Sunday, March 3, 2024

2024-03

31st March 2023

Last week Miriam and I were invited to give a presentation about the Nature of Israel to our local ESRA Group - Miriam’s music accompanying some of my photographs – and we talked about the fascinating flora and fauna that we see. I showed a photo of the rather beautiful coastal iris that I took recently in Netanya. One of the participants asked if we had seen the equally beautiful Gilboa iris, which we hadn’t. So a couple of days later we set off to Mount Gilboa in search of these irises. Mount Gilboa, at almost 500 meters above sea level, towers over the surrounding countryside and can be seen from miles away. It was the scene of King Saul’s last battle, which didn’t have a happy result for him and his three sons, and ultimately led to King David’s succession. Much later in history Saladin, the Sultan of Egypt and Syria, was also involved in a battle there. Although he wasn’t victorious, he fared better than Saul, and was able to return home to his Sultanas (and probably his sultanas too).

Last week the mountainside was covered with giant fennel plants with lovely mustard-coloured flowerheads, purple milk thistles, which were equally tall, and the very much lower, but bright and cheerful-looking chamomile flowers, members of the daisy family. The giant fennel is a Triffid-like plant that grows quickly to a t’rific height (2 to 3 meters), and whose sturdy stalks were used in days gone by in Sweden and elsewhere, to inflict pain on misbehaving schoolchildren who fell out with their teachers. The thistles can also cause significant pain to anyone who falls in amongst them. The chamomile, though, isn’t the source of pain at all – it makes a nice tea (if you like that sort of thing, which I don’t). After being chased by Mr McGregor, whom he met at the end of a cucumber frame, Peter Rabbit managed to struggle home. In Beatrix Potter’s words - “Peter was not very well during the evening. His mother put him to bed and made some chamomile tea: One tablespoonful to be taken at bedtime.”

Among the millions of fennels, thistles and chamomiles we did manage to find half a dozen or so Gilboa irises (Iris haynei). They’re a glorious bright purple colour and it’s well worth driving to the Gilboa to see them, specially at this time of year. Their flowering season is from the beginning of March to mid-April, so you’ll have to be quick to see them at their best, though. These flowers which are only found in this locale are classified as vulnerable, so they’re not for picking and indeed, as is usual in such circumstances, are protected by law.


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28th March 2023

Butterflies and lizards are both cold-blooded, so spend a lot of time basking in the sun to gain sufficient warmth to function fully. That said, I had awful trouble keeping up with the swallowtails, red admirals and a gecko that I saw last week at Mount Arbel. The red admirals were far too quick for me – they didn’t stay still for more than a second and by the time I got anywhere near, they were flitting around, sometimes in pairs doing a rather elaborate courtship dance. A swallowtail did settle near for me about two seconds, and I had about two seconds to look at a gecko before it realised I was watching.

The gecko was an Israeli fan-fingered gecko (Ptyodactylus puiseuxi) - I’ve written before (23rd November 2023) about its amazing ability to walk upside down across a smooth ceiling or rock – take a look at the November post for more details. I was thinking about what an interesting sounding name a gecko has and actually it takes its name from the Tokay gecko whose chirping sounds a bit like ‘gecko’. If I have too much Tokay wine, which I’m quite fond of but haven’t had for years, I’ve also been known to make chirping sounds that sound like ‘gecko’.


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26th March 2023

I had a walk last week at Nachal Amud – the Amud stream. The stream runs from Ramat Dalton, north of Safed and flows through a windy (that is, winding) and sometimes windy (that is, a bit breezy) route down to the Kinneret lake. The Amud, which gives its name to the stream, is a 20-metre-high limestone pillar. I joined the stream fairly close to the Amud but was disappointed to find that the route towards it was closed because of danger from falling rocks. So, I walked in the opposite direction alongside the stream. In several places I had to cross it without a bridge, and though there were rocks to walk across as steppingstones, it was still a challenge for me not to fall in. I got my shoes a bit wet, but nothing worse than that. Along the route there were flowers galore and in the stream thousands upon thousands of tadpoles. I could hear frogs croaking loudly but couldn’t see them. And there were sunbirds and bulbuls in nearby trees. After walking a few hundred meters I came across a huge rock growing out of nowhere and I could see a large cave high above (80m). There was a sign on the path that explained in Hebrew, Arabic and English that a skull had been found in this cave just lying there (lazy-bones) – the earliest human skull ever found in Israel. It wasn’t quite from a human as we know humans but from Archaic Homo sapiens. The skull is now in a Jerusalem Museum and what happened to the rest of the body, nobody knows.

