Friday, 2 December 2022

Clapham Nature Trail - lichens - waxcaps - trees - nature - song - 1st day of Dec walk

An Expanded / alternative Nature Trail at Clapham to Ingleborough Cave.

Please read on if you are interested in

  • Lichens
  • Waxcaps (at end)
  • Climate Change
  • Montreal Biodiversity COP15: - And song
    Countries of the world meeting to make plans about nature.
     Remember 68 % of of the world's wild mammal, bird and reptile populations have gone since 1970 - Don't we have a responsibility for future generations?
  • Craven Conservation Group
  • Clapham Nature Trail

OK, I am trying to "kill 6 birds with one stone.."  and may miss all..

- the only birds I remember seeing on the walk were mallards on the lake.. 

and discussing whether the picture on one of the new informative notice boards may have been a purple heron rather than a grey heron -

Clapham Nature Trail "First Day of the month Climate Walk".

Each first Day of the month we have a climate walk, using prayers/notes from "Prayandfastfortheclimate.org" which are usually bang up to date since the people who write them only put them on line on the first day of the month. And have a fun walk and discover new features of our local nature.

"We" being a group from Churches Together in Settle and District and Craven Conservation Group.

Today there are six of us - eight if you included two friends we meet en route. We start at 1pm in what the weather forecast has said will be "Low cloud" - which here means "light drizzle."  i.e. very grey.

At the entrance at the new "Old Saw Mill Cafe"  Pete and Jules present me with a present they have picked up in Scotland

"Lichen Safari - at Dawyck Botanic Garden."  

(note Dawyck is pronounced DOYK  ) Dawyck Botanic Garden is a botanic garden and arboretum covering 25 hectares at Stobo on the B712, 8 miles south of Peebles in the Scottish Borders region of Scotland, OS ref. NT168352.

It is a lovely A6 booklet. 





I slim through the booklet:- and point out Peltigera membranacea - a dog lichen.

"We may see that" I say



The first trees by the lake are old Holm Oak (native to the Mediterranean region) and it is covered in mosses and other epiphytes such as Common Polypody fern. . .

Could this be temperate rainforest?  I have just looked at Guy Shrubsole's Lost Rainforests of Britain map, and Clapham is two miles away from the higher land which gets enough rain etc apparently to qualify for being in the "Oceanic area". The rare mosses and lichens that should be present if it was are certainly not here.. I suspect acid rain from Lancashire and Yorkshire mill towns until 60 years ago , and lack of any tree cover at all (due to sheep grazing) until the lake was dammed and woodland planted by the Farrer family makes it unlikely that they will be found. Ah well.

The leaves of the old, but planted Holm Oak are infected with something which gives this lovely pattern. It may be a fungus.


from underneath




We see various rhododendrons that had been planted by Reginald Farrer. They are planted where the acid Ordovician rocks are at the surface next to the Craven Fault. The majority of rocks in the area are Carboniferous Limestone. 

A rest on the stone seat

The lake is an artificial lake, dammed by the Farrer Family in the past. I had forgotten how deep and steep the valley of the incoming stream is at the top end. 

The trees are planted. But there are patches of woodruff, a plant that also grows in old woodland.

A medium big tree next to the path has a trunk with fissured bark with a lot of pale grey lichen down one side. I go to photograph it whilst the others patiently wait.


It has a few very dark apothecia - sort of reddish-brownish black. And lot of other pale grey lumps on it the thallus - which appear to be developing apothecia - some have a grey pruina.

 





Closer up




I check once home and decide lichen is Lecanactis abietina

(I think - though I did have a shot at making it Cliostomum griffithii first


What is the tree species?: Somehow I had thought "That's one of those pale grey crusts that grows on dry acid bark  - That will be an acid tree- oak". - but I did not check.

BUT: isn't it much more likely to be ash, since  ash grows much better on limestone rocks?  

How DO you tell the difference between oak and ash bark?

