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Natural Connections

Modern life in Scotland is increasingly busy. The connections our ancestors had with nature and the land are being lost. As leisure time shrinks, or is filled with hi-tech experiences, opportunities to experience nature become fewer. And yet it is possible to connect with nature on a day to day basis. All around us, the great web of life continues to hold its shape, and nature continues its eternal cycles. Keep looking, listening, smelling, touching - and keep experiencing natural connections.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

A Christmas Day walk along the stretch of the Cart which goes through Rosshall Park produced a single Redshank which flicked up from the water's edge and disappeared up the Brock Burn. This is a new bird for me for the site (others were Fieldfare and Treecreeper - square total now = 48), following recent sightings on the Cart at Hawkhead and Paisley Cross, and on the Kelvin at Yorkhill. Also notable today were two Moorhens feeding together on the ice and singing Collared Dove and Greenfinch. Up at Crookston Castle, a tree laden with apples had attracted a single Fieldfare.
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