Sunday, May 10, 2026
Some Wild Garden Action
I came across this graffiti in Camden when walking along the canal a couple of weeks ago. Nothing like a wild-eyed Staffy to brighten my day!
More reading yesterday morning. I learned the Lib Dems won in our local elections -- apparently plenty of other voters felt as I did, that they were the most promising candidates on the ballot.
Then I took another walk after lunch, just a wide loop around the neighborhood via Maygrove Peace Park and the cemetery. The weather was perfect. It's so nice to get out and walk in a t-shirt. My only complaint is that we have had no significant rain for at least a month. It's dry as a bone out there, the ground is cracked, and although the lawn and most plants seem to be doing OK we could sure use some moisture.
I lost a couple of my cosmos seedlings to pigeons, which plucked the heads off them as if they were corn for the picking. And I lost my biggest zinnia to a slug or snail. I'm down to three surviving zinnias, four sunflowers and five cosmos.
Remember my old habit of picking up china shards while walking, on Hampstead Heath in particular? Well, I found these during my walk on Friday and added them to my bowl. Lots of Blue Willow, or something similar. I'm intrigued by that bit at far left with the lettering -- looks like "acs L" or perhaps "acs D." I tried Googling to figure out what it might come from. When I uploaded a photo, the AI assistant helpfully said, "This is a ceramic shard featuring cursive script." Yeah, thanks for that.
Further Googling tried to tell me it comes from this pottery, which is just wrong. The font doesn't match and the wording isn't right. I think it's French based on the fact that a word ends with "acs," but who knows. There's just not enough of it to tell.
We had a crazy week on the garden cam! Some very unusual activity and lots of it, which is why I have a nine-minute video featuring birds, squirrels, rodents, wandering pets and, yes, foxes. As usual I'll list everything below, with the most interesting moments in red in case you'd like to jump ahead.
We begin with Sharpie sniffing around. Then:
-- At 0:15, a little mouse comes out of a nearby bush. Man, that thing can jump!
-- At 0:36, Q-Tip (or some fox with a white-tipped tail) comes by.
-- It's followed at 0:51 by a black cat. This is not Blackie, who is all black. This is a different cat, much fluffier.
-- At 1:37, a fox is back. Looks like Crooked Tail. It sees something at the back of the garden and takes off after it.
-- At 1:51, squirrel and pigeon.
-- At 2:05, Sharpie is back, followed by Q-Tip, and then at 2:56 by Crooked Tail. (Again, my fox differentiation is not absolute.)
-- At 3:13, SQUIRREL PANIC!
-- At 3:22, Crooked Tail.
-- At 3:31, a starling.
-- At 3:39, squirrel long jump!
-- At 3:49, some kind of LBT (sparrow?) intimidates a pigeon.
-- At 4:10, a great tit flutters in, followed at 4:17 by a dunnock on the ground.
-- At 4:22, Crooked Tail is back.
-- At 4:34, a robin flutters up to perch on the camera.
-- At 4:53, you see my legs as I'm trimming our hazel tree. (I guess I count as wildlife!)
-- At 5:13, Crooked Tail comes by.
-- At 5:26, the mouse is back.
-- At 5:43, we see another tit hopping around.
-- At 5:59 we get some brilliant daytime footage of (I believe) Sharpie. It really shows off his or her coloring.
-- At 6:39, the dunnock is back.
-- At 6:49, I put down a couple of pork chop scraps for the foxes.
-- At 6:58, an unwelcome surprise! A RAT appears and carries away the pork! I've learned my lesson about feeding the foxes.
-- At 7:09, a fox appears and sniffs around, but the rat has apparently made off with all the food. This is followed by lots of coming-and-going by a couple of different animals, I believe, all within the span of about half an hour. They probably smell the meat but they're too late.
-- At 8:28, that friggin' rat is back.
-- At 8:48, a fox trots past. It's early morning, so you can really hear the dawn chorus, mainly robins and blackbirds.
-- At 9:08, there's a horrible screech, and then Pale Cat chases a fox past the camera!
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Your garden is a true hub of wildlife activity! I didn‘t think a cat would take on a fox, but obviously some of them do.
ReplyDeleteIntriguing about the shard, and a good example of the limits of AI.
I always thought a fox would dominate a cat, but I think foxes DO tend to run if they have a chance.
DeleteI was on an archaeology site in Greece, talking with a grad student who was so happy, after several weeks of effort, she had three fragments of pottery that fit together. What will archaeologists of tomorrow think of our trash miles.
ReplyDeleteIt must be a thrill to piece together something that's been broken for so long!
DeleteI am wondering whether the L on that pottery shard may indicate that it possibly came from a Limoges piece?
ReplyDeletepossibly...It wasn't all porcelain. Definitely an L
DeleteHmmm...maybe?
DeleteIt was finding bits like this in his Nanna's garden that made my son an archaeologist!
ReplyDeleteFunny the things that inspire us!
DeleteI’d be obsessing at Hampstead Heath trying to find more of that dish. I wondered if we’d see a rat. I thought maybe the foxes and cats were controlling them.
ReplyDeleteI hope the foxes are doing their part, but maybe they're too well-fed? LOL
DeleteFascinating footage. Foxes do keep the rat population down fortunately...but there are a lot of rats
ReplyDeleteYeah, more than our foxes can eat, no doubt!
Delete"It's so nice to get out and walk in a t-shirt". Steve, please accept my well-meant advice with good grace. To avoid arrest by officers of the law and indeed tittering from schoolchildren, I urge you to don trousers or some of your funky shorts before setting off an urban walk. Even a long T-shirt that hides your bits will not do. Remember this is England - not Florida!