Ah phew, - I look at the picture I can see Oak leaves on the ground it.

(And I have looked it up: Ash trees have similar sized ridges, but they have triangular shaped grooves between the ridges..)

Here on the Clapham Trail it is a new record for in SD77.  This hectad is diagonally to the NW of SD86 (my own Settle hectad) where I also found the first record for this species in Cleatop Park Wood in 2020. Also on Oak, also on the SE side of the tree, and the tree sloping to the SE and SE of a footpath.



Ah - you can see the leaves. It IS oak.






A little further north, on a stump on the left of the path, I see some Dog Lichen.  In fact it is Peltigera praetextata, slightly rarer than the very common P membranacea in the Dawyck book.  P praetextata  has "frilly bits" on the edge of the thallus. (These lumps are called isidia and can drop off and form new bits of lichen)






We meet some friends Carole and Joseph - also out for a walk on this grey day.

We stop at the grotto, and read thoughts and prayers from the Climate sheet. We sing a hymn "O mother Earth". This was originally written for the Climate COP15 in Copenhagen in 2009, but the sentiments are good for the Nature COP15 this month in Montreal (Rather sad that none of the objectives set out in the preceeding conference at Nagoya in 2010 have been acheived)

It goes to the tune "Danny Boy". I'll print the words at the end.

Maybe next time I can record us singing it.





We descend from the woodland to the streamside that leads to the Cave entrance. 


The hydraulic ram is clonking away. The stream is running past its grassy banks - where I know from previous visits there are occasional tufa like rocks. There is a white marquee outside the Clapham Visitor Cave. It is not open today - have to come back another day to see Father Christmas. 

There is an ash tree next to the marquee with a lovely expanse of whitish pale grey green lichen on its trunk. I get as far as "Pertusaria" and give up.


Well, it's 10 to 3 and we had wanted to get back by 3.30. so it's time to turn round. We leave Cecile who returns by the same route, and the other five of us ascend the steep slope field to the NW of the path. (i.e. to the right in the picture above)

This is the field where on our CCG walk in 2011 we found 10 species of Waxcap and allies. .. although looking 6 weeks earlier.

We searched - and found specimens of

Scarlet Waxcap, Crimson Waxcap, Parrot Waxcap, Heath Waxcap, Meadow Waxcap, a "yellow2 waxcap, and Golden Spindles. well that is 6 plus the golden spindles  


Scarlet Waxcap

Meadow Waxcap

Parrot Waxcap

Heath Waxcap

Golden Spindles



(We also find Dung Roundhead, and Cystoderma aminathinum, and a Galerina). We have noticed no fungi in the wood on the way up (compared to about 50 in the 2011 October trip).


We meet a lady Maria gathering foliage for Christmas Decorations at the church and had a chat about Reginald Farrer and his books and writings.


At 3.50 The official time of sunset, the sun drops below the "low cloud" to give a sunset and a streak of red gold  glinting into our subtle shades of grey day

On the way down on in the wood beside the road we find another species of waxcap, our first woodland species, growing under beech:  Hygrophorus erubescens - Ivory Woodwax. (I say this - It is definitely a Hygrophorus .. and Ivory Woodwax was found on our 2011 list) 


Down at the village, the Old Saw Mill is just closing.. so we will have to go back and visit there another day for tea.

I hope you enjoyed coming on our walk with us.


Why not come on a "First Day of the month walk with us?

1st Jan 2023 is likely to be a combined walk - maybe with the Keasden walk again - see description of our walk last year.

Then the walks in February and March will be Wednesday afternoon walks, and 1 April is a Saturday.

Or arrange a walk near where you to look at nature.

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Here is the song: taken from here remember sing it to Danny Boy.

Oh mother earth,
obedient to God’s calling,
your mountain glaciers and your rivers long,
your swelling oceans, many waters falling
to thirsty lands –
for you we raise our song:
God’s precious globe, our glowing blue-green jewel
set in the bounds and mists of outer space
to be our home, our labour and renewal
where we, your men and women, find our trusted place.

