Thursday Poem – ‘Wind’ by Ted Hughes

Dear Readers, what a great poem this is – although I’ve read a lot of Ted Hughes, I hadn’t come across this one. It sums up that frightening yet exciting feeling of very windy weather. See what you think.

Wind by Ted Hughes

This house has been far out at sea all night,
The woods crashing through darkness, the booming hills,
Winds stampeding the fields under the window
Floundering black astride and blinding wet

Till day rose; then under an orange sky
The hills had new places, and wind wielded
Blade-light, luminous black and emerald,
Flexing like the lens of a mad eye.

At noon I scaled along the house-side as far as
The coal-house door. Once I looked up –
Through the brunt wind that dented the balls of my eyes
The tent of the hills drummed and strained its guyrope,

The fields quivering, the skyline a grimace,
At any second to bang and vanish with a flap:
The wind flung a magpie away and a black-
Back gull bent like an iron bar slowly. The house

Rang like some fine green goblet in the note
That any second would shatter it. Now deep
In chairs, in front of the great fire, we grip
Our hearts and cannot entertain book, thought,

Or each other. We watch the fire blazing,
And feel the roots of the house move, but sit on,
Seeing the window tremble to come in,
Hearing the stones cry out under the horizons.

Wednesday Weed – Primrose (and Polyanthus) Revisited


Goodness, Readers, I was at the Sunshine Garden Centre on Monday, on a bleak, chilly, damp morning, but was heartily cheered up by the tremendous array of primroses, primulas and polyanthus. Clearly the plant breeders have the bit between their teeth now, as I have never seen so many variations.

Primulas and Polyanthuses with a few hellebores thrown in…

I am noticing a lot of double primroses about at the moment – I’m not a great fan of double flowers as they have a lot less pollinator value than the single ones, but they are impressive nonetheless

However, in my heart I love the basic primrose best, with its buttermilk petals and butter-coloured centre. In my garden they usually fall prey to slugs, though maybe I’ll give them another go if I can find a reliable source. In the meantime, let’s see what I had to say about the plants a whole ten years ago, back in 2016.

Primrose (Primula vulgaris)

Dear Readers, those of you who read Saturday’s post will know that I’m spending a lot of time in our local cemetery at the moment, which gives me plenty of time to admire the primroses that are just coming into bloom. They seem to favour sites where the graves themselves have practically disappeared, and have mostly, I’m sure, spread from a couple of primroses planted when the ground was first turned and the headstones, now long-gone, first erected. Close to where I first spotted the fox sunning himself there are hundreds of primroses, poking their heads through the moss and dead leaves like so many eager fishes.

The late Oliver Rackham suggested that primroses will only really prosper where the soil is rich, and where there are higher than average levels of mineral nutrients. If this is so, maybe the primroses are taking advantage of the recycling of the bodies of those who died so long ago. In Flora Britannica, Richard Mabey notes that the Victorians often planted primroses on the graves of children, which adds a note of melancholy to those patches of prettiness.

IMG_5585The name ‘primrose’ means ‘first rose’, referring to the way that the plant is one of the first spring flowers to come into bloom (though it is not, of course, a rose, being a member of the Primulaceae family). This family includes, to my surprise, such dissimilar plants as cyclamen, pimpernels and creeping jenny.

Primroses come in many different forms, as anyone who has visited a garden centre lately will know. The popular, brash polyanthus is a cross between the native primrose and primula veris, the cowslip. How all those reds and blues came to be is anybody’s guess, but there is a fair amount of diversity even among wild plants. The yellow ‘eye’ in the centre of the plants above can be found in native primroses, but may also have been bred for. There are also occasional ‘rhubarb and custard’ primroses amongst the cream and yellow ones, which I can only imagine have popped up by themselves, over time.

IMG_5593

Note the pink primroses!

A fine selection of polyanthuses. Or polyanthi. Who can say?

A fine selection of polyanthuses. Or polyanthi. Who can say?

