indicated by the wider gap. This is made by the hindfeet landing ahead of the forefeet. A Rabbit (inset) shows something similar but greatly scaled up.
Bear in mind that two way trails are common with many mammals. A small creature like a mouse or rabbit will have a learned route that they can flee down in moments of danger without a thought or hesitation, so ingrained that they know where every obstacle is for an instant manoeuvre.(It has been shown by experiment that for a while they still jump over objects that have been removed.) Other animals follow scent trails that they have laid down, Badger and Fox, for instance, but the Fox also has excellent vision and may follow his own trail by sight.
Here is an example of where a Fox has struck out over a rather wide open area but has stuck almost exactly to the trail it had left previously. You can see that in places the animal deviates from line slightly (probably to investigate a scent) but otherwise holds it tight. These tracks led to (and from) a spot where there had been a lot going on. I thought it may have been hunting activity but there was absolutely no sign of prey, just indications of more than one Fox. Then I realised it was play, probably between dog fox and vixen as the mating season is only just coming to an end. Aside from a patch where one animal had rolled in the snow, there was a beautiful example of a four-footed pounce, with a brush mark, something that a Fox usually does when catching mice or voles.
I didn’t get very far in four hours, there was so much to see. More woods and a river nearby but not the time on this occasion. Probably the most strangely beautiful sight of the day was the double imprint of a Blackbird that had inadvertently landed in deep snow and floundered, leaving the impressions of fanned wings and tail, feet and even chin and beak.
February 12, 2010
The Bushcraft Magazine meets Fergus the Forager
The Bushcraft Magazine meets Fergus Drennan whilst he is out foraging for seaweeds on the North Kent coast.
January 27, 2010
Mars Goes a Wandering
The night sky is a good place to test your powers of observation. Are you clear which ‘stars’ are actually planets? Do you, as our ancestors did, notice their wanderings around the constellations? Have you observed how they stay within a relatively narrow band of the stars – the ecliptic or Zodiac?
Well if haven’t, don’t feel too bad. There are wheels in motion within wheels and keeping track can be challenging to non-astronomers. In addition to the daily rotation of the Earth causing everything to slide out of view over a period of hours there is the Earth’s passage around the Sun, the Moon’s orbit of the Earth, the periodic disappearance of those planets behind the Sun, and the tilt of Earth’s axis to contend with, for example. If you were up all night every night under clear skies, you would soon pick up on some of the more local activity – that of two inner and three outer planets. Busy lives, cloudy skies and our own diurnal (opposite to nocturnal) nature make it very difficult.
Now is a good time to look up and catch an observable event. Mars, the red planet, is at opposition. Opposition is when the Earth and an outer planet line up on the same side of the sun. In the same way that the Moon is full when it is at opposition, the face of Mars visible from Earth is completely illuminated. It is also visible pretty well all night, rising around sunset, riding high at midnight and setting around sunrise. It is at its closest to the Earth since 2008, making it appear bigger and brighter than at any time from then until 2012!
Looking East January 26 2010 at 21:00 – 22:00 10 second exposure at f 5.6, ISO 400
It not only looks striking but something else is going on, too. During November 2009 Mars was slowly trekking through the constellation of Cancer. As it continued its journey East, it moved into the Constellation of Leo in December but early in January 2010 it appeared to turn around and head back towards Cancer, travelling Eastwards again. This is known as retrograde motion and is really an illusion caused by the fact that Earth (being nearer the Sun) moves in a faster orbit – Mars takes almost two Earth years to complete a round trip. For a time Earth overtakes Mars causing it to seem as if going backwards (we’ve all seen this effect whilst in cars and trains), but because the motion of both planets is a circle not a straight line, we swing back to our relative positions again, albeit much further apart. If that’s not clear, then watch this lovely little video on You Tube; not one of mine I’m sorry to say. Retrograde Motion and the Opposition of Mars
Mars is back in Cancer again. Cancer is a faint constellation and the bright moonlight bleaches it out at the moment. On January 29th the Moon, which moves much more quickly West to East than Mars, will be full in Cancer, also, probably expunging all the local stars. However Mars, very close by, will continue to shine brightly. As the moon wanes it will start to appear later and later in the night sky and not interfere with seeing Mars, which will remain prominent for a couple of weeks. (Leave that to the clouds). On March 11, 2010 the planet will turn around and start heading back towards Leo again. As it does so it will become progressively fainter, a far cry from the red eye presently burning a hole in the night sky.
One way to follow this is by taking photographs at intervals of a couple of days. You will need a tripod. For the image I took a 10 second exposure at f 5.6, ISO 400. Use the self timer or shutter release to avoid shaking the camera initially.
January 20, 2010
Velvet Shanks / Enokitake
Velvet Shanks (Flammulina velutipes) are a genuine Winter mushroom that don’t begin fruiting until December or even January. They grow on dead wood particularly the stumps of Elm, where they can be frozen solid by frosts but are still good to eat when they thaw. Often the clumps are small but occasionally Velvet Shanks turn up in profusion. Provided your specimens are young and fresh I find that their supposed toughness is overstated. Generally they are an ingredient, rather than a meal in themselves because of their small size.
Velvet Shanks are very recognisable because so few other fungi are fruiting (Judas’ Ears and Oyster Mushrooms being exceptions) but forage for them well outside the main mushroom season and check to make sure your specimens don’t have a hint of a ring, or they might not be what you think. If in doubt do not eat them.
January 6, 2010
Wassail and Twelfth Night
Today is the twelfth day of Xmas and Twelfth Night.
This time of the year is associated with wassailing.
The word “wassail” probably derives from the Old English: “hale you well” , ie be of good health.
Wassailing comes in two versions:
Wassailing from house to house – a bit like carolling; singing to householders and receiving presents. The wassailing songs include words like:
Here we come a wassailing, among the leaves so green; Here we come a wandering, so fair to be seen; Now is winter time, we’ve travelled far and near; And we wish you, send you, a happy new year.
The other sort of wassail is in apple orchards like our small orchard at the bushcraft site, where locals would visit the trees early in the new year to sing to them and wake them up ready for a new year of growth and harvest. Making loud noises also scares evil spirits away and encourages the trees to bear great quantities of fruit.
These songs have words such as:
Here’s to thee old apple tree; That blooms well, bears well; Hats full, caps full; Three bushel bags full; And all under one tree.
I shall be wassailing my trees very soon as I prune them!
Cheers all
Huw






