The first month of 2021 is over, the summer season is at its height. Green, verdant growth with plentiful rainfall. Already a few exotic trees have leaves that are starting to turn colour and some mornings there has been a slight crispness to the air.
We have had over 240mm of rain this month, the coolest morning 8 degrees Celsius on the 2nd and the warmest day 28.5 degrees Celsius on the 22nd Jan.
There have been many insects and the juvenile birds are being fed by their diligent parents. This diligence also means at the slightest hint of danger, including a human with a camera, they quickly take cover, the Cape Robin Chats, Southern Boubous, Fork-tailed Drongos and Speckled Pigeons are amongst them. I suspect the Cape Robin Chat nest is in the hedge that borders on side of the vegetable garden, as this seems to the base for the juvenile, who has ample cover in the rampant growth.
The wide variety of nature on display is really only touched on this month, here is some of what I saw:
Saturday 2
Tuesday 5
In the early morning many creatures greeted me outside the kitchen door
Later I explored the grassy hillside
Thursday 7
Saturday 9
Monday 11
Tuesday 12
A few of the moths drawn to the kitchen light
Wednesday 13
Thursday 14
Only the second time in 26 years that I seen this stately orchid growing here
An absolute highlight for January is when
Sunday 17
Monday 18
Friday 22
Monday 25
I was so excited, having collected a very special book,
Wednesday 27
Thursday 28
Friday 29
Saturday 30
Sunday 31
Over the month I’ve heard Black-backed Jackal calling in the evenings and several times while out doing bramble control work, have startled a very fine male Reedbuck. He is very nervous and vary of humans, probably as poaching has been ongoing for months. The Common Duiker decided my Agapanthus next to the house were tasty treats, ate all but one of the buds….
On Tuesday, Nikki, her motto – Celebrate the Small Stuff, and I had glorious day doing just that, walking on amahaqwa, Bulwer Mountain, the skies opened to the bluest of blue, only eclipsed by the Agapanthus in full bloom.
This is a mountain ridge that is essentially an extension of the Drakensberg, albeit cut off from the main escarpment. As a result, there are the same rock strata, including getting above the Clarens Sandstone, and many of the flowering plants of the Drakensberg and Little ‘Berg are found here.
These are some of the flowers we saw….
The 2020 has finally drawn to a close. One aspect that continues is the cycles of nature and has been one of my greatest solaces. During December many wonderful and varied life forms revealed themselves here, a time of growth, renewal and beauty.
On the last night of December, 31, I measured 39,5mm of rain, this brought the total for December to 207,5mm. The highest daytime temperature was 30C on two days, 27 and 29 December, the lowest nighttime temperature was 8,5C on the 2 December. A sultry, warm summer month with rapidly growing foliage.
Now that the Summer Solstice has passed, 21 December, we begin the gradual passage to winter, though usually our warmest month is February.
Here are some of the wonderful flora and fauna seen during the month.
Wednesday 2
Monday 7
Tuesday 8
Whilst doing alien Bramble eradication I came across this stunning
Thursday 10
Friday 11
A simply stunning sunrise
Saturday 12
A short walk was rewarded by these lovely finds,
Later that morning I was astounded to see a Narina Trogan in a tree near the house, I grabbed my camera, pointed and clicked, but didn’t manage to capture this special sighting! The distribution does cover this area, my guess is that now the trees and shrubbery have grown up near the house it has become more inviting for forest birds. Two days later I saw a Bush Blackcap in the Buddleja next to the sitting room window. Both were first time sightings here.
Sunday 13
Monday 14
It is always so exciting for me to find this glorious moth
Tuesday 15
Friday 18
Saturday 19
Wednesday 23
November has been a gloriously wet and verdant month, we’ve recorded rain on 22 days of the 30, a total of 196,5mm. The hillside is green with a wealth of flowers. The only flowering plant that doesn’t seem to enjoy the wet, cool conditions are the orchids, only one seen this November. The coolest temperature was on the 19th at 8C and the warmest 33.5C on the 8th. Most days were overcast and often misty.
Here are some of the wonderful flora and fauna seen during the month.
Monday 2
Tuesday 3
Although the light was poor, I couldn’t resist taking these late afternoon photos
Saturday 14
Monday 16
I was so excited to see that an Ochna arborea had self-seeded in the little indigenous shrubbery I planted. Normally I’ve seen these beautiful, slender trees with beautiful ‘dappled’ bark in the mountains, their distinctive red and grey green, turning to black, seeds sparkling in the green foliage.
Tuesday 17
Monday 23
Although I didn’t manage to take a photo, as we were having early morning coffee a russet orange Slender Mongoose, with a black tipped tail, darted across the lawn into the longer grass, so lovely!
Thursday 26
Friday 27
As I was wandering through the grasses I disturbed a Common Reedbuck. He stood up, watched me, then cavorted, before settling to observe me once again.
Saturday 28
The most gorgeous dawn
Monday 30
To round off the month, the sky was filled with vibrant colour in the evening after a storm.
Last October we only had 37.5mm of rain, this year the total rainfall for the month is 129mm, almost 100mm more! Being optimistic I had planted out the vegetable garden in the middle of October and it has been worth it, seedlings appearing and in the last few days seem to grow visibly! Over the 30 and 31 October we have had 46.5mm of rain. The coldest morning was on the 11th, 4C and the warmest day on the 28th and 29th October, 29C. As the ground moistened wildflowers started appearing in greater abundance, with some, for me, unusual species seen.
Friday 9 October:
Monday 12 October:
Although Swee Waxbills, a fairly common endemic, are around all year, they are very ‘shy’ and this is the first time I’ve managed to take photos, not great, but a record.