April 19th is Primrose Day, which makes me happy because it is also my brother’s birthday. A bouquet of primroses is placed on Disraeli’s statue outside Westminster Abbey, because these were the politician’s favourite flower. They are also strongly associated with Easter, and, along with daffodils and chocolate eggs, seem to be a popular component of presents over the season. Primroses are also the county flower of Devon.

IMG_5589As I mentioned in last year’s post about the Cowslip, primroses come in two forms: Pin flowers and Thrum flowers. For pollination to be successful, it needs to be between flowers of different forms. Each plant will be either a Pin plant or a Thrum plant. In this way, the plant ensures that it cannot pollinate itself, a fact that helps to ensure diversity.

Thrum form of primrose (via wiki)

Thrum form of primrose (via wiki)

Pin form of primrose

Pin form of primrose

The leaves and flowers of primroses are said to be edible – certainly the blooms would make a lovely addition to a spring salad (maybe with some English asparagus if there’s any about). In The Ecologist, there’s a lovely (and very honest) article about the joys of cooking with something as delicate as a primrose flower by Susan Clark, and the end result is a primrose meringue nest drizzled with primrose honey, which sounds absolutely delightful. Do have a look at the article here. It made me roar with laughter.

A delicious dish called ‘primrose pottage’ was made from rice, honey, almonds, saffron and ground primrose flowers, and very delicious it sounds too.

The flowers can also be used to make primrose wine, which sounds like one of those drinks that you  pack in a picnic basket and drink under a fine old oak tree while the bees buzz languidly past. Well, I can dream. Most of my picnics involve knocking over the wine, noticing that the cream has gone off, being visited by curious and very muddy cows and suddenly realising that one of those cows is actually, well, a bull.

However, before you rush out with a wicker trug, wearing your best bonnet, to gather primrose flowers, note that they are protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, which makes it illegal to pick wild primroses or remove them from the wild. Best to get planting in your back garden I think, though as you need 350 primrose petals to make 5 litres of wine I hope you have an extensive acreage.

IMG_5586The primrose also has a long history as a medicinal plant. A Modern Herbal explains that, for Pliny, the primrose was almost a panacea for the treatment of paralysis, rheumatism and gout. Culpeper described how the leaves ‘made as fine a salve to heal wounds as any I know’. Another renowned herbalist, Gerard, notes that primrose tea, ‘drunk in the month of May is famous for curing the phrensie’. So next time you are visited by the phrensie, you know what to do.

IMG_5584So, as I go on my nightly visits to the cemetery for jam sandwich distribution, I am much heartened by the companionship of the primroses, which seem to glow in the half-light. I walk back from my mission, scuffing through the dead leaves and watching the wood pigeons fighting over the ivy-berries. And all along the way, the primroses edge the path, and extend off in every direction. If this is Shakespeare’s ‘primrose path of dalliance’, I am all for it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Stock Dove Extravaganza in France….

Dear Readers, I have long been a fan of Stock Doves – they go about almost unnoticed, and yet they are very attractive birds, with their ‘kind’ dark eyes and iridescent patch on the neck (no white on these guys, which is one way to tell that they aren’t Wood Pigeons). In Coldfall Wood they hang about in pairs, and are very shy, often flying away when I am within a ten metre radius. The population of the bird has fallen by about 50 percent in the UK over the past fifty years, but  recently it’s been making something of a comeback, which as we know is unusual for birds that are usually associated with farmland. And could it be that they’ll soon be back in some numbers? Have a look at this photograph of a roosting site in the Marais de la Vacherie regional nature reserve in Vendée, where no less than 12,800 Stock Doves were recorded back in 2024.

Previously, many European Stock Doves would head south when the weather got too cold, but a lot more are now staying put or migrating for shorter distances. Might some of them hop over the Channel to swell our Stock Dove numbers? I have no idea, but they would be most welcome. I had a Stock Dove in the garden back in 2023, and it hung out with the squirrel very nicely. Fingers crossed for a few more.

Absolutely the Last Word on Pudding and Sunrise

Pudding and Sunrise demolishing an egg box

Dear Readers, you might remember that I said goodbye to my foster cats Pudding and Sunrise last week. You might also remember that they were completely addicted to food when they arrived: we suspected that they hadn’t had a reliable source of food in their previous home, and so were constantly anxious about where their next meal was coming from. To keep them occupied, I hid a small amount of dry food in an egg box, in the hope that this would keep them busy for half an hour. Within ten minutes they’d ripped it to bits and eaten everything.