The accompanying photos show:

  • Purple pea fields that were a sort of pea-purple colour
  • Bright yellow downy restharrow (also from the pea family)
  • Oleander seed pod
  • The skull cave




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20th March 2023

This is the best time of year to see Israel’s beautiful wildflowers. When we visited Ramat Hanadiv last week, the nature park was carpeted with wild mustard, pincushion scabious and kalaniot (the usually red crown anemones); we also hit a purple patch of flowers – it must have been our lucky day.

We enjoyed looking at a splendid pinkish-purple three-toothed orchid. Orchids can live up to 100 years! Though in our house they do well to last 100 days. Maybe if we gave them some water occasionally, they’d survive a bit longer.

There was a lot of purple clover - Trifolium purpureum - Trifolium, meaning three-leafed. So, I maintain that a four-leafed clover isn’t actually lucky, as it’s not really a clover at all.

And there were purple cornflowers also known as the Syrian cornflower - Centaurea cyanoides. Sounds a bit like half man, half horse, and not-half poisonous!

I also photographed a cattle egret, that seemed to have lost its cows – how careless! And in the gardens, a jay that wanted a bath.





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17th March 2023

Last year on one of the tracks at Ramat Hanadiv, we saw a tortoise scurrying along at a snail’s pace. It was somewhat sluggish, indeed as slow as a sloth. It took a quick look at me and then tootled off, unperturbed by the camera I was pointing right at it. Tortoises carry their houses (that is their shells) along with them, but most creatures have to look for protection from predators a little further afield. Caterpillars, for example, which are easy prey for birds and beetles, often use other defense mechanisms, such as being poisonous or being covered in horrible little hairs. This week while I was looking for the mantis sac that we saw a couple of weeks ago, Miriam noticed a very small pile of twigs ‘walking’ across our path. I once saw a tree ‘walk’ across a motorway in front of me, on a particularly stormy day, but generally trees and twigs aren’t meant to take walks. As we looked carefully at the twigs, we could see a caterpillar’s head sticking out at the front. This was the caterpillar of a bagworm moth, which gathers little bits of twigs and grasses and covers itself in them, a sort of log cabin – to disguise the fact that it is there and to be a first layer of protection. How clever!

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As we were walking along the track, a truck went past and stopped – there was Dr Tzach Glasser, the Nature Park manager. Tzach had been kind enough to give Miriam and me a guided tour of the park a few months ago. As we chatted, I recalled our conversation last year about Griffon vultures and the work that Tzach does to preserve them in Israel. Sadly, just a few days ago, three vultures were found dead in the South of Israel – it’s thought that they may have eaten a poisoned carcass.

 


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14th March 2024

This week on our way to Netanya, we stopped at Ramat Hanadiv. After a coffee at the wonderful outdoor Mata’im cafĂ© we had a short walk through the gardens. Of course, I always look at the frogs in the lily pond near the main gates. There were a few frogs – and before I reached the pond, they were croaking to each other. I was hoping to photograph frogs with their vocal sacs inflated but wasn’t lucky enough on this occasion.

I did get to see a rather lovely greenfinch, though, perched high up in a tree. I recalled Wordsworth’s poem The Green Linnet – green linnet, being a name that the greenfinch used to be known by. In Wordsworth’s words:

Beneath these fruit-tree boughs that shed
Their snow-white blossoms on my head,
With brightest sunshine round me spread
Of spring's unclouded weather,
In this sequestered nook how sweet
To sit upon my orchard-seat!
And birds and flowers once more to greet,
My last year's friends together.

One have I marked, the happiest guest
In all this covert of the blest:
Hail to Thee, far above the rest
In joy of voice and pinion!
Thou, Linnet! in thy green array,
Presiding Spirit here to-day,
Dost lead the revels of the May;
And this is thy dominion.

Even so long ago, Wordsworth knew, as we all know now, that time spent out enjoying nature is time well spent – it eases stress and generally improves one’s well-being. I was encouraged to read a few days ago in a Jerusalem Post article, that recent research has shown that time in nature can reduce the risk of osteoporosis. I’m one of those people who have this crumbly-bone condition, as does my sister (and my brother has a reduced form of it – osteopenia). We inherited it from our late father.

So, it’s great to know that the time I spend at Ramat Hanadiv and at other nature sites throughout Israel, is actually doing good things for both my mind and body.

