Urban Nature Every Day (eBook)
256 Seiten
Batsford (Verlag)
978-1-84994-934-7 (ISBN)
Jane McMorland Hunter writes and edits books on the good things in life: gardening, nature, cookery, craft and poetry, whilst also working part-time at Hatchards Bookshop, London. She has written and edited several books, including 100 Happy Poems, A Happy Poem to End Every Day, Ode to London, Favourite Poems of England, A Nature Poem for Every Day of the Year and Nature Writing for Every Day of the Year. She lives in West London and can be found on social media at @alittlecitygarden.
366 prompts for noticing nature every day of the year. Arranged in day-by-day format, this beautiful book is a celebration of the nature you can find in your city or town, such as urban foxes prowling in the street, wildflowers sprouting from a crack in the pavement, butterflies on your balcony and the joys of wandering along a canal path. Learn how to put up a bug hotel on the 5th January, search for cherry blossom on the 4th April and have a picnic underneath a willow's branches on the 11th June. There are cloud formations to spot, avenues of trees to walk down and elderberries to harvest. Over the past few years, many city dwellers have learned to appreciate the nature on their doorsteps, as part of the lasting legacy of lockdown. This timely book is a celebration of the vast variety of wildlife around us, proving that you don't need a trip to the countryside to enjoy the natural world.
JANUARY
On the first day of the year, make a simple aim: to engage your senses more and notice nature wherever you are. The trees are bare, the weather uninviting and the nights long; once the jollity of New Year is over, January can seem like a grim month, but there are catkins and snowdrops to see, the hoot of an owl to hear and the fleeting beauty of frost to admire on the coldest of days. And rediscover wassailing, an ancient and splendid festival, which awakens the apple trees and their spirits.
___________
Little acrobat of the terraces,
we’m winged when we gaze at you
Jimmucking the breeze, somersaulting through
the white-breathed prayer of January
From ‘Birmingham Roller’ by Liz Berry
1 JANUARY
NATURE BY YOUR BACK DOOR
It is a myth that you need to ‘go to the country’ to find nature. Often, there will be amazing things right by your back door, even if you live in a seemingly barren urban landscape. A patch of rough grass by the roadside will be home to a wide variety of plants, insects and tiny creatures that will amaze you if you take the trouble to look at them properly. Admittedly, you may not spot a tiger or even anything particularly memorable, but it will show you a world both different and wondrous, which exists alongside the one you inhabit.
2 JANUARY
FROST
Frost forms overnight when temperatures fall and the moisture in the air freezes. By morning everything is coated with a thin layer of ice crystals. The air in these crystals makes the frost appear white. If the weather is very cold, fern frost patterns form on windows, creating beautiful and delicate swirls. Frost rarely lasts long, particularly in urban areas, as it is only a very thin layer and will easily melt. If you want to see your local park transformed into a genuine winter wonderland, you will need to get up early but – trust us – it is well worth the effort.
3 JANUARY
WATCH THE YEAR
All naturalists have ‘their patch’. It probably won’t be exclusive to them, but it will be somewhere that they know well, well enough to notice subtle changes as the seasons progress. It needn’t be anywhere spectacular, just a place that has things that interest you. Visit your patch as often as you can: every day is obviously ideal but, for many people, this may be totally impractical. Once a month is fine, once a week is better. The rate at which things grow will adapt to the light, water and warmth; the activities of the birds will alter as they mate, raise a family and possibly prepare to migrate; and the animal and insect visitors will vary. Don’t be put off by the weather, some of our best sightings have been while huddled beneath a brolly.
4 JANUARY
ALDER CATKINS
Alder trees need light and prefer wet ‘feet’, so they can be most often found along rivers and canals. Each tree bears male and female catkins: males are drooping and purple, gradually turning to yellow in spring; and the females are like tiny fir cones at the tips of the branches, turning from bright green to dark brown as they ripen. You won’t be able to see the most important thing about alders; they use the carbohydrates they produce during photosynthesis in an incredibly clever way that improves the quality of both the air and soil around them. The other unusual feature is that the wood does not rot as long as it is kept wet – which is why alder posts are, almost single-branchedly, holding up Venice.
5 JANUARY
BUG HOTELS
Bug hotels may look like stylish garden art, but they are actually a practical way to help bees and other insects. There are many species of bee who live alone and do not produce honey. These solitary bees build and provision their own nests, rather than living in a community hive. For them, and insects such as woodlice or lacewings, cities are often hard, inhospitable spaces where they can struggle to find winter shelter. If you have a city flat with a tiny balcony, think about putting in a bug hotel. As with all hotels, location is key and a sunny spot away from frosts is essential. Use a hanging basket, recycled pallet or a drainpipe and fill with a mix of found objects: drilled logs, canes, pinecones, straw. Make it an attractive pattern to please yourself, but make sure there are plenty of nooks and crannies to please the insects.
