For Tree Following this year, I've chosen a magnificent old cherry tree in North Merchiston Cemetery
in Edinburgh. Crafty Green Boyfriend
and I started walking round this cemetery every day for our
#DailyExercise during the first UK lockdown
last year. And we're still doing the same walk regularly, though not
quite as often. I also sometimes pop into the cemetery after doing my
weekly patrol along the Water of Leith.
By mid November the cherry tree in North Merchiston Cemetery was bare of leaves.
but looking carefully, there were already signs of new life, look at these buds!
Further on in November, the tree is very bare indeed
Ladybirds often hibernate on gravestones, so late November I checked under this gravestone under the cherry tree and found these ladybirds. Although these look like different species, they are actually two colour forms of the common Two Spot ladybird - the standard form (red with black spots) and the sexpustulata form (black with red spots). These ladybirds will have spent the summer in the cherry tree and then fallen on to the gravestone to find a cosy hibernation spot.
Earlier today, the tree was covered in snow
as was the ivy surrounding the tree
Back in 2014, I followed a larch tree in Craiglockart Dell for Tree Following. I still see this tree regularly when I'm carrying out my volunteer patrols of the Dells for the Water of Leith Conservation Trust. I took this photo near the end of November, the larch looks beautiful in its autumnal yellow. (Larches are the only conifers that lose their needles over the winter.)
Nice to see buds :) I've seen only a few larches and never in autumn ... quite yellow!
ReplyDeleteGood pictures, and new growth is a welcome sight. I don't recollect seeing larches. Ivy is so important for wildlife. xx
ReplyDeleteA white Christmas maybe? Although it looks like that snow might not last long.
ReplyDeleteLovely photos - and good to see the characteristic terminal buds of the cherry tree.
ReplyDeleteThe larch is lovely - I always find deciduous conifers surprising...
Thanks for joining in our tree following and all the best for 2023 :)
Hi Hollis, yes larches are astonishingly yellow in Autumn!
ReplyDeleteThanks Flighty! I agree, ivy is vital for wildlife and so often unappreciated.
Hi Erika, some people are predicting a white Christmas here, though the cold spell has ended and most of the snow has disappeared. I don't think it will snow again until the new year.
Hi Squirrelbasket, thanks for organising Tree Following! I agree, deciduous conifers are always surprising.