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12th March 2024

The sycomore fig is a fig, but the sour fig isn't. Go fig-ure that!

This tree is in the heart of a residential area of Netanya, and is so old that it was there very many hundreds of years before the current apartment buildings and houses that surround it. Indeed it is thought that the tree is more than 1,000 years old and possibly even 1,500 years old. Its diameter is an incredible 24ft, and it is for sure one of the oldest trees in Israel. It's not a sycamore tree. It’s a sycomore fig (Ficus sycomoros) - note the slightly different spelling - and it is a member of the fig family of trees. When the bible, for example in I Kings 10:27, refers to sycomore trees (sikma) it refers to this tree rather than the sycamore, that we were familiar with in England. In the summer the tree produces large quantities of figs, which are not particularly human friendly, but bats go nuts about them. And you might not Adam and Eve it, but the leaves are definitely big enough to clothe fully-grown adults.

Last week at Caesarea, as I walked along the coast, there were lots of these yellow flowers – sour figs (Carpobrotus edulis). They’re a succulent with green and red foliage, and their fruit, which is edible and is used to make jam, resembles a fig. But it’s not actually related to the fig family.

The kind of fig tree that produces the figs we eat, whose primary purpose is for the production of the fig rolls that I’m particularly fond of, is a subject for another day.




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8th March 2024

Until a hundred years ago or so, there were bears in Israel. The Syrian brown bear, happily lived here and there’s a record of one being seen near Mount Arbel, just a few miles from our home, about 150 years ago. Sadly, today, you have to visit the zoo to see bears in Israel, though I’m not sure I’d fancy meeting one on Mount Arbel.

Syrian brown bears we don’t see, but Syrian bear’s breeches we do. The rather interesting looking plant Acanthus syriacus is found in much of Northern Israel, including in the Switzerland Forest where I took this photograph yesterday.

The plant is interesting to look at, particularly in that the shape of the leaves inspired the design of the capital at the top of Corinthian columns. Just the day before yesterday, I photographed this capital at Caesarea. Two thousand years ago, King Herod built up the city and named it in honour of Augustus Caesar – and it was known as the cultural and commercial capital of Israel. 

The third photograph is also from yesterday - a mackerel sky over the trees of the Switzerland Forest, early in the morning.

While I was writing this post yesterday evening, our talented friend, Lisa Aigen, made a pencil drawing of me.




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5th March 2024

Put out the flags – yesterday, for the first time ever, I photographed a corn bunting. We saw two at Mount Arbel, the first from quite some distance, and the second reasonably close by. I have to admit that I thought they were both sparrows – it was only after I’d ‘developed and printed’ the photos that I realised they were both buntings. Of course, I should have listened to Miriam, who immediately stated that they weren’t sparrows and were probably buntings.

Buntings look a bit finch-like, and indeed they are related – but they’re a distinct family themselves. The corn bunting has heavily streaked brown plumage and has a yellowish bill.

Yesterday was a bluebird day. Half an hour earlier I had snuck up, closer than I usually manage, to a blue rock thrush, precariously balancing on the cliff edge. In case you’re wondering, it was the bird balancing precariously, not me. Despite my old man’s walking pole, I keep well away from the edge, which has a drop of some 50 to 100 meters. I don’t think my crumbly old bones would fare well with a 1-meter fall, and certainly not such a huge one.

Quite some time ago, Vera Lynn sang:

There'll be bluebirds over
The white cliffs of Dover
Tomorrow, just you wait and see.
There'll be love and laughter
And peace ever after
Tomorrow, when the world is free.

Every day, we pray for peace and a world of love and laughter.


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3rd March 2024

Almonds and Lupines

 The almond trees are blossoming beautifully. Van Gogh would have had a field day. But to deliver nuts the flowers must be pollinated by bees, and then a few months later there will be almonds in the drupes (outer husks) that grow from the flowers.

As well as the almonds that are eaten as nuts, some are used to provide almond milk and most important of all, in my opinion, some are used to make marzipan.

Do take care, though, bitter almonds have so much cyanide in them that just a handful can cause death. Check with a nut-ritionist if you’re not sure.

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In recent weeks we have seen quite a number of blue lupins (Lupinus pilosus) near to home, but in Jerusalem on Friday we saw a few hundred thousand at Givat Haturmusim (which translates as Lupin Hill).

It used to be thought that lupins ‘wolfed’ minerals from the soil, which is why they got their wolfish name. However, the truth is that they take nitrogen from the air and use it to provide nutrition for the soil - so not the big bad wolf after all.