Thursday Poem – Two Poems About Moths

Japanese Moon Moth (Actias artemis) Photo by By entophile – https://www.inaturalist.org/photos/153644961, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=114060033

Dear Readers, lots of people write poems about butterflies (such as this cracker by Ellen Bass), but how about our mothy friends? Here is a haiku by Buson (1716 – 1784), followed by a response from Billy Collins. See what you think…

On the one-ton temple bell
Yosa Buson

On the one-ton temple bell
A moon moth, folded into sleep,
Sits still.

Japan by Billy Collins

Today I pass the time reading
a favorite haiku,
saying the few words over and over.

It feels like eating
the same small, perfect grape
again and again.

I walk through the house reciting it
and leave its letters falling
through the air of every room.

I stand by the big silence of the piano and say it.
I say it in front of a painting of the sea.
I tap out its rhythm on an empty shelf.

I listen to myself saying it,
then I say it without listening,
then I hear it without saying it.

And when the dog looks up at me,
I kneel down on the floor
and whisper it into each of his long white ears.

It’s the one about the one-ton temple bell
with the moth sleeping on its surface,

and every time I say it, I feel the excruciating
pressure of the moth
on the surface of the iron bell.

When I say it at the window,
the bell is the world
and I am the moth resting there.

When I say it at the mirror,
I am the heavy bell
and the moth is life with its papery wings.

And later, when I say it to you in the dark,
you are the bell,
and I am the tongue of the bell, ringing you,

and the moth has flown
from its line
and moves like a hinge in the air above our bed.

Wednesday Weed – Privet Revisited

Broad-leaf privet (Ligustrum lucidum) photographed in Australia by By John Tann from Sydney, Australia – Broad-leaf privet, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=38234707

Dear Readers, today was one of those days when I left the house wearing a jacket and scarf, and came home ‘feeling the heat’ as the old saying goes. But as I journeyed from Walthamstow to East Finchley, it felt as if every single privet hedge was in flower, and the scent filled the air. To me the perfume has a creamy, rather sickly quality, but there were sparrows dashing in and out of some of the bushes, and overall it’s a most attractive plant.

In ‘Alien Plants’, Clive Stace and Michael Crawley have this to say about privet:

The rather nauseous smell is to me the characteristic smell of hedge-lined city streets in July, when the best of the summer has gone’.

I suspect many people have planted it because, with the advent of the Box Moth, box hedges are no longer viable in many places.

As I walked home, a man in a sweatshirt was wielding the most enormous hedge-cutter as he tackled the privet hedge on the High Road next to ‘Amazing Grates’. I complimented him on his work, but I can imagine it was a very uncomfortable job as the temperature climbed.

Incidentally, it’s obligatory for shops that sell fireplaces and flame-effect fires to have a pun for a name – in addition to ‘Amazing Grates’ I’ve seen ‘The Better Hearth’ and ‘Grate Fires’. Is there something about selling something so cosy that brings out the wag in the shopkeepers? I have no idea. But let us turn to my original post on privet, from 2016. In particular, have a look at the Privet Hawk Moth. What a stunner!

Oval-leaved privet (Ligustrum ovalifolium)

Oval-leaved privet (Ligustrum ovalifolium)

Dear Readers, many years ago I used to commute to the Netherlands for work. Every Sunday I would catch the last plane into Rotterdam Airport, where the cleaners were mopping the floors, and the security guards were jingling their keys, all ready to lock up. The taxi would take me through the frozen countryside but, as we got into the city itself, the warm glow of light from the uncurtained windows of every flat and house were a constant source of fascination. The interiors were stylish, and there were often families gathered at a perfectly dressed table for their evening meal. Admittedly, I only got the quickest glimpse, but there never seemed to be an overflowing waste-bin, or a pile of clutter on a chair. I loved the openness of this attitude, the generosity of it, as if people were saying ‘Here we are, do have a look if you’re interested’.

