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Sunday, 15. November 2009

Trails Eastwards

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The storm has blown itself to pieces, but the roads have turned into rivers in its wake :yikes:



Even so, I've been out travelling today to my old haunts in Norfolk :smile: spending a while wandering around the soaked campus of the University of East Anglia.



This big peninsula is largely rural - a strange mixture of marshland and arable farms, although other habitats aren't lacking - and there's always some wildlife to be seen, especially around the university. Rabbits have been the focus of a long term study here. Any wildlife photographer who goes to the UEA and doesn't see a rabbit can consider themselves exceedingly unlucky...



Meanwhile, the squirrels are sorting the leaves and nuts...





As are jays.





I think these are largest shaggy ink caps that I've ever seen :eyes:



These strange fungi self-dissolve after dropping spores, gradually changing shape from a neat bell-like form to a tall, relatively "normal" mushroom appearance :alien:



But where there are students, one might find even stranger wildlife on the loose. I didn't really expect to find a spider the size of my hand sitting on the lawn :yikes: bug



I imagine that it is probably a refugee from a Halloween prank :left:

It hasn't rained today, but the land still has a tired, wintry, washed-out feel, and yet more heavy downpours are forecast for this week.

Lights from the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge over the Thames