Oh mother earth,
God’s joy in ever seeing
his handmaid and his ever-fertile spouse
in whom he birthed life’s many ways of being;
the birds and beasts
in you, our living house.
We know the inspiration of your beauty,
we mine the riches of your million years,
we have explored, but failed in our duty
to care for you, your other children and our peers.

Oh mother earth,
to Montreal we’re taking
our final and our deepest hope of all:
to live within our means, no more delaying;
Gone are the days
when men could steal and stall.
Now look ahead, you delegates of nations,
and see our children, what their lives are worth –
to live at last in knowing we’re relations,
Christ’s family and offspring of our mother earth.

Audrey Theodosia Bryant (1927-2015)
* Original words : “we take to Copenhagen” have been replaced by “to Montreal we’re taking”


Sunday, 13 November 2022

Low Bentham Churchyard - Hairy Earthtongues, Waxcaps, Increase in Dog Lichen (Peltigera hymenina)

It is Fri 11 Nov 

Exactly two years ago - on 12 Nov 2020 - Doris and I visited Low Bentham Churchyard of St John the Baptist Church. She was investigating whether to do a few paintings of flowers in the grounds for Revd Tim Fox and the people of the Church.

This little strip of mown grassy burial ground with its sombre dark green conifers, set between the scattered tree bordered River Wenning, and the narrow quiet country road with pastureland beyond is constantly revealing new secrets.  The land extends downstream with a narrower strip of unmown grassland. (Past secrets:-

1.  Visit with Doris in Nov 2020 (still to write this up -including Lichens and Earthstar- see end of this article)

2. Visit in March 2021 to look at Lichens

3. Visit in May 2021 just before Churchyard Week with Sharon, Peter Flint and Doris looking at Insects.

4. June 2021 Wildflower Churches Count on Nature Walk with people from the church 

Todays finds:-

1. How Peltigera hymenina has increased in cover.

2. Waxcaps including "The Ballerina" or Pink Waxcap

3. Lots of Earthtongues.. O just looked closely and discover they are Hairy Earthtongues!!

4. Other fungi

5. Revisit to Oak Tree.

6. Brief reunion with David and Tim Fox.

Note on current weather - 1. The weather by 11 November 2022 is still very mild - Though  there was just one frosty night a week ago.- The church lies in a valley and cold air sinks down into it - hillsides may have missed the frost. 2. Remember we had a drought over summer.

Peltigera hymenina:

Our November 2020 visit was an early outdoor trip in the open air, at the end of the first Covid Year.  We recorded plants then and I recorded lichens.  I remember finding Peltigera hymenina in one place on some shallow soil near two gravestones and in the partial shade of conifer trees, west of but quite close to the church. That was the only place I found it then, or at least the only place of note.

I notice in our June 2021 visit that I found it in another place.

This time - November 2022 I couldn't get over how much there is of it. There is some near the wall at the SE corner of the churchyard.. beyond the grassy place where I found some earthtongues.

But in the main grassy area to the west of the church in various places always on the raised part of the graves (where the lawn mower might have mown closer)  there is lots of the dog lichen.

How has it increased so much in two years?  Maybe the drought over summer has knocked the grass back? Maybe it is easily propagated with the grass mower.


Peltigera hymenina-2020


Specially taken to show Peltigera hymenina-2020


The next pictures are from 2022:
Peltigera hymenina-2022

Peltigera hymenina-2022




Peltigera hymenina-2022 - and Pink Waxcap

This leads us on to..

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2. Waxcaps.

