With all the festivities over January can feel like the bleakest month of the year, but really it is a time of great quickening – for those with eyes to see. Suffolk’s woods and spinneys may seem leafless (and lifeless), but look closer and you’ll see that many trees are quietly coming into bud, making this time of year perfect for brushing up on your identification skills.
Ash buds are black, and appear at the end of twigs that often swoop down and then up at the tips, as though beckoning. Those of the horse chestnut are large, brown and slightly sticky. Often first into leaf, they can be quite far along in a mild January. Last year, horse chestnut bud-burst was recorded as early as February 8 here in East Anglia. Beech buds are slim, golden and pointed, appearing on alternate sides of the twigs, while the field maples, which are such an important hedgerow species in this part of the country, are reddish, set in pairs along russet twigs.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 2020-Ausgabe von EADT Suffolk.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 2020-Ausgabe von EADT Suffolk.
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‘Look at me!'
Jan planned a modest start to 2020. It’s not going well.
Treasure Island
Lindsay Want goes on a walking adventure around Somerleyton on the ancient island of Lothingland
New beginnings
In the bleak, dark days at the start of the year, life stirs
In black & white
Felix Aldred follows the fortunes of a family of oystercatchers on a Suffolk river estuary
Hot dates
Mark your calendar for some important milestone events in 2020
Applause, applause
Bury’s Theatre Royal, the only Regency theatre in the UK, is a hidden attraction that deserves to have its name up in lights
2020 vision
With the New Year upon us, heralding opportunities for change and renewal, we asked some of Suffolk’s leading lights about their hopes for the county and their personal ambitions for the coming months.
Dreaming Of A White Christmas
Maxine White and Ady White (not related) make Christmas happen. They’re possibly Suffolk’s closest thing to Santa’s elves.
Food From The Heart
It’s ten years since Justin Sharp opened Pea Porridge in Bury St Edmunds. He’s still proudly delighting customers with simple, satisfying seasonal food, brimful of flavour
An All Together English Walk
Lindsay Want takes a seasonal family stroll around the parklands of Huntingfield and Heveningham