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Yearly Archives: 2023

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Visit to Addingrove Farm to see a robot milker

Blasdale Home Posted on July 21, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

21st July 2023

A group of us visited Addingrove Farm to see their new robotic milking parlour. We arrived at Chilton and were taken down to the farm on the back of a couple of tractors and trailers. On route we drove through a “closed” road, where Thames Water was endeavouring to fix a leak. At the farm, we were divided into two groups to look at the milking parlour.

The barn has room for 200 cows, plus a few more dry ones. Normally they are able to go in and out of the barn and graze the fields, as they wish We were told that many of the cows preferred to stay inside, and when it rained there was a stampede for cover. The barn had feed on both sides. In the centre were the cows water beds where they could lie in comfort. The cows were on slats which robots patrolled, scraping the excrement through the slats into a special processing system down underneath.

There were four milking cubicles, and the cows would enter these of their own accord and be automatically milked. They could be milked up to four times a day. If they entered the milking parlour again, they were not fed, and were ejected. Those cows who chose not to be miked in 24 hours could be identified on the computer screen and action taken to persuade them to be milked.

In the evening, the lights are dimmed to a red glow.

It all seemed to work smoothly, we saw cows entering and being milked, and others, who were trying it on, being ejected.

After the visit we were transported back to Chilton, where we bought beers from the Chiltern Brewery and BBQed burgers from the local butcher. They were excellent burgers, and I did go in for a second round. The money raised went to the church

Following the burgers, we finished the evening at George’s drinking Scotch. As we left at 10.10 I spotted a bright moving light in the sky. I later checked. It was the International Space Station.

Video of the Automated Milking Parlour

Gallery

Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Visit to Addingrove Farm
Posted in Buckinghamshire | Tagged Addingrove Farm, Chilton, Cows | Leave a reply

Packwood House and Warwick

Blasdale Home Posted on July 14, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

14th July 2023

We met up with friends (Bill, Viv, Norman and Valerie) at Packwood House. This was our first visit to this National Trust house. (But why? It is an easy drive from home for us.) The weather was atrocious with torrents of rain. We arrived early and went straight to the cafe. It was a genuinely nice National Trust one which opens at 9.am and was very well used. Many people were there seemingly just to meet up with friends.

Bill and Viv arrived, followed by Norman and Valerie. Having had hot drinks and yummy cakes, we headed out to the house where B&Vs daughter Jenny came to join us and introduce her baby son to us.

Packwood House is a Grade I listed Tudor manor house in Packwood on the Solihull border near Lapworth, Warwickshire. The NT has owned it since 1941. The house began as a modest timber-framed farmhouse constructed for John Fetherston between 1556 and 1560. The Fetherston family owned the house for more than 300 years, until the death of the last member of the family in 1876.

In 1904, the house was purchased at auction by Birmingham industrialist Alfred Ash. Alfred Ash was a bit of a character. He was known for his sharp wit and his love of practical jokes. One of his favourite hobbies was to play pranks on his guests. One of his favourite pranks involved the house’s very narrow, spiral staircase. Ash would often hide at the top and wait for his guests to come up. When they did, he would jump out very suddenly to scare them.

Alfred Ash’s son, Graham Baron Ash, inherited the house in 1925. Graham Baron Ash was also a bit of a character. He was a philanthropist and conservationist. Like his father, he had a good sense of humour.

He decided to restore Packwood House to its former glory, so he spent the next two decades buying antiques, of the correct era, reclaimed salvage. and appropriate artwork. He had the house decorated in a traditional Tudor style. He also worked on the gardens, having them restored and adding a number of new features, including a yew garden and a lake.

Graham Baron Ash was a generous man, and he decided to leave Packwood House to the National Trust in memory of his parents. In his ‘Memorandum of wishes’, Baron Ash stated that all furniture should be kept in the same position, that no extra furnishings should be added, and that freshly cut flowers should be placed in every room. The National Trust has been careful to preserve the house and gardens in their original state. And we duly noted the many vases of cut flowers.

Here are some funny facts about Packwood House:

  • The house has a secret passage that leads from the library to the chapel.
  • The yew garden is home to a number of topiary shapes, including a dog, a rabbit, and a sheep.
  • The house is said to be haunted by the ghost of a former housekeeper.

Unfortunately, not all the rooms in the house were open; some of the downstairs rooms were closed due to being “rested”. There were an extraordinary number of longcase clocks. The National Trust room guides were very informative, and good humoured.