Indeed my main aim had been to come and look for waxcaps. (And a dot for our visit is now recorded on the map here.. click and go down the page at this site Yorkshire NEYEDC survey 2022-2024)

Surveys have been carried out on Waxcaps and a group of fungi that grow in unimproved grassland (i.e. not fertilized or reseeded) called CHEGD fungi

Some background papers include: ( CIEEM site CHEGD fungi by Penny Anderson  - CHEGD fungi include Fairy Clubs (C), waxcaps (H), Pink Gills (E), Earthtongues (G) and Crazed Caps (Dermoloma - very rare - (D)  Peak District.gov Report -Yorkshire NEYEDC survey 2022-2024)

 We found Parrot Waxcap and Snowy Waxcap .. and Earthtongue  and The Ballerina  one tiny Golden Spindle 


Parrot Waxcap 
Gliophorus (formerly Hygrocybe) psittacinus


Some rather "past it" Parrot waxcaps



Slimy Waxcap - I did find some more.
Gliophorus (formerly Hygrocybe) irrigatus - grey with slimy cap and slimy stipe 


The distinctive Ballerina or Pink Waxcap had to be photographed:






Pink Waxcap at Low Bentham Church

3. Earth tongues

These seemed wider than the usual earthtongues I see, and quite  a few of them were forked. When I looked closely - i.e. with a decent lens or microscope - I could see they have hairs.

Ah - these are Trichoglossum hirsutum (Hairy Earthtongue) - Not Geoglossum cookeanum (Earthtongue)


Earthtongues - mostly to the SW of the church. 

Look closely. is this the Hairy Earth-tongue?









4. Some other fungi.

Well definitely an Agaricus - under a tree - a conifer - well yes you can see the leaves on the right.
Maybe Agaricus langei - Scaly Wood Mushroom but could be others.




Laccaria laccata The Deceiver.

Lichens on the Oak Tree
FinallyI noticed the young oak tree with good lichens is still there. The good leafy and foliose lichens on its branches are looking rather tired and green alga covered, and the Metsgeria violacea is still there (a thallose liverwort that grows well in N  polluted areas)



The good young oak tree was still there but its foliose and fruticose lichens looked really coated in green algae.

By chance we met the church warden who looks after the grounds - David Channing. He had come to meet Rev Tim Fox to do some work in the grounds. David showed me yet more fungi.

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Below are some pictures from 2020


1. Pictures from 2020

12 Nov 2020

Earth Star in 2020

Earth Star location in 2020. We could not see one in 2022




More on 11 Nov - trip to Ingleton for Covid Jab and Meal at The Falls Bar and Kitchen

Trip to Ingleton and Low Bentham Church: to keep things in context.. and see distractions of the day.. 

It is 11  November 2022, the day before Sat 12 November which is day of action about Climate change - COP27 - the Climate COP is underway in Egypt.

Main aim of Friday:- to get my covid and flu jabs at Ingleton 10 miles away - where they have an efficient friendly walk in system at the Community Centre. (It would give me Saturday to recover.) My friend Zoe would be on duty that morning.

 As I drove into Settle (on the way to Ingleton)  at 11 am, the radio announced that it was 11am of the 11th day of the 11th month.  Oh. I parked my car abruptly just beyond the cenotaph and was able to stand at the edge whilst a little crowd - mostly representatives from the primary school -  held a short service at the War Memorial (There will be a much bigger crowd on Sunday).

I proceeded to Ingleton Community Centre Car Park where volunteers in yellow jackets showed me where to park.

Ah, there would be just time for me to nip down to the Methodist Coffee Morning at Ingleton Church - a chance to support them since some of them often come to Settle. I marched in at 11.29 - a tad  inconveniently for them I suppose, since I discovered it finished at 11.30, but the remaining four people made me very welcome and gave me coffee and biscuits.  One lady was a very fit 92.

Outside I met a young lady (originally form Latvia) who, like me last year, had followed directions to the pharmacy, not to the Community Centre. I cheerfully showed her the way and we walked up to the centre.

The system worked well. I saw several other friends also queueing.  A man cheerfully stuck a needle in my left arm, then I turned round  and he stuck a needle in the right arm.

