saxonaxe
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With another day of temperatures in the high 20's C forecast I was out fairly early. The woodland paths alongside the lake are shadey but with all the trees in full leaf the passage of any breeze is stifled. Meanwhile the lake under it's coating of weed stews gently in the hot sun, so I headed for higher ground.
The white marking on the bottom of each arch support shows how low the lake level is after very little rain and high temperatures for some time now.
I made for a high point a couple of minutes walk from the coast. The site of a Neolithic settlement, it's in a good defensive position overseeing the nearby lakes and beach. The breeze blows up there, cool off the nearby sea and the silence today broken only by the buzz of Bees on the wild flowers and the occasional Sea Bird calls from overhead.
A place to sun dry my damp T shirt on the monument to the old folk. and there's shade if required nearby in the stand of Pines.
I love the sunshine but even up there the heat was approaching unpleasant levels. I had made the usual brew and some time later moved the thin Ally wind shield that had been standing in the sun. The stove had been out 20 minutes but the shield just heated by the sun was hot enough to burn my fingers. Warning bells, so I wandered home through the woods, stopping for another brew in a cool shaded place.
I was talking to a friend, a National Trust Ranger, the other day and he told me that there are 1,000 Ash Trees that need to be felled because of the ravages of Ash Die Back Disease. Originally they thought perhaps a couple of hundred, but their survey showed many more than expected were victims of Die Back.
Today I was sorry to notice even apparently healthy young Ash Trees are affected.
Fortunately there is a natural regrowth and replanting scheme of Broad leaf trees already prepared by the National Trust, so all is not lost.
The white marking on the bottom of each arch support shows how low the lake level is after very little rain and high temperatures for some time now.
I made for a high point a couple of minutes walk from the coast. The site of a Neolithic settlement, it's in a good defensive position overseeing the nearby lakes and beach. The breeze blows up there, cool off the nearby sea and the silence today broken only by the buzz of Bees on the wild flowers and the occasional Sea Bird calls from overhead.
A place to sun dry my damp T shirt on the monument to the old folk. and there's shade if required nearby in the stand of Pines.
I love the sunshine but even up there the heat was approaching unpleasant levels. I had made the usual brew and some time later moved the thin Ally wind shield that had been standing in the sun. The stove had been out 20 minutes but the shield just heated by the sun was hot enough to burn my fingers. Warning bells, so I wandered home through the woods, stopping for another brew in a cool shaded place.
I was talking to a friend, a National Trust Ranger, the other day and he told me that there are 1,000 Ash Trees that need to be felled because of the ravages of Ash Die Back Disease. Originally they thought perhaps a couple of hundred, but their survey showed many more than expected were victims of Die Back.
Today I was sorry to notice even apparently healthy young Ash Trees are affected.
Fortunately there is a natural regrowth and replanting scheme of Broad leaf trees already prepared by the National Trust, so all is not lost.