After touring the house, we walked out into the rain and visited the garden (complete with fantastic herbaceous borders), spending a significant amount of time in a summerhouse out of the rain. We did manage to view the topiary shapes, and cloud hedges,

We dried off in the cafe before heading off to Leamington Spa for an excellent supper and the night at Bill & Viv’s. We admired their recently refurbished sash windows and the evidence of Viv’s green fingers. After supper, we played a wooden memory game that V&N had recently discovered, Trickier than it first appeared.

National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House
National Trust - Packwood House

The next day it was bright and sunny but with large rain clouds. At any moment it could be sunny, or it could pour. After a good, hearty breakfast We headed into Warwick on the bus, and after the mandatory visit to the charity shops, we headed to Saint Mary’s Church. Norman had worked here on an archaeological dig in 1975 after leaving Cambridge. This beautiful church is full of history & interesting features after standing for 900 years. The Norman crypt is the oldest part of the church, dating back to the 12th century. It is a vaulted space with pillars and arches, and it is said to be haunted by the ghost of a monk. There was part of a medieval ducking stool on display.

The church has three organs, of which two are operational and used at various recitals.

The Beauchamp Chapel is a magnificent example of 15th-century Gothic architecture. Built to house the tomb of Richard Beauchamp, the Earl of Warwick, it is said to be one of the most important tombs in England.

The church has connections with the armed forces, with old military flags on display. St Mary’s Church hosts regular services for military personnel and their families. These services are a way for people to come together to pray for those who are serving, and to remember those who have died in service.

Not so nice was a plaque to the memory of Enoch Powell. Apparently, Powell was a regular worshipper at the church. After his death in 1998, he was buried in the adjoining churchyard.

We ate lunch in a small cafe called the Thomas Oken. Oken was a wealthy Mercer who died in 1573 leaving his fortune ‘for the relief in need’ of Warwick residents. It was full inside, so we sat outside and ordered drinks and food. Then it started to rain. Thankfully, space became available inside. The weather soon improved, and we were able to continue our tour of Warwick in the dry,

Once we had finished, we walked down towards Warwick Castle and visited a small private garden called The Mill Garden. This was super special, quiet, secluded spot. It is a privately owned, half-acre informal cottage garden located on the banks of the River Avon. Julia Measures, is the current owner. Her family has owned the gardens since 1938. Her father Arthur worked on it for 60 years.

We headed back to Leamington Spa on the bus, and then, after a restorative cup of tea & biscuit at B&V’s, we drove home

Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick - St Mary’s Church
Warwick Castle
Warwick - Mill Garden
Warwick Castle
Warwick - Mill Garden
Warwick - Mill Garden
Warwick - Mill Garden
Warwick - Mill Garden
Warwick - Mill Garden
Warwick - Mill Garden
Warwick Street
Posted in Art, Warwickshire | Tagged Bill and Viv, Norman and Valerie, Packwood House, Saint Marys Church, Valerie, Warwick, Warwickshire | Leave a reply

Wells Farm, BBOWT Reserve

Blasdale Home Posted on July 12, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

12th July 2023

We visited Wells Farm in Little Milton. This was an organised trip by BBOWT. The reserve is a working farm, managed on a traditional rotation basis. The hedge margins are more than six meters wide, giving plenty of habitat for insects and birds. The fields have a mixture of soils. from chalk to sand and wet clay. Walking the fields, it became obvious as the soil types changed.

We were given tea and coffee in the Little Milton village hall. A wonderful village hall with an integral community run post office, shop and cafe.

The fields had many flowers and insects. The bird life was sparse, but then there was a group of 40 plus people walking around. It would be interesting to spend time there quietly.

BBOWT have the land on a 999-year lease, on the condition it is managed as an environmental farm. The lease was gifted to them by the previous owner. One does wonder how we could survive if all agriculture was performed in this same way…..

BBOWT - Wells Farm
BBOWT - Wells Farm
BBOWT - Wells Farm
BBOWT - Wells Farm
Posted in Oxfordshire, Uncategorized | Tagged BBOWT, Little Milton | Leave a reply

Wedding Anniversary

Blasdale Home Posted on July 10, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

10th July 2023

We celebrated our 41 years of bliss with lunch at the Black Horse in Thame where we sat outside in the courtyard at the back of the restaurant in the sun. Lack of photos of all our courses shows how concentrated on their eating we were.