I phoned Doris who was in, and went round to see her. We decided to go out to lunch and went to the Falls Bar and Kitchen - i.e. The Ingletorn Waterfalls trail cafe newly refurbished.  - - American style bistro. Doris had had a "take away leaflet" delivered through the door recently  - Link to facebook




Doris had cauliflower fritters (a snack) and salad and I had "Loaded Fries" with butternut squash chilli jalapenos cheddar and sour cream.  (and some of Doris salad). Link to menu

Then we set of for Low Bentham Churchyard - See next blogpost.


Saturday, 22 October 2022

Sphagnum - Peat Exhibition at the Folly, Settle - and a bite to eat at their café


Give Peat a chance and other Exhibitions at the The Folly  now till 23 Dec. Tue-Sats  11-4pm

Please all you people who go for a wonderful meal at the Folly Café
- and please all of you who visit  Settle Tues-Sat when the museum is open -
Go to the top floor of the Folly and look at the exhibition on "Give Peat a chance" - on  Peat and Sphagnum.- just opened, with a square meter Sphagnum garden. " at The Folly  If you go, note: there are magnifying glasses and a chart of species on the wall.  And whilst you are there on the stairs see the "All our Land" project and on the 1st floor the ACE Settle display on The Climate Emergency. The Folly





















This photo was taken in 2017 the week the café opened

Another visit to the café



 

Saturday, 1 October 2022

Climate Walk 1 Oct 2022 : Fungi, wildlife, trees and prayers for the Amazon - at Scaleber Foss, Old Settle and Settle Parish Church

How are local wildlife (around Settle), climate change and the survival of the human species linked?

This may see a very "local" post - but I am amazed as I put up these posts how quickly the world is changing - and at an accelerating rate.



Pholiota: Scaly-cap (or maybe Gymnopilus)



Green Wood-cup - Chlorosplenium aeruginascens  (young cups c 5mm)


On the first of the month at Settle a walk is held and the sheets from the "Pray and Fast for the Climate site (a UK website)" are used. Last night (30 Sept) I emailed the producer of the prayer/info sheet and asked to be sent it a day early so that I could print it out. The draft sheet was emailed to me and can be read here.  (The final sheet will be put up on their website sometime soon, but it often misses the first day of the month so I am very grateful it was sent to me early)

The prayer for today included a section about the election in Brazil taking place tomorrow 2 October. In  the few years that the current president has been in power vast amounts of the Amazon forest have been destroyed, as he encouraged people to remove the forest. (Crazy. And O so sad)  

Brazil’s election
On Sunday, October 2nd, Brazilians will elect their president. The election, which is being contested by the incumbent Jair Bolsonaro and his predecessor, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has been described as one of the most significant elections in the world for the climate. During his time in office, Bolsonaro has presided over a sharp increase in deforestation, and analysis done for Carbon Brief and based on the two candidates’ stated policies and actions, suggests that a win for Lula could reduce Amazon rainforest loss by over 75,000 km2.  Please pray for wisdom for all who are voting – and that whoever wins, the Brazilian government will take action to preserve its forests. 


Losing this forest (I was informed over 30 years ago, at a Right Livelyhood Award Ceremony in Bradford - when JOSÉ  LUTZENBERGER  - 1988 received the award  ) can upset the currents in the Atlantic Ocean - and if we lose the Gulf Stream,  Britain will become a much, much colder place. 

(Whilst the rest of the world will get hotter) - 

Also, Climate change from increased CO2 and methane and other greenhouse gases will give increased heat  which  will mean that crops cannot be grown so by 2050 lots of people will be starving and coming into northern countries as climate refugees.

It is only now (2022) as Pakistan floods and storms with 150mph winds in Florida that the BBC and newspapers are beginning to talk seriously about climate change. I am heartened to hear lots of good programs now on the radio .. But why could we not have had them 10 years ago?

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I write these blog posts - mostly about nature - but it is amazing look back - at the rate of change of opinion. So that is heartening.

Back to our walk.

I went to the meeting point in Settle but no-on turned up.  