It’s fair to say that we do things differently where I live. The hedges of the County Roads in East Finchley are truly a wonder to behold. It’s not surprising: our front gardens are tiny and so every passerby can look into our front rooms if they are so minded. So, to provide a bit of privacy, many people have gone for the hedge option. In these parts, the plant of choice seems to be the oval-leafed privet. When I was on ‘Wednesday Weed’ patrol yesterday, I realised that I had never noticed that these hedges bear tiny black berries at this time of year (though I had noticed the sickly-smelling white flowers in the spring). I had always thought of privet as being rather a boring plant (when I thought of it at all). So, what is the story of the oval-leafed privet?

By No machine-readable author provided. MPF assumed (based on copyright claims). - No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims)., CC BY 2.5, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=983049

Spring privet flowers (Photo One – credit below)

Oval-leafed privet originated in Japan and Korea. We do, in fact, have a native privet, Ligustrum vulgare, which has narrower, smaller leaves than the plant pictured here, but the majority of plants used for hedging in the UK are of the oval-leafed variety, maybe because of its more abundant flowering and fruiting.

img_8929It seems as if every plant that I write about these days is poisonous, and privet is no exception. The RHS website considers it to be ‘somewhat poisonous’ (which is not overwhelmingly helpful). A quick run around the internets has articles which state that privet hedge cuttings can be dangerous for horses, goats, sheep, cattle, hens and rabbits. Another website mentions that the berries are poisonous if eaten by dogs. All in all, it seems that the berries should be left on the bush, for the thrushes that enjoy them ( the plant is in the British Trust for Ornithology’s guide to berries for birds).

img_8925A wide variety of moth caterpillars enjoy a meal of poisonous privet leaves, however. As I love the names of moths almost as much as the moths themselves, a small selection are pictured below.

By Ben Sale from UK ([1669] Common Emerald (Hemithea aestivaria)) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Common Emerald (Hemithea aestivaria) (Photo Two, credit below)

By ©entomart, Attribution, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=806463

The Engrailed (Ectropis crepuscularia) (Photo Three – see credit below)

By ©entomart, Attribution, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=290444

The V-Pug (Chloroclystis v-ata) Photo Four(credit below)

Perhaps the most spectacular of the privet-feeding moths, however, is the privet hawk moth, a creature of satanic beauty which can produce an alarming hissing sound by rubbing the segments of its abdomen together. Do not attempt to replicate this at home unless you want to spend Christmas in traction.

By Gaudete [CC BY-SA 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons

Adult privet hawk moth (Sphinx ligustri) (Photo Six – credit below)

The caterpillar of the privet hawk moth is a delightful lime-green creature with lilac and white side stripes and a sticky-up tail like a terrier. It would be worth growing a privet hedge for the chance of a sight of one of these little chaps.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/rachel_s/2829915165

Privet hawk moth caterpillar (Photo Seven – see credit below)

Although the privet hedge is one of the quintessential symbols of suburbia, it turns out to be quite a useful thing, if not cropped indiscriminately. It provides roosting and nesting sites for birds, flowers for pollinators, berries for thrushes and leaves for big fat green caterpillars. Privet hedges thrive in polluted environments, and may even help to protect us from the gases and dust produced by cars.  And it also provides opportunities for creative pruning, and for the more energetic among us to let rip with the power tools. Plus, who wants to be washing net curtains all the time? Much better to have a living barrier to the prying eyes of the curious public or, at the very least, something for them to talk about.

How I understand the owner of this plant. There comes a time when the power tools lose their novelty value, and the step ladder is just that bit too short.

How I understand the owner of this shrub. There comes a time when the power tools lose their novelty value, and the step ladder is just that bit too short.

Photo Credits

Photo One (privet flowers) – By No machine-readable author provided. MPF assumed (based on copyright claims). – No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims)., CC BY 2.5, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=983049

Photo Two (Common Emerald) – By Ben Sale from UK ([1669] Common Emerald (Hemithea aestivaria)) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Photo Three (The Engrailed) – By ©entomart, Attribution, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=806463

Photo Four (The V-Pug) – By ©entomart, Attribution, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=290444

Photo Four (Privet Hawk Moth) – By Gaudete [CC BY-SA 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons

Photo Five (Privet Hawk Moth Caterpillar) – by Rachel_S (https://www.flickr.com/photos/rachel_s/2829915165)

All other blog content free to use or share non-commercially, but please attribute to me, Vivienne Palmer, and link back to the blog, thank you!

