Wild Update - Late November 2023

Wild Update - Late November 2023

What's happening in nature - late November

November is a strange month somewhere in between autumn and winter proper.
Yet, as always with nature, there’s plenty to enjoy if you just get outdoors, whatever the weather.

Shop ‘til you drop on some Waxwings

At last, after many blank winters, this one is turning out to be a ‘waxwing winter’ (the last time we had one was in 2012/13). When there’s a scarcity of food on the continent, these bird ‘irrupt’ and fly west for the winter. Flock of hundreds have been seen in Scotland and, once they have deplete the berries there, they will move south.

Donald Sutherland

The small red ‘waxy protrusions’ give these birds their name

Waxwings come from the forests of Scandinavia and Russia so will have seen few if any human beings.
Yet once over here, they fly straight to those supermarket and retail park car parks where berry-bearing shrubs such as rowan or Cotoneaster have been planted ignoring the ‘head-down’ shoppers all around them.
I vividly remember watching a large flock gathered in trees on a central reservation in urban Sheffield, waiting for the chance to fly down to some berries in a busy car park across the busy road. No one else even noticed them.

Waxwing (Bombycilla garrulus) feeding on Cotoneaster berries in supermarket car park. Whitstable, Kent - Terry Whittaker/2020VISION

So keep your eyes peeled when you are out shopping!
See:  Where to see waxwings | The Wildlife Trusts
I can’t wait to see some again though so far, apart from a small flock in Glossop, only a few ‘flyovers’ have been seen.

Cotoneaster colour
There are over two hundred species and ‘varieties’ of Cotoneaster, a shrub which originated in China and the Himalaya. Some such as the often planted C. frigidus, have large leaves and berries whereas others, like the one in my garden, has very small ones. (Indeed the flowers are also tiny though the bees swarm around them in summer). Just now the large cotoneaster in the garden is a riot of autumnal colour though the blackbirds have eaten most of the red berries.

Cotoneaster - NB

Cotoneaster - Nick Brown

A mixed blessing

Fifteen ‘escapee’ species are listed in The Flora of Derbyshire as growing in the wild but most are very rare.
One Cotoneaster in particular, Cotoneaster horizontalis, is very invasive and you may well have noticed it growing on cliff faces in disused limestone quarries and along the Tissington and High Peak Trails.

(If you don’t have a copy of the wonderful Flora of Derbyshire, you can see a slightly out of date distribution maps for all species on this very useful website:
Flora of Derbyshire - Cotoneaster horizontalis sens.str. (Wall Cotoneaster) (kevinhutchby.uk) )

cotoneaster

Cotoneaster growing on High Peak Trail - Nick Brown

Nature table or museum display?
My photo of a home-made nature table, this week, in an idle moment, I set up my ceramic woodcock in the hallway and surrounded it with some ‘habitat’.

Nature table

Nature Table - Nick Brown

The woodcock, the work of Karen Fawcett, was not cheap but well worth every penny given the pleasure I still get from it years later. (As they say ‘the quality is remembered long after the price is forgotten’).

Autumnal bird nests

Too small to see properly on my nature table were some birds nest fungi I saw four or five years ago.
They were growing on woodchip in the garden at Darley Abbey Park in Derby. This one is the striated birds nest fungus, Cyathus striatus,  though two other species were also present. Peter Smith, my mycologist friend, had told me about them but I had to search for over half an hour before I found any myself…..they are indeed very small!

 

birds nest fungi

The ‘eggs’ are full of tiny spores. When a rain drop hits them they fly out and disperse…..NB

Wilding revisited
If one book has completely changed the nature conservation world it is Isabella Tree’s Wilding (along with a failing farm estate in Sussex). Remarkably that book is now five years old and it’s high time I read it again.
 

wildling

Wilding - Isabella Tree

Remember if you see anything whilst you're out and about this Autumn, please do let us know through the Derbyshire Biological Records Centre webpage: here