6 JANUARY
FOX
When April comes around there will be cute fox cubs at play. At this time of year, the fox world is also with us, but is much less appealing. How often have you been woken in the night by blood-curdling screams reminiscent of the soundtrack of the more lurid crime dramas or horror films? The chances are, unless you are unlucky enough to live in a particularly bad part of town, this will be foxes. Foxes scream and bark to communicate with each other, and at mating time in January this is at its peak. Males scream to warn off other foxes and protect their territory, while females scream to attract a mate. This activity tends to occur at night and neither tod nor vixen care that you have an early meeting.
7 JANUARY
RECORDING NATURE
Keep a nature diary – start one, today. This will be an easy resolution to keep as the more you write the more addictive it will become. It doesn’t need to be a fancy diary and you don’t even need to write it every day, although the habit helps, but simply jot down anything interesting you see. Over the years you will see bluebells arriving earlier or later, migration patterns changing and heatwaves repeating themselves. Photos can record the moment but writing in a diary makes you think more than the mere click of a button. You will soon find unexpected and fascinating connections across the natural world, in your own back garden, park or far beyond.
8 JANUARY
GREAT TIT
A really pretty great tit is a regular visitor to our bird feeder. It’s great in tit terms, but these are small birds. Tits (great, blue, coal and all the tits in between) are always welcome. About the size of a robin and with a similar personality, tits are comfortable with being watched and flit about catching insects on the wing. Great tits have yellow breasts with a black stripe down the centre, greenish backs and black heads with very white cheeks. Blue tits are the ones with the little blue caps, which they can raise as a crest if they are in the mood, while coal tits look similar but have greyish chests. All of them are pretty vocal and like to chat among themselves.
9 JANUARY
IT’S NOT THAT EASY
Nature programmes, podcasts and videos are great, but they can give a false impression of how easy it is to find wildlife. The camera operator may have been sitting in a particular spot for hours, but we only see the three minutes of perfectly edited film. Equally, none of the experts are ever seen peering at something saying, ‘I’m not sure. It could be …’ None of this helps when you go to a carefully researched site, certain of a glimpse of a particular creature, only to find it refuses to appear. Don’t lose heart. Watching nature does not come with a guarantee that you will always find what you are looking for. Look around, notice everything else and simply appreciate being outside in the wild.
10 JANUARY
SITTING STILL
For much of your time spent nature watching you will need to learn to sit still. Very still. Many of the creatures that would normally run away may notice you, but as long as you are not moving, you do not pose a threat. Others, which would run away anyway, may not notice you or, at the very least, sitting still will earn you some time before they do spot you. Find somewhere comfortable, settle down and watch the world around you. Try to look and notice rather than allowing your mind to wander or even close down; this is not a mindfulness or meditation session. Don’t set a time, just watch the natural world.
A tip we learned from Simon Barnes: always take a plastic bag to sit on, it’s hard to be still with a wet bottom.
11 JANUARY
SNOWDROP
Strictly speaking, most snowdrops you see in urban areas will be garden flowers rather than truly wild, but they are the earliest of the spring bulbs, so we are not going to let a technicality stop us from including them. The pretty white flowers hang like tiny lanterns from thin, green stems and are one of the markers that winter is beginning to lose its grip. Measuring 7–15 centimetres (2¾–6 inches) high, each plant has three to four grey-green, grass-like leaves. The three inner tepals (where petals and sepals are indistinguishable) have green tips, the outer three are white. Single flowers, looking like miniature shrouds, can represent death, and according to ancient lore should not be brought indoors, but bunches are a sign of purity and virginity.
Larger, later to bloom and with six green spots are snowflakes, also garden flowers and equally pretty.
12 JANUARY
FEED THE BIRDS
Channelling your inner Mary Poppins supports birdlife and encourages them to visit. While feeding in winter is obvious, food shortages can occur year-round, so provide a regular supply.
Bird tables and hanging feeders are excellent. You are providing a treat, not setting bait, and ground-level feeding exposes birds to predators. While birds mostly eat on the spot, they sometimes take titbits back to the nest, so think about...
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 14.3.2024 |
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Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Natur / Technik ► Natur / Ökologie |
Schulbuch / Wörterbuch ► Lexikon / Chroniken | |
Naturwissenschaften ► Biologie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-84994-934-4 / 1849949344 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-84994-934-7 / 9781849949347 |
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