An Amazing Underground Network – Mycorrhizal Fungi Mapped for the First Time

Arbuscular mycorrhiza (Image by By Oyarte-Galvez (AMOLF) – https://www.eurekalert.org/multimedia/986302, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=135745890)

Dear Readers, it’s long been known that arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi form ‘trading relationships’ with up to 70 percent of all plant species, swapping phosphorus and nitrogen in exchange for carbon-based sugars, Not only do these fungal networks sequester carbon, but they are also an important part of the structure of soils, helping them to retain water and nutrients, even after the fungi themselves die.

Scientists have been extracting soil samples for decades, with over 16,000 cores being extracted from 4,000 sites – these have been analysed to measure the density of hyphae (the fungal threads that exchange materials with the plants) and from these the amount of mycorrhiza at each location can be extrapolated.

From this information, the scientists have produced this extraordinary map. Do have a look – you can zoom in on a particular location to see how it’s doing for fungal density.

https://a-hidden-infrastructure.spun.earth/map#2.6/28.85/59.93

One of the things that the map tells us is that over 40 percent of the biomass of these arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi is in unimproved grasslands and wetlands, particularly the Tibetan plateau (with 11.4 metres of mycorrhiza to every cubic centimetre – just imagine how densely packed the fungal threads must be!), the Sudd wetlands in South Sudan, and Flint Prairie in the US. However, the density on croplands is 47 percent lower, which is worrying for soil fertility, climate change resilience and biodiversity. The fungicides that are used on many farms kill the mycorrhiza directly, while constant ploughing and turning over the soil damages the networks. Then fertilisers are used to replace the nutrients lost . Hopefully, the revelations from this study might flag up how damaging these practices are.

Looking at the map of the UK, it was interesting to see how the highland peat bogs and grasslands of Scotland were in the top 2 to 3 percent of density for the world as a whole, but as you travelled south it got worse and worse,  with some areas in the south of England being in the bottom 45 percent for mycorrhizal density, I had a lot of fun with this – you can zoom in a long way, and I imagine  you could probably pick out a local greenspace and see how it did. However, some areas have very little or no data, so we probably shouldn’t extrapolate too far from the general trend.

The scientists are eager not to suggest that this means that plants are talking to one another all over the planet via fungal networks, but there is definitely a degree of interconnectedness that hadn’t been appreciated before, and which has major implications for our ecosystems and for our food production. Do have a little play with the map, and have a look at the ‘story’ attached. This is pioneering work.

The map is here.

The story is here.

The Day of the Jackdaw

Dear Readers, the jackdaws have definitely arrived this year – looking back through the blog, I see that I first noticed one in the garden in 2017, 7 years after we arrived in East Finchley. Since then, an occasional bird has dropped in, but this year a whole family has turned up, and my pal Leo in Barnwood has had jackdaws in the community orchard for the first time, eating the cherries.

These are watchful, intelligent birds, and are often chased off by the much larger and more belligerent magpies, who also have babies. As do the parakeets, who are also visiting in groups of four.

There are still lots of fledgling starlings about, though they have mostly left their parents and travel in noisy juvenile groups, much like post-exam youngsters that I often see around East Finchley, full of youthful exuberance and high spirits.

And the great tits have definitely started a second brood – they have been in and out of the nest box all day. I missed the fledging last time, and am likely to be away for the next one too, but I’m so happy that they feel safe enough to nest so close to the house. They are moving from one nest box to another along the ‘sparrow terrace’ that the sparrows have ignored – there’s one more to go, so let’s see if they try to make it three broods. I’ll keep you posted!

A Visit to the Queen Elizabeth II Garden in Regent’s Park

Well, Readers, today I took my first look at the new Queen Elizabeth II garden in Regent’s Park. It’s been described as ‘a garden of colour and contemplation, of biodiversity and beauty, of memory and hope’, and it is a very attractive place. It’s on the site of the old nurseries for the Royal Parks (now moved to Hyde Park), and it prides itself on its accessibility – it has wide, level paths, accessible toilets, and is next to the espresso bar in case you need to stop for a caffeine hit.

