Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 August 2017

Saturday, 4 March 2017

It's so fluffy!

This seal was given a furry toy that looks like a baby seal and fell in love with it!




Sunday, 5 February 2017

Happy little guy

I can't remember if I posted photos of this jolly little fella before, but he keeps turning up on social media and never fails to cheer people up. It's a marsupial the size of a domestic cat, it's called quokka, hails from some small islands off the coast of Western Australia, and is on the list of vulnerable species, facing extinction... [ Now I don't feel so cheerful anymore... :-( ]






Tuesday, 24 January 2017

Tuesday, 24 May 2016

Photos of wildlife photographers

Dare I say these photographers were spotted in their natural habitat? Hahaha! These animals are endearingly curious, love them!














Tuesday, 29 March 2016

Thursday, 11 June 2015

Visiting an old favourite park

We lived in Twickenham for over twenty years and enjoyed the fantastic local parks when the children were young. We continued to visit them often, just because...

I'm going to invite you to visit all of them, starting with the largest and most spectacular: Bushy Park.






Bushy Park is a royal park, rich in history:

Bushy Park extends over about 1,100 acres (445 hectares) of grassland to the north of Hampton Court Palace. Cardinal Wolsey began by enclosing farm land adjacent to the house when he took over Hampton Court and, when Henry VIII acquired the palace in 1529, the old oak fences were replaced by a high brick wall, traces of which can still be seen today. The park was originally of several distinct areas until the present boundaries were completed in 1620. The name “Bushy Park” was first recorded in 1604 and was probably a reference to the many thorn bushes. These were planted to protect the young oak trees which were being grown as timber for ships in the navy.
In Tudor times the parks were important as hunting grounds - Henry VIII stocked them with deer and there were rabbits in abundance. After the royal palace at Richmond was destroyed by fire, Hampton Court became increasingly important as a royal residence and the land we now know as Bushy Park was the adjacent hunting ground. Henry, and later his daughter Elizabeth, both enjoyed riding and hunting here.
There are formal areas, where the gardens are kept very neat, but there are also very rugged areas, where we find an abundance of wildlife. Actually, the wildlife is all over the park!

Jackdaws congregate in a grassed area::

A couple of coots, one nesting, the other going for a walk:



Another nesting bird:



An Egyptian goose:



A couple of ring-necked parakeets:



The famous Bushy Park deer:




I hope you've enjoyed the visit to this very beautiful place.




[Last three photos by Helen Carrington]