Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Fat Bats?

It’s that time of year when bat people go into the mine adit beneath our drive in the Maentwrog nature reserve to count the hibernating bats. The adit runs 200 feet into the mountainside with waist deep water at the entrance, best not tackled in leaky waders. 150 feet into the adit you rise out of the water and that’s where the lesser horseshoes start to be found.

Lesser horseshoe
The highest number recorded in recent years was 116 but today it was just 25 plus a solitary (and very rare for these parts) greater horseshoe.  Is it the same one as last year? Is it a he or a she? What are the chances of he or she mating?

It’s been an exceptionally mild autumn / winter to date with only one night going slightly below freezing and this morning it was 3° outside and 10° at the far end of the adit. Six lesser horseshoes were seen flying at Plas Tan y Bwlch the evening before so maybe the bats are enjoying a much longer feeding season. Will this mean fat bats next year?

Sunday, 8 December 2013

Campbell's without the platform

It's difficult for me to imagine the Ffestiniog Railway without Campbell's Platform as this was my first sight of the railway. But Mr Wilcke from Denmark took some photos in the 1950s and Andrew from the FR has kindly forwarded them to us.

Tank curve. Photo taken 1950s by Mt Wilcke from Denmark 
This photograph shows the reeds growing well out of the track and bracken thriving. The tank of tank curve is hidden by a tree.

Conspicuous by its absence is the conifer plantation, planted with larch after the land was acquired from the Oakeley estate. That aspect of the view is about to be reversed with the felling of the Phytophthora ramorum infected trees. The oak trees to the left of this photo will be revealed once more after the larch has gone.

I was hoping to see Ffestiniog rolling stock in action moving the harvested timber but alas their bid was not as competitive as a haulage company.

Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Persil plumes?

That puffy white steam is not Persil white
against a fluffy white cloud
above Campbell's Platform. 

Tuesday, 5 November 2013

Filming the photographers

Every November at the end of the summer timetable a special charter travels the line with enthusiasts who share the twin passions of steam trains and photography. The train drops them at Campbell’s Platform and positions are taken at the seaward end and along the wall below. Bristling with lenses, tripods and bags full of gadgets, some stand on stools and step ladders. Down the line, Taliesin, with a string of heritage carriages, waited patiently in the trees.

A big blob of cloud arrived with the charter so it was time for a chat and sandwich break; I recognised Geoff from the same event nine years ago who subsequently stayed at Campbell’s Cottage and is threatening to return for New Year. ‘You’ll be very welcome Geoff, tell the others how great it is!’ It used to be known as Dduallt Mess sleeping eighteen volunteers in bunk bed accommodation but these days sleeps four in two en-suite bedrooms.

I asked a man with an American accent how much he’d paid to join the train; he’d thought it was about £50 a day for three days but that was small beer compared to the plane ticket from Detroit!  

Sunshine moved slowly up the valley like a giant floodlight and the walkie-talkie gave the driver the signal. Spectacular plumes of steam spouted out of the chimney and jetted forwards from beneath the engine. A sixty second burst of click-click-clicks, like you hear on the news, followed the train as it rounded the corner. The driver reversed and repeated the journey twice to give the chance of a better shot or a better angle with a different lens. Then another engine pulled a string of slate wagons up and free-wheeled down. Likewise this happened several times until it was time for the circus to carry on down the line. And this is what it was like:

Sunday, 27 October 2013

Living offa the fatta the lan

Last Saturday of the month, must go to the Porthmadog local produce market; no pre-planned menu, just see what’s available. A pair of sea bass fillets and a dressed crab from Gill’s Plaice. Radicchio grown in the polytunnels at Gardd Deudraeth. Kurmang’s latest invention, a flat bread with sesame seeds.

As I drove home a Jamie Oliver recipe came to mind. Drat! I should have bought some mushrooms from the Mushroom Garden. Stopped off at my favourite wood for chanterelles but slim pickings, just a few, enough for flavour and probably the last of the season.

After lunch Sue and myself went cranberry picking up the mountain, squelching in the bog, parting the sphagnum to reveal bright red berries linked by thin vines. Growing conditions must have been good and we harvested much more than last year, an ice cream tub, enough to make some sauce for our neighbours as well.


Saturday dinner tasted great. Crab with radicchio salad and warm flat bread followed by ‘Seabass à la Tony Blair’ on a bed of oven roasted potato from the garden. 




Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Bird's eye view?

Getting close to the birds at Campbell’s Cottage is a favourite with most visitors with the bird table just a couple of feet from the French windows, great viewing from the kitchen table. Frequent visitors include nuthatch, greater spotted woodpecker, loads of tits, robins and if you’re lucky you may see yellowhammers. Not on this film though:

Another great sight in the autumn is the feast on the yellow berry tree. Chaffinches seem to rule this roost with blackbirds mainly on the ground picking up the fallen fruit.

Sunday, 20 October 2013

Fox and the fruity scat

We see lots of foxes in the autumn, scoffing on the ripe damsons and raspberries in the garden. Here’s a film of the fox, stealing our fruit and leaving a fruity fresh scat.


Without wolves the foxes have no foes apart from Dewi and the other farmers; every now and again there is a hunt and the other weekend I think they got two. There are also some people who go ‘lamping’, shining a high powered torch at night and then firing at the eyes. Sheep eyes are very different to fox eyes but I’m not sure how different Molly’s (our dog) would be, so she stays indoors at night time.

Despite the best efforts of the hunters there are still plenty of foxes but, now that we have no chickens and ducks to protect, we’re not too bothered. The worst that can happen is Molly rolling in a fresh scat; the stink is terrible but a bit of soap and a scrubbing brush in the stream soon puts that right. She won’t tell me why does she loves fox poo so much.