Butter wouldn’t melt….

Well, they settled down a bit and spent time playing and snoozing as well as rushing out to the kitchen every time I stood up. On  Thursday they went to their forever home, and I tearfully wandered out to the kitchen after they’d gone, dabbing my eyes with a bit of kitchen roll, when I noticed this….

I’d heard peculiar noises coming from the kitchen, but hadn’t gone out to investigate. At least the eggs are still intact. Clever kitties! They’d previously broken into a loaf of bread, so I assume they just wanted an egg butty.

A Mole Fortress – Who Knew?

Russel Wills with a mole fortress

Dear Readers, most of us are familiar with the little raised ‘molehills’ that you can see when walking in the country – the soil on the top is apparently perfect for seedlings, and moles do a great job of aerating the soil and recycling nutrients. They can dig 4.5m of soil every day, and in addition to munching on earthworms they also eat leatherjackets and chafer grubs. Their velvety coats help them to slip through the soil in a network of tunnels that can be the size of two tennis courts.

Normal molehills (Photo By I, PRA, CC BY 2.5, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2304758)

Occasionally, though, moles build something even more impressive: a mole fortress, a small hillock which can be up to 1.6 metres across.  Scientists aren’t exactly sure why they do this, but fortresses  often occur in areas which flood, or where the soil is particularly thin. At the top there’s a worm store – moles can eat up to six big fat earthworms today, and the largest worm store ever found weighed two kilograms, which is a lot of worms. Furthermore, they bite the tips off of any surplus worms so that they can paralyse them and keep them nice and fresh. Beneath the worm store they make a cosy nest, well above the water table, where they can wait out any flooding. Three mole fortresses have just been discovered in the RHS Garden Bridgewater, near Manchester, and Dr Robert Atkinson, a mole expert, is delighted. He explains that the amount of energy required to build a fortress is the equivalent of a forty-year-old woman walking for fourteen hours, a somewhat curious metric. Is it therefore the equivalent of two twenty-year-old women walking for seven hours? Or even a sixty-six year-old woman (ahem) walking for 18.86 hours? I think we should be told. But, pedantry aside, that is a lot of calories for a small velvety insectivore to burn, and apparently only the ‘fittest moles’ are capable of building a fortress.

Hopefully a very fit mole (Photo By I,Stanislaw Szydlo, CC BY-SA 3.0,as if https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6433426)

Moles are very common mammals in the UK, but because they live underground they are very rarely seen. But if you meet a female mole, you should be respectful – according to the RHS, female moles have a ‘rare masculinised biology’ and produce high levels of testosterone, which means that they are aggressively territorial. Personally, I feel as if a little better hormone balance between the human sexes might help things along – if women had a smidge more testosterone, and men a whole lot more oestrogen maybe things would balance out more nicely. Or not. But at any rate, I have acquired a new-found respect for the mole, small and inconspicuous as they are. And here is a poem by Michael Bazzett, which I rather like. See what you think.

Goodbye to Pudding and Sunrise

Pudding on the left, Sunrise on the right…

Dear Readers, being a cat fosterer is always bittersweet – it’s lovely to see cats blossom in a home environment, but it’s sad to say goodbye to them. These two cats hadn’t had a great start in life: Pudding spent her first two days hiding behind the books on the bookshelf with just her ears showing, her fur bare on her stomach and back legs where she’d been overgrooming from stress. But just look at her now!

Instead of being constantly on the lookout for food, she and her sister spent time lazing about on the furniture, chasing one another and demolishing my knitting…

 

When the people who adopted them came to collect them today, both cats ran up to them to say hello, and then chased one another around the house as usual, like normal playful cats. They’re three years old, but I do wonder what kind of kittenhood they had – it sometimes feels as if they’re making up for lost time. And I know that they’ll do really well when they have a garden to play in, though the birds will have to watch out. One reason why I foster, and why if I did adopt it would need to be an indoor cat, is because I spend a lot of time trying to attract birds and other animals to the garden, and it seems unkind to have a pet that might massacre them.

