Home Newsletter Locations Diary

 Indexes

Portal
Magazine4U

May 2016 

Photographers Resource

ISSN 2399-6706

Issue No: 148


A family of town foxes who too refuge in our garden

With it's two bank holiday weekends, May is a month full of activities and events for both families and photographers. The first May Day holiday brings with it tradition with MayPoles, Obby Oss's in Cornwall, Donkey Processions in Malvern, Beltane,
May Diary
Wildlife Photography In May
Your First Visit
and the Maldon Mud Race in Essex. At the end of the month, the Spring Bank Holiday, you have the Woolsack Races in Tetbury Gloucestershire, The Muncaster Festival which includes the International Jesters Tournament in Cumbria, Cheese Rolling in Gloucestershire and the Soham Carnival and Heavy Horse Show in Cambridgeshire and the Cotswold Olympik Games. Take a look at our diary page for loads more going on throughout the month. There is no excuse not to get out and get some good pictures.
Many of you may have noticed the bouncing blue heads of the Bluebell as you've been moving around the countryside, or taken a walk in your local wood. They start to flower from April and the intruder 'the Spanish Bluebell' has been out in my garden for some weeks now. The Forest of  Dean in Gloucestershire, is renowned for its spectacular carpets of native bluebells and over the last two weeks I have visited, but although some have popped open, the carpets are not quite there yet. Being in a forest it does not get much light, so they usually are delayed. Perhaps this week they will be out.

Did you know that:-

  • the UK has some of the best bluebell carpets in the world

  • they usually flower in April and May

  • they are an important early flower for feeding bees, hoverflies and butterflies

  • their sap was used to bind pages into the spines of books

  • bluebell glue was used to attach feathers to arrows by the Bronze Age people

  • in Elizabethan times they crushed the bluebell bulb to get the starch for their ruffs and sleeves

  • bees get the nectar by biting a hole in the bottom of the bell and can reach in without pollinating the flower, good for the bee, not so good for the bluebell.

See the links below for places to visit.

Bluebells in the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire

As well as the Bluebells, in the wildlife calendar there is also loads going on, with bouncing babies appearing everywhere. In country fields you may sight wild rabbits and their newborns feeding, or pheasants. Some of the summer bird visitors are starting to arrive in barns and places where they can nest, such as Swifts, Swallows and Martins, flying low over fields to catch their next meal and to feed their newborns. Around the ponds in parks and gardens you may see a Dragonfly or two as well as all the usual waterfowl suspects.

Rabbit This is of a young rabbit taken in my back garden.

In gardens and your flower pots, like me, you may see an invasion of snails, or as reported in the press slugs. Snails particularly can make a good photographic subject, they don't move too fast and left to their own devices can create some interesting patterns with both climbing on each other like in the photo below, or the slime patterns left behind them as they move around the garden. The picture below used garden snails, they were not forced or harmed in this process and they were returned to the garden fit and well. Take a look at Photographing Snails to find out how we went about getting this image and others as well as finding out what equipment we used to get this result.

Garden Snails


What's New and Changed
Locations and Lists Updated this month

Where to photograph Bluebells

Where to Photograph Bluebells in England

Where to Photograph Bluebells in Scotland

Where to Photograph Bluebells in Wales

Where to Photograph Bluebells in Northern Ireland


We are continuing to upgrade this website

It is taking time, but we are continuing to move from a Microsoft based website to something much newer and more flexible, run on our Apple systems. This is a major change and is going on in the background.

Our Windows computer is often difficult to start and we have decided that should it fail, before the new system is live, we will allow a gap of a month or two to occur rather than waste time setting up outdated systems as a temporary measure. So if we go missing for a month or two please check back regularly as we will be back. Hopefully there will be no problem and we will be able, in the near future, to switch over to the new system and as you may have noticed we have been out collecting a vast amount of more information to expand it.


Let's Explain How This Resource Works

Our most popular feature is the monthly diary covering interesting and unusual things on, around the UK, in the two months ahead. Our monthly front page/newsletter, from the beginning, is still available and can be accessed via our 'recent editions' link.

Everything that appears amongst these pages, or ever has, is indexed in a number of ways, alphabetically, by topic, by county, and often linked in to sections. Many of the sections have their own front doorways so people with specific interests have direct access through these doors to their area of interest.

All of our links are coded showing you if it's an external link or one of our own pages and when it is, the type of page it is. A key to the most popular codes is at the bottom of the contents panel on the left and clicking on any of the symbols will bring up a full list. On any page, holding your mouse over one of these symbols tells you what it means.

If this is your first visit, click here to find out how you might best use this site to help you find what you are looking for.

 

Home Newsletter Locations Diary

 Indexes

Portal
Magazine4U