At the moment the alliums are in full view: because parts of the garden are still fairly bare, they look like little round purple aliens, to me at least. The bees were thoroughly enjoying them, though I managed to get not a single photo of a pollinator. Sigh.

There are various ecosystems in the garden, including a couple of boggy ponds, a proper ‘lake’ and a meadow, and a nice mix of native and non-native plants. This little lake was a particular favourite, with a blackbird taking a bath and several dragonflies zipping about.

The meadow has a good mix of grasses, for butterfly and moth caterpillars, along with flowering plants.

There are some shady areas with rather nice leave/wood piles for insects…

And a nice plaque explaining some of the planting…

There’s a pergola built from metal repurposed from the nursery buildings…

And  a fine shallow ornamental lake, with a few waterlilies and lots of water plants around the edge.

All in all, this seems like a very fine addition to the Regent’s Park gardens, with something for everybody – lots of colour for those who like more traditional gardens, lots of places for wild creatures, and lots of nice places to sit down and just contemplate the scene.

On the way out, we noticed that this tree was gradually defeating the fence next to it…

And one of the fountains in the ornamental gardens is being refurbished – the original winged lions look a little disgruntled to me, and I’m not sure if they’ve been replaced or are going back.

Incidentally, this week I came across the notion of ‘orphaned’ words, where there is a negative but no positive word. So, there is ‘disgruntled’ but no ‘gruntled’, ‘nonchalant’ but no ‘chalant’. Can you think of any more?

And do pop into the Queen Elizabeth II garden if you get a chance, I suspect it will be constantly evolving and changing as it matures.

A Sudden Song

Dear Readers, this morning I was standing at the Highgate Station bus stop on Archway Road, en route to pilates in Islington (possibly the most middle-class sentence ever written :-)). Lorries and buses were heaving up the steep hill, runners were stomping past, dogs of every shape and size headed eagerly up the hill for their walkies in Highgate or Queen’s Wood. I peered up the hill to see if a 43 bus was about to turn the corner, when suddenly I heard a blackbird’s song. It was so loud I thought it was coming from the trees by the bus stop, but I soon spotted the bird on top of an aerial above the café opposite. Such a song! I almost missed my bus as I listened to it. Blackbirds are not as common as they used to be, and so hearing this one was a real, unexpected treat.

Here are a few excerpts from the ever-wonderful Xeno Canto website. Enjoy!

Squeee!!!!

Dear Readers, for the past few nights we have been visited by not one but two adolescent fox cubs. They are such skinny, gangly little things! Apologies for the quality of the photos, but it was dusk and I was very excited.

They are quietly wrecking the place, but to be honest I Don’t Care. They are lurking somewhere down at the back of the garden, and sometimes sit on the bench. By the way, don’t ever position a bench under a large tree frequented by lots of birds. I only washed this down a week ago, and look at the state of it…

In other news, since we’ve followed the RSPB bird feeding advice, and stopped providing seeds, the garden has been absolutely mobbed with parakeets, magpies, jackdaws, and even a jay. I suppose everybody has youngsters to feed, and all the birds mentioned are omnivorous to some extent. The magpie has even been hanging off of the bird feeder, so it must be desperate. Meantime, the great tits are on their second brood in the sparrow nest box, so at least somebody is using it. I don’t remember such a busy spring – maybe it’s the combination of rain/sun/rain, but I do hope all the youngsters are coping with the wet weather and the fall in temperature. There’s always something to worry about!

Thursday Poem – ‘First Sight’ by Philip Larkin

Photo by Alexander Meareworth at https://www.flickr.com/photos/thwaite/4255839993/

Dear Readers, I recently went to see ‘The Sheep Detectives‘, a film about some sheep who solve the murder of their shepherd (who just happens to be Hugh Jackman). It included the concept of ‘the winter lamb’, a lamb born in January or February and (according to the authority that is Sony Pictures), this lamb is often rejected by the rest of the flock. But what it reminded me of most was this tender poem by Philip Larkin, a city-dwelling curmudgeon if ever there was one, who still manages to convey a sense of delicate wonder in this poem. See what you think…

First Sight by Philip Larkin

Lambs that learn to walk in snow
When their bleating clouds the air
Meet a vast unwelcome, know
Nothing but a sunless glare.
Newly stumbling to and fro
All they find, outside the fold,
Is a wretched width of cold.

