Thursday, 9 May 2019

Cathedral City Cormorants and Coastal Conveyancing


 Disclaimer: This is not an attempt to cause Ms Scarlet more cormorant-related anguish.

 Well, maybe a little...

 In keeping with the recent general theme of birds - and, in particular, Mistress Maddie's more specific cormorant-containing posts - the first part of this post is my most recent cormorant sighting.
 The photos are a bit crap because they were taken with Phone, not Camera, as I was walking through the city on my way to work.  Yes, through the city!  These cormorants were perched atop the Norwich University of the Arts*, lording it over the mallards and Egyptian geese that were grubbing around on the riverbank beneath them.


You can just make out their distinctive silhouette
 I must point out, that these were taken in February, and I haven't seen a cormorant since.  Perhaps Ms Scarlet has a point, and that England's cormorants have flown across the pond since then?

* Although, when I attended, it was known first as the Norfolk Institute of Art and Design then, in my second year, as the Norwich School of Art and Design. 


oOo

 And now on to other things.  The following are just a few photos from the Bank Holiday weekend's leg-stretchers.
 First up - Saturday (and what a difference from this time last year):















 I didn't go as far as the End-of-the-Line, but someone did: While I was loitering around taking these photos, a man in a woolly hat came to take some measurements from the monitoring devices placed on the enormous groyne.  I asked what was being monitored, and he said sand levels, cliff falls and the like.

::

And Bank Holiday Monday:

Looking back down Tower Lane in Sidestrand (Cromer radar station on the horizon, and Overstrand on the right)

Overstrand on the cliff top from Tower Lane

The End-of-the-Line as seen from Broom

And again

Small Copper butterfly on the cliff top - there were quite a few of these flitting about

Scots pines next to Sidestrand church

The view to Sidestrand from Hungry Hill

Bluebells in the woods next to Cromer radar station (actually in Overstrand - grid ref 52.910482 1.349672)
Last seen here
.



19 comments:

  1. *Sobs* Why has Mistress Maddie STOLEN the Cormorants????? WHY???? They do look rather lofty here, as though they were destined for better things.
    Your sea looks a bit choppy. And chilly. Has Mistress Maddie stolen summer too??
    Sx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Cormorants. Summer. What's next for Maddie to snatch from under our noses? Bunting?? Moira Stewart?!?

      Delete
    2. Watch out you tall glass of water...you might be next thing a swipe out of England.

      Delete
    3. Just a heads up: my Passport has expired, so you'll need to smuggle me out of the country in a large, well appointed suitcase.

      Delete
  2. Ooh I like that. I want a stuffed one, now.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Maddie's cormorant, or that big, wet groyne?

      Delete
    2. Nice...now your offering up my wet groynes?

      Delete
    3. Well, I thought I'd save you the bother...

      Delete
  3. What does this hill feed on ? Are there subterranean entities to be found ? Nice to learn that the massive groyne is put to good use.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Not a great deal, which is why it's always so hungry. There is, however, a poultry farm on its west slope, so it could always have a chicken dinner?
      There might possibly be a giant under the hill? I have heard stories that the hill once swallowed a giant which filled it up so much that its after dinner nap lasted for a thousand years.

      Delete
  4. Jeepers! Those wave-lashed groynes don't look at all inviting! I wonder what sort of data the Inexplicable Devices on your groyne measured then?
    Bluebells are pretty!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, it was a bit nippy and windy last week. I'm looking forward to seeing some fatastical graphic of coastal erosion on the ScanLAB website.

      Delete
  5. Why does the university keep changing its name? Does it owe money?

    ReplyDelete
  6. There is an excessive amount of spume in these photos. That crusty old groyne is positively engulfed in it... Jx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I gather it's been a while since it has had such a pounding...

      Delete
  7. Im still trying to figure out where all these cormorants came from. In all my 19 years living here, this is the first time I have ever seen them here. And the beach locale is lovely. Where is my invite? I'll even wear a bathing suit.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You'll need to pack your full body Victorian bathing suit, as it's still rather cool here. You'll succumb to exposure in your square-cuts!

      Delete

Tickle my fancy, why don't you?