| January |
What's about in January?
The drive to survive goes up a gear as food becomes scarce and
harder to find. With few leaves to block your view even the
seemingly sterile landscape can surprise you with signs of
life. |
| February |
What's about in February?
When the sunshine's it may seem for a moment that spring has
arrived but this can soon be snatched away. Some of the worst
winter weather over the past two decades has come during
February. |
| March |
Though winter often has a sting in its
tail, we are now leaving the dreariest months of the year
behind
Spring flowers are opening and butterflies are emerging from
hibernation. Listen out for the first warblers, the rich bubbling
of a black cap or the unmistakable song of a chiff-chaff. At last
it's the start of the naturalist's new year. |
| April |
Spring is here! The vegetation is
changing from the browns and greys of the winter to lush
greens.
Hawthorn is the first common tree to come into full leaf. However,
it is beaten to flowering by the Blackthorn (sloe) which blooms
usually at the end of March, beginning of April. |
Spring is here!
The vegetation is changing from the browns and grays of the winter
to lush greens. |
| May |
What a busy month in the
countryside.The leaves on the trees are unfolding showing a
bright translucent green, they attract hungry insects while
dandelion clock heads are being torn apart by linnets and
goldfinches for their seeds. |
| June |
What a busy month in Margam Country
Park.
This is the month when our fallow and red deer give birth to their
young. The activity peaks with the majority being born from the
second week of June onwards. |
| July |
Noon in high summer, and barely a breath
of wind stirs the grass.
Little is moving in the countryside as the sun heats everything,
the best time for wildlife-watching occur early or late in the day,
when the dew is still on the grass, the air is fresh and fewer
people are out and about. |
| September |
September has a restless feel.
The sounds of summer changing slowly to those of autumn. It can be
a rewarding month for wildlife watching with lots going on before
the dark of winter sets in. |
| October |
The time is coming to get out your
winter woollies.
The frosts will soon transform the countryside, sending insect
numbers plummeting and leaves spinning to the ground, where the
wind will whisk them into heaps. |
This month is Conker month!!!
When collecting conkers remember only to take a couple. Autumn
fruit like conkers and sweet chestnut provide vital food for the
deer during this month. |
Death's Head Hawk moth.
A Death's Head Hawk moth, Acherontia atropos, was found in the Park
on October 3rd. Rather a surprise as it turned up inside the
Orangery!!! |
| November |
Mushroom Month
The woods and grasslands are full of mushrooms, toadstools and
other fungi of all shapes and sizes. |
Remember to check your bonfire for
hedgehogs before you light it for Guy Fawkes night.
Or even better don't light a fire on the site the material has been
standing but move it to the fire site just before you light
it. |
| December |
December can often be quite a wet month,
but why not get your wellies on, what better antidote for the
festive season than a December walk in the park.
Flocks of feeding finches, frost lingering in the shadows of the
woodlands and the washed out colours of a December afternoon are a
tranquil counterpoint to tinsel and wrapping paper. |