Seen that advert for birificio Angelo Poretti? The one that's classically Italian, steeped in heritage and culture, drunken by the Mafia themselves? Brewed by carlsberg in the Midlands!!!
Printable View
Seen that advert for birificio Angelo Poretti? The one that's classically Italian, steeped in heritage and culture, drunken by the Mafia themselves? Brewed by carlsberg in the Midlands!!!
As if coping with nettles and brambles isn't bad enough as I run or walk around the Charnwood hills, now I could get stung and eaten by a 500-million-year-old jellyfish: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-62291954 :p
Talking about brambles, due to the ridiculous weather that we have been having, there are already enough blackberries to make it worth harvesting them.
Yeah, they're really early this year!
Blackberries not ready yet here, but looking like a massive crop everywhere; the wild raaspberries are good already and the bilberries are still going strong and the best for years - no more room in the freezer unfortunately.
Blackbirds are the garden fruit robbers, have you noticed the call or noise they make whilst stuffing themselves with your fruit? It's a kind of self satisfied "I've nicked your fruit and there's sod all you can do about it, belch".
I once read a line in a poem that read "as polite as a blackbird". I can't remember the poem's name, but it struck a cord with me, as usually I see them on my lawn, hopping around in their smart shiny black 'suits', 'arms' tucked behind their backs, kind of looking polite. But yes! When it comes to fruit-nicking they're as rough as a badgers arse! I still like blackbirds though. Their singing is enchanting (when they're not belching!).
Interesting. In the pre-cambrian there was virtually no oxygen in the air or in the sea, and the seas were very hot due to the amount of volcanic activity. I'm surprised it actually managed to survive, it must have derived energy mainly through some early form of photosynthesis because there won't have been a lot for it to eat.