Two people are on holiday, one person is going on the "Visit different faiths walk" at Bradford (excellent - I recommend it) , two more couples looked at the weather (wind and showers and slippery on the ground) and said they would give it a miss, and also said 9.30 was rather an early time to start.

In some ways I was relieved - I had actually printed out a risk assessment for this walk - broken branches dues to the strong wind, slippery ground and a big drop at Scalebar Foss, and wet grass underfoot elsewhere

So I just went by myself (and arranged to meet three others later).

I had visited Scalebar a week earlier to check and knew there would be two fungi there. In fact I went to the same fallen tree at the top (did not go to the dangerous slope)  and found 5 fungi. It is worth recording this - just so that next year I can say how many extra fungi appeared in the week leading up to 1 Oct.

Shaggy cap - Pholiota

Green wood Chlorosplenium

Pleurotus

White Cap )need to look it up

White mycelium in log.

Orange jelly fungus






I also photographed a few mosses and lichens:


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I went to my friends in Upper Settle. I was shown White Spindles in their garden. 

We sat on the seat in the adjacent play area and looked at the Climate Prayer sheets.

Two people walking up the steps past us agreed to take our photos  

With Fungi books and Sally's apple picker.




Sitting with Climate Prayer sheets, Fungi book and White Spindles.


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We discussed the difficulty of getting younger people to join and hep run organisations - from Craven Conservation Group to Churches Together in Settle, from U3a to the Yorkshire Naturalists Union.

Maybe It is because young people spend so much time online that there is no time to do anything else.


(Digression - for my own education:
of Generation z spend so much time online that there are not any hours left in the day to do anything else. Generation Z is those born between 1997 and 2012 - i.e. 10 - 25 year olds.

Generation Y is those born between 1981 to 1996 - also known as Millennials, i.e. now aged 26 -41.

Generation x - 1961 to 1981

Baby boomers - born 1943 to 1960

Silent Generation – people born before and during the Second World War (1925 and 1942). They valued stability, sought after corporate jobs, and married early.
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 Sally and Keith told me they were going to support Settle Parish church's monthly fundraising lunch (Best: acronym for -Bacon, Sausage, Egg and Tomato butties) . sounded good.  I followed them down - but first

I made survey of trees in the churchyard and found the following starting from the lych gate and walking to the left. (counting.. 20 altogether including a few shrubs.

Elderberry (1), Bramble (2), Ash (3),  Yew(4),  Two unknown garden shrubs, Holly(5). Sycamore(6), Raspberry (7)

Corner near viaduct.

Privet (8), Ivy (9), Elm (10), Ash, Horse Chestnut (11), Elm, Goat Willow (?Hybrid?) (12), Laburnum (13), Lilac(14), Long leaved Cherry (15), Ash, Sycamore, Apple/pear (16), 

Corner (now at "step" between two parts of  the churchyard)  

Currant (17), Yew, Hawthorn (18), Silver Birch (19), 

Corner  

Two ornamental Cherry and Cypress(20) in centre  

Box (21), Holly (now next to Church)

 Horse chestnut,  Palm (22), 

Corner 

Holly, Cherry, Yew 

Lych gate. Path to Church:

Yews, Holly, Conifer.


I met a lady carrying some flowers to put on the grave of her mother and father. She had lived at Settle Junction till she was 8 and missed the railway. (The house had been pulled down since then).

I went in and had lunch - giving up my bacon in my hot sandwich as they were running short - and still felt guilty because of the sausage but thoroughly enjoyed it.

I met a couple of young, well youngish, people who were on the way up to Penrith as one of them was entering at Whinlatter  with their dog the race:-

https://www.timeoutdoors.com/events/lakeland-paws 

https://lakelandpaws.com/events/

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Back home and sorting my pictures. Well, I must stop doing this now and print out some posters for the coffee morning we are holding at Church for the Rainforest Fund on Wednesday 5 October, so that they can display them at the Giggleswick and Settle Brass Band Concert Tonight.