Black Horse
Black Horse
Black Horse
Posted in Oxfordshire | Tagged Black Horse, Thame, Wedding | Leave a reply

The Fox Cubs

Blasdale Home Posted on June 30, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

30th June 2023

It has been a long while since I posted a video about our fox cubs. This five-minute video shows the fox cubs still with the Vixen down at our waterhole. The timeline is from mid-end June.

On the waterhole (pond) you can see a pair of moorhens racing around the pond, and preening. In one shot at about 32 seconds in you can see a fox cub on the bank, and the moorhens in the pond.

At 45 seconds in, a Muntjac (?) deer makes an appearance, after which we see a Vixen and her two cubs walking along the bank in the darkness.

During daylight hours, a grey heron comes fishing and catches a small unidentified morsal of food from the pond.

More fox cubs and their mother appear during daylight and darkness, often to come for a drink from the pond.

A Greater Spotted Woodpecker appears at 3.15. It hangs around entertaining us for a few seconds.

Not so nice is Ratty at 4.45.

Finally, a Jay comes for a drink.

Posted in Buckinghamshire, Grendon Underwood, wildlife | Tagged Fox, Fox Cubs, Great spotted woodpecker, Grey Heron, Moorhen, Muntjac | Leave a reply

Glastonbury Festival 2023

Blasdale Home Posted on June 26, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

21st June 2023 – 26th June 2023

Glastonbury Festival 2023

Glastonbury Festival 2023

This was my 13th Glastonbury Festival. I first started going to Glastonbury in 1998, and then 1999. I still have the T-shirts which I wore to Glastonbury. A few suitable comments were made by other festival goers. I took a break for a few years and started attending again. I’ve been to every Glastonbury held since 2009. The Glastonbury Festivals I have been to are 1998, 1999, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014 ,2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2022, 2023.

This year was another dry Glastonbury. A week or so before Glastonbury, showers were expected during the show. As the date neared, the rain disappeared from the forecasts. Those who arrived on Tuesday were rained upon. I arrived on Wednesday, and it was dry and hot throughout the whole festival, with only one exception of a very small shower early on Monday morning.

I drove to Glastonbury in my EV on Wednesday, arriving in the early afternoon. Stopped for a coffee and a quick charge on route. The Blue route, taken by campervans, was empty with no delays. I arrived at Love Fields and was soon installed in my yurt. Love Fields has installed a large building, called The Barn, replacing the Teepee for breakfasts and meals. Breakfasts served downstairs, and cocktails upstairs. The bar and stage area lower down the fields were still in place.

Met up with Ed, Mary, her brother, and Jon while they were still on shift at the Silver Hayes area. Afterwards we had a few drinks, and then watched the opening fireworks. This evening we wandered around spending time in the Green Fields. I was back in Love Fields at 4am.

Thursday

Some bands were playing today in the small venues. I started off at the Rabbit Hole, watching Prima Queen, and then spent most of my time at the Bread and Roses, listening to small bands, such as Duo, The Love Buzz, Frankie Morrow, N’Famady Kouyate. I rushed over to the Southwest corner to see some metal, but the place was so packed I gave up and returned to the principal areas. It’s a shame I somehow missed the Vlure playing at Bread and Roses. Not to worry, the Glasgow band was playing again on another day.

Friday

The main days of the festival open. I started off with an exercise class run by Joe Wicks. Twenty-five minutes, plus a warmup session beforehand. I met up with Ed and Mary, it was their day off. After a while I went my own way and headed to West Holts stage. It is my favourite area, good cider, decent food and good music. I watched Louis Cole, Young Fathers and the headline act Kelis.

Saturday

The first band of the day was The Last Dinner Party at Woodsies (the new name for the John Peel Stage). Here I met Mark and his daughter. They were standing two rows in front of me. After this show I rushed back to the Greenpeace Stage to watch N’Famady Kouyate., again. He was playing five shows during Glastonbury and had won the emerging talent show at the Pilton Working Mens Club. Then it was Sudan Archives before rushing over to see Vlure at BBC Introducing. At the Other Stage, I watched the Manic Street Preachers, Plenty of room. Next for me was Guns and Roses on the Pyramid stage. I was disheartened because the area looked full for Lizzo. But after Lizzo finished, space opened up and I was able to find room in front of the barrier. Despite the reviews, the show was enjoyable, the crowd were ecstatic. Rumours circulated that Paul McCartney may come on to sing Live and Let Die. This did not happen. Shame it would have been a nice touch. After the headline act, I went on over to The Glade to watch the The Steve Hillage Band.