It seems very quiet as I sit on the sofa writing this: a few hours ago I’d have had a cat ‘helping’ me to type. I always have a little cry when the cats go. But honestly, the satisfaction of seeing animals rehabilitated and going off to loving homes, with people who will adore them, is more than compensation. Charities are always looking for people who can foster cats or dogs, and I really recommend it. Every animal is different, you learn so much, and for me, a house isn’t a home without an animal or two (not counting the spiders and the clothes moths, obviously). If you’ve been thinking about it, do give it a go – you might love it!

Nature’s Calendar – 30th January to 3rd February – Lichens on Bare Branches Revisited

A series following the 72 British mini-seasons of Nature’s Calendar by Kiera Chapman, Lulah Ellender, Rowan Jaines and Rebecca Warren. 

Dear Readers, a frosty morning presents a great opportunity to have a look for lichens: they are everywhere but, like mosses, they are often overlooked, because they are not as colourful or as showy as flowering plants. Hah! They are complicated, multi-faceted organisms, as we shall see below. They can give an indication of how clean the air is – look at this headstone from Milborne St Andrew, the sheer variety of lichens tells you something about both which species can survive, and how old the stone is.

Headstone in St Andrews’s churchyard, Milborne St Andrew

Plus, unlikely as it seems, lichen is the food for the caterpillar of the Marbled Beauty moth, as I described here

Marbled Beauty caterpillar

Marbled Beauty (Cryphia domestica)

Sometimes we just need to slow down a bit to admire what’s under our noses. And if not now, when? We haven’t got forever, you know.

And now, let’s see what I had to say about lichens back in 2024.

In her piece in Nature’s Calendar, Kiera Chapman tells us that there are 2,300 species of lichen in the UK. They vary enormously, from flat crusts like the ones above to organisms that look more like coral. They live in habitats as varied as deserts and rainforests, and can vary in size from less than a millimetre to two metres.

What is a lichen, though? It’s not a single organism but an association between at least two organisms – the mycobiont, which is a fungus, and the photobiont, which gathers energy from light via photosynthesis and can be an alga or a bacteria. The relationship between the two has been debated for a century and a half. The whole idea of mutualism between two species (where both benefit from the association) was pooh-poohed at first, with the hypothesis being that the fungus ‘captured’ the alga/bacterium and held it captive, like an ogre sequestering Rapunzel in a tower. In fact, there is still some discussion about how to classify the relationship: it may appear that the fungus is parasitizing the other organism, but some photobionts can’t now exist without the fungus. It’s clearly a complex relationship that varies in emphasis from species to species.

Ash trunks with lichen (probably black apothecia)

Chapman discusses two different artworks that are based on lichen. First up is a monumental work by Klaus Daven on the Vouglans Dam in the Jura region of France. It was created by a process known as ‘reverse graffiti’, whereby a pressure washer blasted off most of the lichen and algae in order to create an image of a forest. It was sponsored by the electricity company and a company that makes power washers. For Chapman, and for me, it feels slightly uncomfortable – destroying one set of lifeforms to make images of others seems the opposite of environmentally friendly, however impressive the final results are.

The Vouglans Dan with Dauven’s image of the Jura forest (Thilo Parg, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons)

The second work is by German artist Hubert Fenzl, who uses sustainably harvested Claydonia lichen to make artworks that will live indoors for years. His ‘Rainforest’, shown below, uses the lichen to form a birds-eye view of a forest, surrounded by a menacing red area that seems to surround and encroach upon it. As Chapman points out, the combination of a human artistic vision and this natural material asks questions about our care of the forests. There is also none of the grandiosity of the dam project. I know which I prefer.

I was also very heartened to learn from my RHS magazine this week that biology studen Lottie Cavanagh-Sweeney has been commissioned by the British Lichen Society to make a Lichen Trail at the RHS garden at Rosemoor in Devon. Magnifying glasses are provided to examine some of the smaller lichens, and you can download the trail to a smartphone. One of the featured lichens is the rare Tree Lungwort (Lobaria pulmonaria) which Fay Newbery, a plant pathologist, describes as ‘green when wet, brown and crinkly when dry.’

