Squares, socks and an otter

They say that a change is as good as a rest, but this is probably only the case if you don’t sit up talking until three-thirty in the morning!

My weekend away was lovely – a little reunion with three of the ladies I graduated with. We all studied Environmental Science at what was then the University of Wales, Aberystwyth (now Aberystwyth University). Back in those days it was still economically viable to run courses with very small numbers, so in my year only seven of us graduated in that subject. More than 25 years on and four of us are still friends. For quite a few years we didn’t really see each other, but last year we decided to have a get-together and now we plan to make it a regular thing… e-mail is great, but it’s not the same as meeting up and sharing a meal, a glass of wine and a lovely walk in the countryside. So, this weekend found us enjoying each other’s company in the cosy eco-lodge at Denmark Farm… only 20 minutes down the road for me, but a considerable journey for two of the others.

Two more contributions to the masterpiece

Two more contributions to the masterpiece

Electronic communication often makes me smile, but rarely leads to hysterical laughter… over the weekend, in contrast we laughed so much. But we also got creative… I came away with two more squares for the Masterpiece – one each from the two who hadn’t already contributed. This involved one person being taught to crochet, but she made a great job of it (hers is the square on the right) don’t you think? The square on the left was made mostly using yarn we were given. Saturday was National Yarn Shop Day here in Britain, so we felt compelled to visit Red Apple Yarn in Lampeter, where we were allowed to each choose a lucky dip prize… we selected squishy packages in the hope that they would contain yarn that we could use in a square… and two of them did. Don’t worry though… between us we bought lots of yarn and a few other things too:

Our haul (bought and free) from Red Apple Yarns

Our haul (bought and free) from Red Apple Yarn

But we were more creative than that, working on hats, a dishcloth and socks between us over the weekend:

This sums up much of our weekend!

This sums up much of our weekend!

Inside the roundhouse

Inside the roundhouse

But, being such a lovely spot, we didn’t just stay indoors. Knowing the site so well, I took my friends on a tour. They were particularly taken by the roundhouse, which was build by volunteers and provides a lovely shelter in the woods. It has a great atmosphere and we sat in there watching birds (it has big windows) and chatting for quite a while. We got a very good view of a pied fly-catcher. Then we strolled round the site, looking at the fallen trees and chatting about the ecology, before arriving at the lakeside shelter, where we were delighted to see an otter! We watched it going in and out of the water for five or ten minutes. They are so quick that getting a photo is a real challenge; this is the best I could do:

Otter emerging from the water

Otter emerging from the water

We also managed to fit in a visit to see one of our old lecturers and went to look at the submerged forest at Borth… where we’d all been taken to on a field trip as undergraduates. Of course, the weekend was over too soon, but we’ll get together again next year and until then, we do have the internet!

Beside the sea

Recent storms here in west Wales have exposed all sorts of interesting things along the coast, from tank tracks and evidence of peat cutting in the exposed peat on the beach at Tywyn, to the foundations of the old bath house revealed when part of the promenade collapsed in Aberystwyth.

On Thursday I took the learners attending my ecology course to see another of the features revealed by the storm… the submerged forest at Ynyslas. The stumps of the trees here have been radio-carbon dated and are about 6000 years old. They were drowned when the site they were growing on became wetter and a peat bog formed – preserving the stumps and fallen trees. Subsequently the sea level rose and and the site disappeared under the sandy beach. There are usually a few of the stumps visible poking out from the sand, but at the moment a vast area has been uncovered, providing a rare opportunity to see this amazing preserved ecosystem.

Whenever it is exposed like this it gets a little more eroded, but soon, the sand will cover it again and it will be hidden from view. If you are in west Wales, it really is worth a visit in the next few weeks.

There is a vast stretch of peat on the beach

There is a vast stretch of peat on the beach

Tree stumps emerge from the peat

Tree stumps emerge from the peat

You can see an amazing amount of detail

You can see an amazing amount of detail

Quite fine root systems are visible

Quite fine root systems are visible

Branches and trunks lie where they fell, embedded in peat that is now eroding

Branches and trunks lie where they fell, embedded in peat that is now eroding

Not only is this a fascinating piece of history...

Not only is this a fascinating piece of history…

... it's beautiful too

… it’s beautiful too

 

 

 

 

 

 

%d bloggers like this: