They've been baling the straw in the local fields and it all looked lovely with the dark sky. However I suspect the farmers were not quite as impressed with the sky as I was.
Now, either I'm shrinking, or the bales are getting bigger. I thought things were supposed to get smaller as you got older (see the great Wagon Wheel debate here).
I'd be impressed if you can throw one of those on the back of a hay cart - I'd also be very polite to you. |
Is it a bird, is it a plane, no, it's .... |
a disdainful, arboreal rat :-) |
He'd obviously been in the pile of wood but had very sensible scuttled up the tree as we approached with the dogs. This is a rat with a great survival instinct and we think he'll go far. I will admit that part of our admiration for him was that he was in the middle of the woods and not in our stables. Rats in woods = good, rats in stables = bad. One the basis that he was a good rat we left him safely in his tree and took the dogs off to complete the rest of the walk.
On the homeward stretch of the walk it got even better - we saw a grass snake. A real, live, honest to God (it was in the churchyard) grass snake. No pictures I'm afraid - they can move very fast when they want to, but we got a lovely view of the two yellow diamonds just behind his head. He shot into the hedge much to the amazement of the dogs. They were not sure what to make of non-furry thing that wriggles and decided to give it a wide berth just in case it ate dogs.
If your wondering how we're sure it was a grass snake, there's a great video on the BBC website where Simon King shows you the differences http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/species/Grass_Snake#p0085c27
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