Just look at this gorgeous organism!

Tree Lungwort (Lobaria pulmonaria) Photo By Bernd Haynold – Self-photographed, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3320107

The elephant in the room, however, as with so many other things, is climate change. An article in New Scientist in 2022 suggested that it had taken a million years for the algae that form the photosynthetic part of the lichen partnership to evolve to cope with 1° Centigrade of warming. They are also not fond of air pollution – the variety of lichens on the headstone at the top of the page indicates that it’s in a rural area with relatively clean air. Still, let’s not become too downhearted just yet – lichens have been here a long time, and who knows how resilient they might prove to be? In the meantime, let’s keep our eyes open for these overlooked organisms.

 

Thursday Poem – ‘It Was The Animals’ by Natalie Diaz

This poem reminds me so much of some of the people that I grew to care about when I worked at the night shelter in Dundee – one young lad was schizophrenic and a heroin addict. This is for you, Jamie. I hope that, somehow, you pulled through.

It Was the Animals
Natalie Diaz
1978 –

Today my brother brought over a piece of the ark

wrapped in a white plastic grocery bag.

He set the bag on my dining table, unknotted it,

peeled it away, revealing a foot-long fracture of wood.

He took a step back and gestured toward it

with his arms and open palms—

It’s the ark, he said.

You mean Noah’s ark? I asked.

What other ark is there? he answered.

Read the inscription, he told me.

It tells what’s going to happen at the end.

What end? I wanted to know.

He laughed, What do you mean, ‘What end?’

The end end.

Then he lifted it out. The plastic bag rattled.

His fingers were silkened by pipe blisters.

He held the jagged piece of wood so gently.

I had forgotten my brother could be gentle.

He set it on the table the way people on television

set things when they’re afraid those things might blow up

or go off—he set it right next to my empty coffee cup.

It was no ark—

it was the broken end of a picture frame

with a floral design carved into its surface.

He put his head in his hands—

I shouldn’t show you this—

God, why did I show her this?

It’s ancient—O, God,

this is so old.

 

Fine, I gave in. Where did you get it?

The girl, he said. O, the girl.

What girl? I asked.

You’ll wish you never knew, he told me.

I watched him drag his wrecked fingers

over the chipped flower-work of the wood—

You should read it. But, O, you can’t take it—

no matter how many books you’ve read.

He was wrong. I could take the ark.

I could even take his marvellously fucked fingers.

The way they almost glittered.

It was the animals—the animals I could not take—

they came up the walkway into my house,

cracked the doorframe with their hooves and hips,

marched past me, into my kitchen, into my brother,

tails snaking across my feet before disappearing

like retracting vacuum cords into the hollows

of my brother’s clavicles, tusks scraping the walls,

reaching out for him—wildebeests, pigs,

the oryxes with their black matching horns,

javelinas, jaguars, pumas, raptors. The ocelots

with their mathematical faces. So many kinds of goat.

So many kinds of creature.

I wanted to follow them, to get to the bottom of it,

but my brother stopped me—

This is serious, he said.

You have to understand.

It can save you.

So I sat down, with my brother ruined open like that,

and two by two the fantastical beasts

parading him. I sat, as the water fell against my ankles,

built itself up around me, filled my coffee cup

before floating it away from the table.

My brother—teeming with shadows—

a hull of bones, lit by tooth and tusk,

lifting his ark high in the air.

Wednesday Weed – Christmas Box Revisited (Again)

Christmas/Sweet Box (Sarcococca confusa) Photo by By Denis.prévôt – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=15355473

Dear Readers, I was walking along a muddy footpath with a dear friend last week when, in spite of the chilly air, a waft of honeyed sweetness came up from this most inconspicuous of bushes. I have raved on about it before, but what a delight it is, especially at this time of year when the days are so short and grey, and the world seems to be going to hell in the proverbial handbasket. We need to take our joys where we find them, so keep your nose peeled (?) for this plant. Interestingly, although it’s a member of the Box family it doesn’t appear to be attacked by the dreaded Box Moth which has been ravaging knot gardens all around the country.