Sunday

Already I was nearing the end of the festival. First off was a hike up to the Crow’s Nest to see Professor Alice Robers with Rebecca Wragg Sykes talk about early humans and archaeology. Now back to normal, The Chicks at the Pyramid Stage, Bird on the Wire: The Songs of Leonard Cohen at the Acoustic Stage, followed by a fabulous show by Toyah Willcox and Robert Fripp. I wasn’t going to miss the Mongolian Metal band, The Hu, at the West Holts. Saw them at Download. I then watched Barrington Levy at West Holts and headed over to the Other Stage to see the end of The War On Drugs and finally Queens of the Stone Age. It was a shame for the The War On Drugs, when so many people left to get to the Pyramid Stage to watch Elton John. Queens of the Stone Age were excellent.

Monday

Pack up and leave. Join the queue on Pylle Road. This can be slow as the mobile homes are allowed out onto the road from the same exit. It took me an hour to go the few miles. Once I was on the A37, there was no problem. I did hear that some people leaving the festival from the main car parks were held up for 7 hours. I count myself lucky. What I don’t understand is that despite all the walking, I seemed to put on a kilo.

Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Wednesday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
Glastonbury - Thursday
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Glastonbury
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Glastonbury
Posted in Glastonbury, Rock, Uncategorized | Tagged Barrington Levy, Duo, Frankie Morrow, Glastonbury, Glastonbury2023, Guns and Roses, Kelis, Louis Cole, Manic Street Preachers, N'Famady Kouyate, Prima Queen, Queens of the Stone Age, Robert Fripp, The Chicks, The Hu, The Last Dinner Party, The Love Buzz, The Steve Hillage Band., The War On Drugs, Toyah Willcox, Vlure, Young Fathers | Leave a reply

Cambridge Alumni Event

Blasdale Home Posted on June 16, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

16th June 2023

Rosemary and I had our first campervan trip of the year to Cambridge. I had been to Cambridge in the van on my own to attend an Alumni event. Rosemary being left in hospital to have a replacement hip. I had later been to the Download festival with Selina. But this was our first Rosemary and I trip of the year.

We were attending a garden party at Gonville and Caius. I had chosen an off-grid camping pitch to test the new leisure battery. It was on grass and in an incredibly quiet area of the campsite. There were an interesting mix of people in our field. One couple from Holland were driving a Series 1 Landrover, and were taking it up North to a show. There were also a number of walking / cycling campers.

The weather was very good for the few days we were away. We managed to dodge the only rain.

Most days we caught the bus into Cambridge city centre. Friday we ate and drank at the famous Eagle pub and later sat in the sunshine outside Kings College drinking a glass of wine from the Cambridge Wine Merchants.

The garden party was on Saturday when the food was up to its usual high standard. We also visited the library where there was a special collection of old medical books on display. When you look at the surgical equipment in use in the 17th century, it doesn’t seem to have changed much in modern days. (This was brought home to us when we visited Egypt a few years ago. On one wall there were carvings of surgical equipment from the pharaoh times. They were very recognisable as surgical devices.)

It was a shame to see the Corpus Christie clock out of action. It had been removed. Some vandal had taken a hammer to the glass window which protects the clock from the elements. This glass was very resistant to attack and had not been broken through. I gather the clock is now back, so the congestion at the junction of Benet Street and Trumpington Street will be back.

Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Cambridge for the Alumni event
Posted in Cambridge | Tagged Cambridge, Gonville and Caius | Leave a reply

Download Festival 2023

Blasdale Home Posted on June 12, 2023 by SteveAugust 9, 2023

8th June 2023 – 12th June 2023

The Download Festival time had arrived, Selina and I were spending the weekend there. I have been to Download several times now, always buying the RIP camping tickets, these allow me to take the campervan, and give you access to the Guest area. This year I left it too late to purchase those tickets. They sell out very quickly. Instead, I bought some Rock Retreat tickets. This was offsite camping a couple of miles away at Melbourne House. The campsite was nice, toilets and showers on site. The people there were friendly, and it was peaceful. The downside is you need to take a bus in and out. They ran regularly, so not too much of an issue. There was a long walk from the bus station to the arena, and a long-crowded walk back at the end of the evening. That walk was not so nice.