As they wait beside the ewe,
Her fleeces wetly caked, there lies
Hidden round them, waiting too,
Earth’s immeasureable surprise.
They could not grasp it if they knew,
What so soon will wake and grow
Utterly unlike the snow.

Wednesday Weed – Oriental Plane

Dear Readers, those of us who live in London are pretty familiar with London Plane (Platanus x hispanica) trees – they’re pretty much everywhere, and very fine they are too. But it’s easy to miss the Oriental Plane (Platanus orientalis) – I found several in East Finchley Cemetery at the weekend, and was struck by how elegant they look. It isn’t actually ‘oriental’ in the sense of being from the Orient – its native range is from Italy through the Caucasus to Iran, though it is a large and handsome tree which has been transported all over the world. At its largest, it can have a diameter at breast height of 5 metres, which makes it a very chunky tree indeed.

Oriental Plane is one of the parents of London plane, along with its western counterpart, the American Sycamore (Platanus occidentalis).

Fruit of Oriental Plane

The timber of Oriental Plane is also known as lacewood, but perhaps most intriguing is the use of the leaves of the tree for leaf carving, a relatively new art form that originated in China. You can see some examples here . They look as if they would take endless patience.

In India, the Oriental Plane is known as Chinar, and is associated with the Hindu goddess Bhavani. In Kashmir there has been a recent ban on cutting the trees down, and they are now registered and considered the property of the state.

Oriental Planes on Char Chinar Island in Srinagar, India (Photo By Gangadhar Tambe – Self-photographed, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=22816744)

But here in the UK there are a number of exceptional Oriental Plane trees, including one, in Corsham Court in Wiltshire, which was planted by Capability Brown in 1760. It now has the title of ‘the most spreading tree in the UK’. It takes up an area equivalent to the size of a football pitch.

The Corsham Court Oriental Plane (from https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-wiltshire-13682775)

The Pococke tree, an Oriental Plane planted in the gardens of Christ Church, Oxford in 1636, was thought to be the inspiration for the monster in ‘Jabberwocky’

Now, recently I have developed a bit of a passion for the music of Handel, so I couldn’t leave the subject of this tree without mentioning Handel’s ‘Largo’ (Ombra mai fu) from the opera Serse, based on the story of the Persian emperor Xerxes. In the aria, Xerxes praises the plane tree for its shade:

Tender and beautiful fronds
of my beloved plane tree,
let Fate smile upon you.
May thunder, lightning, and storms
never disturb your dear peace,
nor may you by blowing winds be profaned.

Never was a shade
of any plant
dearer and more lovely,
or more sweet.

And here it is, in all its glory. For those of you with a classical inclination, the opera is being performed at the Barbican on June 19th (I will be there, gentle readers, and will report back). Enjoy!

Traditionally, the aria would have been sung by a castrato, but here’s  countertenor Valer Sabadus, doing a pretty good job I think….

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbfGLpDdXPY

and here is Cécilia Bartoli. See which you prefer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OdeOyrLHdSg

A Tired Painted Lady

Dear Readers, there has been a ‘fall’ of Painted Lady butterflies in the south of England over the past few weeks, and today I finally got a photograph of one. This poor creature has probably arrived from Spain or France: the adults leave Morocco and fly over the Atlas mountains, laying eggs as they head north. These eggs then hatch and continue to head north as adult butterflies, arriving in the UK in May or early June, by which time adults that were laid here also hatch – these will look much more pristine.

This is a good advert for having some lavender in your garden as well…

I am amazed that this animal has made it this far – it’s missing the whole bottom part of one wing, but was still surprisingly speedy.

The caterpillars need thistles, burdock or our old friend stinging nettles to feed on, and will not move from the plants that they were hatched on, so if there are too many, some will starve. They also need warm weather, so fingers crossed! Stinging nettles are also food for Red Admiral caterpillars, so let’s not eat all of them, eh.

Painted Lady (Vanessa cardui) caterpillar – Photo by By Harald Süpfle – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7395467