Note that there are several species of Christmas Box about – the one I wrote about originally was Sarcococca hookeriana. However, they seem to have very similar characteristics, and as plant taxonomy is a moveable feast in terms of what things are called I shall assume that the two species are as alike as makes no difference.

And now, onwards….

Dear Readers, I know that it isn’t Christmas, but when my friend L brought me some Christmas Box last week it felt like a present! Christmas Box has the most remarkable sweet scent –  it’s lovely outside, preferably planted by a door so you can get a whiff every time you go past, but indoors the smell swells to a kind of perfumed crescendo. The scent lasted for almost a week, and is only really fading today. It’s made me think that I should definitely plant some, and indeed there are some berries, so maybe I’ll give it a go.

And now, let’s see what information I found about this deliciously scented plant when I first wrote about it back in 2019.

Christmas Box (Sarcococca hookeriana var dignya)

Dear Readers, in continuance of my theme of winter-scented plants I was pleased to find a whole front garden full of Christmas box on my travels around the County Roads today. This is a very unassuming plant, as most members of the Buxaceae are, but those little white flowers produce a heady, bewitching scent. It can be so strong in a confined space that I’ve watched people look around in all directions to try to find the source, expecting a much bigger, showier plant. This particular variety, known as ‘Purple Stem’ for obvious reasons, was given a Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. I rather liked that the owner of the garden had had the courage of their convictions and had planted the whole place up with the plant. The massed flowers will be useful for any early-emerging pollinators, though any bee unwise enough to show its furry head this morning will find a very chilly welcome.

This particular species of box is named after the estimable scientist and botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker (1817 to 1911). What a life the man had! He travelled to the Antarctic with the Ross exhibition of 1839-43, performed a geological survey of Great Britain, went to the Himalayas and India (where he probably encountered Christmas box), then on to Palestine, Morocco and the western United States. He, was a close friend of Darwin and was one of the founders of Kew Gardens. In between times he married twice and fathered nine children, though I suspect he had little opportunity to spend any time with them.

Joseph Hooker aged 90 (Public Domain)

In addition to Christmas box, Hooker had several other plants named after him, including this splendid Kashmiri iris, Iris hookeriana.

Photo One by By Imranashraf2882008 - File:Shounter valley.JPG, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=40388929

Iris hookeriana (Photo One)

His name was also used for a snail which lives in sub-Antarctica and is unique because it has no chitin in its shell, and for a rare New Zealand sealion.

Photo Two by By Alice Gadea, Pierre Le Pogam, Grichka Biver, Joël Boustie, Anne-Cécile Le Lamer, Françoise Le Dévéhat & Maryvonne Charrier - Gadea, A., Le Pogam, P., Biver, G., Boustie, J., Le Lamer, A. C., Le Dévéhat, F., & Charrier, M. (2017). Which Specialized Metabolites Does the Native Subantarctic Gastropod Notodiscus hookeri Extract from the Consumption of the Lichens Usnea taylorii and Pseudocyphellaria crocata?. Molecules, 22(3): 425. doi:10.3390/molecules22030425 Figure 8A, crooped., CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=64153076

Hooker’s snail (Notodiscus hookeri) (Photo Two)

Photo Three by By Brocken Inaglory, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4397600

Hooker’s Sealion (Phocarctos hookeri) (Photo Three)

Once the flowers are finished, the plant will be covered in black fruit – the genus name Sarcococca comes from the Greek words for ‘fleshy berry’. Birds are said to like the fruit, and the jury is out as to whether they are poisonous to humans. All species of Sarcococca are native to  Asia, particularly China and the Himalayas, and are sometimes used in Chinese Traditional medicine. The Wellcome Institute page mentions that Christmas box contains chemicals which attack the leishmaniasis parasite, at least in vitro, which is interesting as one of the Chinese medicinal uses is to attack parasitic worms. Nothing is new under the sun, it seems.