This year was the 20th anniversary of Download, so it was a four-day event. This caused chaos on the roads, and the future of Download has been put into doubt. It is rumouredthat 200 passengers using East Midlands airport missed their flights because of delays. On the Thursday we were held up in traffic for more than an hour, wish we had gone to Melbourne house across country from the West,

Metallica were the star of the show, playing two sets, one on Thursday and one on Saturday. The lighting and additional screens made it a spectacular show to watch. Even when you were near the back these additional screens on towers brought you into the show. Looking at other Metallica shows this year, it seems these towers, and twin shows were a Metallica hallmark. Other bands were allowed to use the towers. I would love to see them at future Download festivals and other open-air venues. They made such a huge difference.

The weather was hot and dry. In fact, too hot, Steve was reduced to drinking water on one day. The bars could do with some updating. The big bars serve one cider and one lager. There was the taphouse bar that sold a few American IPAs brewed in this country by Carlsberg. They were better, but the queues were horrendous. Download, please widen the range of beers in all the bars. The food was generally fine, so long as you steered away from the burgers, well actually most things that contained meat.

The final day, Sunday, we spent quite a lot of time trying to meet up with Selina’s cat’s Twitter friend. This twitter account is operated by Slipknot’s sound engineer. Alas this did not happen in the end, scheduling issues. The Slipknot show was going to happen during a thunderstorm. Thankfully, the storm happened all around us, and not over us. So, we were dry, and the ground did not turn to mud.

The YouTube below contains sessions from most of the bands we saw. The sound on my new Pixel 7 is very much better than my previous phone, so long as I remember not to put my finger over the microphone. I kept doing this. Now I know, I have become very careful. The microphone is just where you want to hold the camera in landscape mode. The image stabilization is very good, and the optical zoom helps get in close.

  • 00:00 Cancer Bats
  • 00:35 Jinjer
  • 01:10 Halestorm,
  • 02:26 Alter Bridge
  • 03:00 Metallica
  • 03:54 Stand Atlantic
  • 04:52 Nova Twins
  • 05:52 Pendulum,
  • 07:49 Evanescence
  • 08:36 Bring Me The Horizon
  • 19:19 Rock Fit
  • 20:40 Ice Nine Kills
  • 23:34 Disturbed
  • 26:25 Placebo
  • 27:42 Metallica
  • 36:52 Bloodywood
  • 37:32 Lorna Shore
  • 38:36 The Hu,
  • 45:00 Ghost
  • 47:44 Slipknot

Download Festival
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Posted in Rock | Tagged download | Leave a reply

The Fox Cubs

Blasdale Home Posted on May 26, 2023 by SteveMay 26, 2023

26th May 2023

This week’s fox cub video was a success. The battery did not fail, and I was able to capture footage of three cubs playing and exploring their immediate surroudnings. I moved the camera partway through the week to a lower vantage point, which allowed me to get better shots of the cubs.

There were originally two vixens and six cubs, but this week I saw only three cubs and no vixens. I believe one vixen has moved home. Towards the end of the week, only one cub remained by the den. I believe the other two cubs have begun to explore a larger area. Last year, they were often seen sleeping under the willow trees. There are also many other large holes on this side of the earth mound and the other sides of the mound.

I am eager to receive my new camera trap. The model I ordered is currently on back order, but I am hopeful that it will arrive soon. In the meantime, I will continue to monitor the fox cubs with my current camera.

I am also pleased to report that the rabbits have returned to the area. They were seen exploring the fox den several times this week. I believe the cubs are not a threat to the rabbits. Too small, or ignorant, to hunt?

Posted in Buckinghamshire, Kingswood, wildlife | Tagged Blackbird, Fox, Fox Cubs, greenfinch, Rabbit | Leave a reply

The Fox Cubs

Blasdale Home Posted on May 20, 2023 by SteveMay 26, 2023

19th May 2023

The video of the fox cubs this week was cut short due to camera battery failure. The batteries were depleted quickly due to the high activity during the night. Unfortunately, most of the night-time footage was discarded in favour of the daylight scenes. We have six fox cubs in total, with two vixens and four and two cubs respectively (we think). Although we have seen all six cubs together, only five are visible in this video. Four of them play together while the other two are slightly smaller with darker fur and can be seen together. A fox cub was spotted sunning itself on top of the compost heap. We suspect there may be more fox cubs in the compost heap and we need another camera trap to investigate.

Fox Cub sunning itsef on the compost heap
Posted in wildlife | Tagged Fox Cubs | Leave a reply

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