What's outside

Heddiw - today.


Teigr y benfelen - the cinnabar.

Gwiberlys - viper’s bugloss.

Cheers J.P.

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Ddoe - Yesterday


Y gramenog fawr - Greater knapweed.
Bysedd y cŵn - Foxgloves

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My favourite flower, diolch :slight_smile:

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Mae’r Siglen fraith yn gadael y nyth y bore 'ma. - The Pied wagtail leaving the nest this morning.

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Heddiw, oedd y tywydd yn boeth - Today, the weather was hot.


Troedwas pedwar smotyn bach - Four dotted footman.

Tegeirian y wenynen - Bee orchid.

Cheers J.P.

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Dren stem. Pichi Richi railroad in Quorn South Australia on the old Gahn line. The name Gahn comes from the old Afghan cameleers who opened up the SA out back.

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Adar eistedd ur hen danc. Galah gwyn du i’n meddwl. (Birds sitting on an old tank. White Galahs I think.)

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Un mwy llun gyda windmill (one more picture with a windmill ( part of))

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Awesome colour

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Lovely to see your land, wild life… just all that is different!

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Cheers, I am lucky that I work in remote location so there is usually a fair bit to see.

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Heddiw - today.


Cleddlys canghennog - Branched bur reed.

Lindys o mantell paun - caterpillar of the peacock butterfly.
Note: the six (tiny black) true legs at the front, as this is an insect these will be legs of the butterfly that emerges after pupation, the other what look like legs are claspers /pseudo- legs, basically modified skin of the caterpillar to help it move around and grip when needed, these will not appear on the butterfly (nature is rather clever).

Cheers J.P.

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Ooooh, lovely. It looks like a night sky, except with barren winter trees on top.

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Bid siŵr - certainly is.

Dim ond cipolwyg - just a glimpse.
Song thrush feeding a chick - Bronfraith yn bwydo cyw.

Amazing how wide their beaks can open. Big enough for a whole snail - malwoden.

Great spotted woodpecker enjoying ants - Cnocell Fraith Fwyaf yn mwynhau morgrug.

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Gwybedog Mannog or spotted flycatcher. They have a nest over the road from me.

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Mound spring, (dw i ddim yn gybod sut i duead i yn cymreag). These are spots in the outback where artesian groundwater (groundwater under pressure) comes out of the ground. Over hundreds to thousands of years the minerals from the water deposit in the area creating a mound.

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Madfall bach (small lizard)

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Nyth adar yn ur hen tan (birds nest in the old fire)

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Marw coden (dead tree)

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Hen arwydd (old sign) I went out groundwater monitoring at work today and I took these few pics on the way.
Cheers,
Leighton

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