Dear Readers, you might have thought that I would struggle to find a poem for something called Sarcococca hunteriana var digyna and you’d be right. However, I did find the poem below, which refers to a very closely related plant, with all the characteristics of this week’s subject. The poem is by Maureen Boyle (1961), a Northern Irish poet with a fine eye for the natural world. To see more of her work, have a look here, you won’t be disappointed.

Christmas Box by Maureen Boyle

There is honey and chocolate on our doorstep
since Christmas—sweet box and coral flower—
one on either side. The heuchera with ruffled
cocoa-coloured leaves hunkers in the corner but
the sarcococca or sweet box is where we step
inside by design so that on nights as dark as winter
and full of storm we brush the bluff, squat, shrub
and boots and coat trail the scent of summer
into the hall. Its flowers are what are left of flowers,
petals blown away—spindly threads ghostly in the leaves,
the odd early blood-berry that follows.
Its genus confusa is right—from so frail a bloom
a scent so big, as if the bees have nested in it
and are eager for their flight. 

Photo Credits

Photo One by By Imranashraf2882008 – File:Shounter valley.JPG, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=40388929

Photo Two by By Alice Gadea, Pierre Le Pogam, Grichka Biver, Joël Boustie, Anne-Cécile Le Lamer, Françoise Le Dévéhat & Maryvonne Charrier – Gadea, A., Le Pogam, P., Biver, G., Boustie, J., Le Lamer, A. C., Le Dévéhat, F., & Charrier, M. (2017). Which Specialized Metabolites Does the Native Subantarctic Gastropod Notodiscus hookeri Extract from the Consumption of the Lichens Usnea taylorii and Pseudocyphellaria crocata?. Molecules, 22(3): 425. doi:10.3390/molecules22030425 Figure 8A, crooped., CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=64153076

Photo Three by By Brocken Inaglory, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4397600

New Scientist – Giant Fossil Kangaroos Could Apparently Hop

Dear Readers, an adult red kangaroo is quite scary enough when it decides that it doesn’t like you: Roger the red kangaroo went viral after a video of him crushing a steel bucket as if it was a paper cup highlighted the strength of these animals.

Roger the ‘ripped’ red kangaroo from the Kangaroo Sanctuary in Alice Springs (Photo from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/dec/10/death-of-roger-the-ripped-kangaroo-sparks-outpouring-of-grief-on-social-media)

Imagine, then, meeting up with one of their ancestors. Procoptodon goliah became extinct about 40,000 years ago. Although they were only a little taller than Roger, at 2 metres, they weighed a gob-smacking 240 kilograms (Roger was 89 kilograms). And that caused something of a problem for scientists. Was this massive animal actually able to hop around like today’s kangaroos?

One of a group of extinct animals known as the sthenurine or short-faced kangaroos, Procoptodon was thought to have been unable to hop, because the impact of landing would have broken their legs, but more importantly their Achilles tendons would have snapped. Scientist Megan Jones, at the University of Manchester here in the UK, notes that the tendons in kangaroos alive today are often dangerously close to snapping, but this is because the Achilles tendon holds a lot of the elastic energy that enables the kangaroo to power itself through a series of hops – in fact, this is a very energy-efficient way of getting around.

However, Procoptodon is not just a scaled-up version of a red kangaroo – their feet are shorter, and their calcaneus, or heel bone, is wider. Jones believes that because of this, the bones of this ancient kangaroo would have been more resistant to bending, and could have accommodated a larger Achilles tendon.

While hopping probably wasn’t Procoptodon’s main method of getting around, it could certainly have thundered across the outback when needed (though goodness knows what was brave enough to chase it). Current day kangaroos also use a range of different  ways to get about: they wander around on four legs, sit up like a tripod using their tail and, of course, speed around the place when necessary. I always think that kangaroos travelling at speed are extremely elegant animals, and sometimes wonder why more large animals didn’t choose this as a method of locomotion (although it’s very popular in small animals, with jerboas and springhaas both choosing to boing about the desert/savannah). All in all, I am delighted to think of these massive animals crashing about, and am only sorry that there aren’t any left for us to witness.

You can read the whole article here

Procoptodon hopping – image by Megan Jones