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| Birchwood Forest Park |
I wasn't feeling my brightest and bounciest best, not that I have a brightest and bounciest best but one should show willing. I had no firm plans, or even vague plans, for the day and despite its being a sunny morning I couldn't shake off the lethargy and get out and do something. As a displacement I spent two hours submitting a response to a government consultation, almost certainly a dead waste of time as given the nature of these things everything's been done and dusted and any are you really sure this isn't a tad unwise? questions will be deftly swept under the carpet. I'd hoped that might have prompted an energetic reaction but it wasn't happening. I put my boots on and went to get the train to see where I went. One of the advantages of not having ticket facilities at the station is that you don't have to commit to going anywhere until the guard sells you a ticket on the train.
Birchwood Forest Park is the thin band of woodland acting as a buffer between the housing estate and the railway line by Birchwood Station. I've not stopped and had a proper look round for a bit, it's a nice hour's slow dawdle, this time of year it has the usual complement of suburban singers, I needed a bit of exercise, so I got off the train at and walked round the corner into the park.
Robins, blackbirds and chiffchaffs sang along the roadside. They were joined by blackcaps, wrens and a song thrush as I walked along. Great tits churred and squeaked as I passed, a couple of robins ticked quietly from the depths of holly bushes, blue tits were in ninja mode, only spotted when breaking cover between trees. A lot of the trees were barely breaking bud but I was already struggling to spot small birds that didn't want to be seen. A couple of goldfinches twittered past overhead, more were silhouettes quietly picking insects from the emergent leaves at the tops of ash trees. A great spotted woodpecker made itself known before vanishing into a sycamore.
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| Spanish bluebells |
I decided I wasn't going to walk round for time gentlemen please at Ridley Moss. I had a bit of an explore of the little side paths between the park and the housing estate, picking my way through cow parsley and Spanish bluebells and stepping over fallen trees. All the while watched by robins, magpies and titmice or startled by woodpigeons suddenly erupting from hawthorn bushes.
Wandering back a coal tit added its squeaky toy call to the soundscape and a couple of woodpigeons started singing.
A blackcap sang over the piped music as I waited for the train back. I felt the better for stretching my legs and getting a bit of sunshine filtered through green leaves. I decided against stopping off along the way for another walk. The dark grey, yellowing clouds that suddenly rolled in confirmed I'd made a sound choice.



















