ReplyDeleteI didn't say ONLY a t-shirt! LOL
DeleteSoon you'll have enough pieces of China to create something new!
ReplyDeleteI did make some mosaic stepping stones for the garden about six years ago. (Hard to believe it's been that long already!)
DeleteLooks like Pale Cat took on the fox and won with a screech! Good cat! Those shards are beautiful. And I love how you research. Is that the librarian in you, or did you miss your calling in urban archaeology?
ReplyDeleteIt's often said that there are two types of librarians -- those who focus on the people and getting them reading, and those who focus on the books and materials. I tend to be the latter type. I'm probably an archivist at heart, honestly.
DeleteI Am So Stoked That You Are Taking Advantage Of Your Free Time By Heading Out For A Walk - Dig The Photos As Always And Classic Video Montage Of Furry Critters For Sure
ReplyDeleteTravel On ,
Cheers
Walks are always worthwhile! I need to do more of them!
DeleteNow around here those bits of ceramics would soon be a garden mosaic.
ReplyDeleteOh, I beat you to it! I made mosaic stepping stones back in 2020. There's a post about them somewhere. They aren't the prettiest because I bought the wrong kind of cement but we still have and use them.
DeleteI love that you pick up those shards. I would too. Were these scattered or mostly in the same spot?
ReplyDeleteThey're very scattered. I think the parks people get gravel from the Thames to firm up the paths, and the gravel contains the china shards. But the Heath was also used centuries ago as a trash heap, so maybe they're from that. Hard to know!
DeleteThat cat"s mustache is epic!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it?! I swear I've never seen that cat before.
DeleteIs it a shard from a Pharmacy jar containing Arnica. They're very pretty though. Xx
ReplyDeleteYou may be right, but how are you getting arnica from that lettering? I tried to look up antique arnica jars but couldn't find anything similar. (Doesn't mean you're not correct!)
DeleteWow, your garden is a hive of activity at night. It's a good job they are mostly a nice quiet bunch of visitors. I used to always pick up bits and pieces of pottery and nick knacks on our land in Wales, it's fascinating isn't it.
ReplyDeleteI guess all of Britain is awash in pottery bits!
DeleteI wonder if you did a similar search on the larger piece of pottery with the beige/white flowers(?). It looks as though the piece with the lettering might have some of that coloring on it, too. Perhaps that might help with any discovery. Or maybe not.
ReplyDeleteOr perhaps you could take the piece with you and go down to your old haunts around Portobello Road/Notting Hill and see if any of the dealers along the road might be able to identify it. Makes for a fun excuse for a day out excursion. :)
Alas, the brown-flowered piece came from an entirely different location, so I don't think they're connected. I have another piece of pottery with a curious mark that I've tried to figure out:
Deletehttps://shadowsteve.blogspot.com/2022/11/a-cake-day-mystery.html
Maybe I should attempt your Notting Hill solution!
I wondered if the neighborhood cats ever met up with the foxes and now I know. They do and it appears the cats are in charge.
ReplyDeleteApparently! I'm actually surprised the fox didn't put up more of a fight, but I think their first instinct is always to run.
DeleteI like trying to figure out mysteries although I often don't know where to start! Could it be Lilacs Limoges
ReplyDeleteOh, lilacs! I didn't even think of that word! That does seem likely. Lilacs something...
DeleteYou might consider getting a Guard Cat 🐈 rather then a dog! You can train them to a leash, some like to fetch, you can leave them at home for a few days when you go away ... Maine Coons, Norwegian Forest cats, could hold their own in a fight! LOL
ReplyDeleteHa! I would love a cat, but Dave is allergic. No cats in this household, sadly.
DeleteYour garden is a hub of wildlife activity.
ReplyDeleteI also would not like the rat and now that you've seen two, there could be more. They multiply when they settle in.
Yeah, as is always said -- where there's one, there's more.
DeleteAs my grandmother used to say, "That will draw ants," if something was left out that would bring the ants in. I think whatever you're feeding your foxes will draw rats.
ReplyDeleteUnappetizing thought.
Love your pottery shards.
Ha! My grandmother used to say that too. I guess ants were a bigger problem back in the day when houses didn't seal as tightly as they do now.
DeleteWe're never far from rats, unfortunately.
ReplyDeleteSupposedly no more than a few feet at any given time, I think! (They used to say that in New York City, anyway.)
DeleteHe has human teeth
ReplyDeleteMaybe it's an artist self-portrait?! :)
DeleteI like all the pottery shards. Maybe you'll find more with that writing on them.
ReplyDeleteI wish! But it's very unlikely. These pieces are scattered far and wide.
DeleteLovely colourful graffiti . . .
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Isn't it eye-catching?! It's a great piece.
DeleteHey, I can tell you that pottery is a ceramic shard with cursive writing on it. Did ya know that, Steve? Didja? lol AI is Captain Obvious.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
It really is sometimes!
DeleteAfter months of regular rains, our spigot shut off too and now everything is drying up quickly. Our soil doesn't hold a lot of moisture so things change which is why I never count my chickens/garden produce until I actually pick them.
ReplyDeleteAnd you have a pretty big garden to water. Do you have a sprinkler system? I can't remember.
DeleteI do though I try to use it sparingly. Usually I just use it as needed in early spring to get the seeds to germinate and then after that, let mother nature take over.
Delete