Wednesday 14 October:
Thursday 15 October:
Saturday 17 October:
Sunday 18 October:
I managed to spend time wandering our hillside, finding a wealth of flowers and other natural discoveries.
Tuesday 20 October:
Thursday 22 October:
Friday 23 October:
Wednesday 28 October:
Thursday 29 October:
Friday 30 and Saturday 31 October:
Rain and more glorious rain!
During the month Greater Striped Swallows have returned, I heard the distinctive call of a Black Cuckoo and had several sightings of the Common Grey Duiker and a male, female and juvenile Common Reedbuck.
September marks the official start to Spring, by the Vernal Equinox on the 23 September most of the exotic trees had a raiment of new leaves and the hillsides were clad in grass with wildflowers appearing. However between light rainfalls there were many days of strong, hot, dry berg winds. During the month we had a total of 21,5mm of rain, very welcome.
The coldest mornings were on the 27 and 28 September, at 4C, the hottest day was the 20 September, reaching 27C. On the morning of the 7 September a light dusting of snow was revealed on the top of the Drakensberg, but a relatively warm 9C here!
Wednesday 2 September:
Thursday 3 September:
Friday 4 September:
Monday 7 September:
Tuesday 8 September:
Wednesday 9 September:
While preparing the vegetable garden for planting Siphmandla discovered a rather large, sleepy Puff Adder in a nest of leaves beneath a fern, in a warm protected spot. It was probably in semi-hibernation, taking it’s time to move sluggishly to the Jasmine hedge. A day later it had moved on.
Thursday 10 September:
While wandering over the hillside I came across
Friday 11 September:
Saturday 12 September:
Monday 14 September:
Tuesday 22 September:
Wednesday 23 September:
On the Vernal Equinox I heard the Piet-my-Vrou, Red-chested Cuckoo call for the first time.
We had an unusual visitor come to sample our lemons.
The birdbath on the verandah is the social spot for birds.
An Olive Thrush dried off in the sunshine, then took another dip!
Wednesday 30 September:
Each year I wait for the small patch of minute flowers to appear in the lawn.
August has been very dry, with more typical August wind. On the 30th we had the wettest day, over 5mm of rain, bringing the total to over 10mm, so hopefully now new spring growth will really start appearing. Despite the dry conditions there has been some new growth and a few flowers have blossomed.
The temperature dipped to 0,5 Celsius on the 6th, the warmest days were on the 15 and 25 August, 24 Celsius.
A cold front passed revealing a snow covered Drakensberg on the 7 August.
Friday 7 August:
Friday 14 August:
Saturday 15 July:
On a walk I found an
Wednesday 19 August:
Friday 21 August:
Tuesday 25 August:
Wednesday 26 August:
Thursday 27 August:
Friday 28 August:
A walk revealed signs of spring
Sunday 30 and Monday 31 August:
Finally cold wet conditions overnight and all day and continuing on the last day of August!
We have now been 127 days in Lockdown here in South Africa. July is the quietest month of winter. Firebreaks are burnt, smoky skies with vivid dawns and sunsets as the sun rises and sets behind a veil. Despite this, new life is already appearing, small green leaves, winter flowering plants, birds spring cleaning nests as the days grow longer.
The temperature dipped to 0,5 Celsius on two mornings, 14 and 17, the warmest day was on the 10 July, 22 Celsius. As a cold front passed over we had 3mm of rain, the total for the month.
As I have been working hard to launch my website, Christeen Grant Creative Arts www.christeengrant.com on the 25 July, I haven’t walked the hillside as often as in the past couple of months. Before dawn on the 7 July I heard Common Reedbuck whistling, and we have seen one, then two on our hillside on the 14 and 30, so they have eluded the poachers so far. In the early evening of 7 July I had a wonderful close encounter with a male duiker wandering into the garden, special moments.
Sunday 5 July:
Tuesday 7 July:
Friday 10 July:
Thursday 16 July:
Wednesday 22 July:
Friday 24 July:
Wednesday 29 July:
On a walk over the burnt hillside I spotted
I found two beautiful downy feathers
I found scattered piles of nesting materials, and for a few days thought maybe an African Harrier Hawk had raided the nest. Happily I’ve seen both the male and female since, so assume they had a spring clean and turfed out old materials.
Friday 31 July:
Sometimes in life the way that was so clearly laid out is changed, like a mist enveloping the path in front of you. The path is still there, the path of life. However we need to adapt our thinking to negotiate it, possibly change the route to continue. Sometimes we need to trust to move forward, as each step reveals itself. Life is change.
Today I launched my new website
This watercolour painting of a Chinese Maple Leaf (Private Collection). It was part of a Joint Exhibition, Trees, held in 2008 and is now my logo.
Few things excite me more than to be faced with a clean sheet of paper or canvas, pencils, paint and brushes. This is one of my earliest memories and today the feeling is as strong! Form and colour inspire and challenge me to explore their depths. A more recent passion is photography, particularly of the wealth of stunning indigenous flowers and landscapes in South Africa and Lesotho.
I am an artist, illustrator and photographer, as well as a Nature, Culture and Mountain Walking Guide. All these activities enrich each other and inspire new artistic avenues.
Mediums used: Oils, watercolours, pen & ink with washes, gouache, photography (excluding computer graphics)
Due to Covid-19 guiding has ceased in South Africa, so with grateful anticipation I’m returning to my first career, art. Hopefully in time I will be able to resume guiding, particularly hiking in the Drakensberg and Lesotho and have a more balanced life, as each discipline acts as inspiration to the other.
The website has launched with an online exhibition,
Playing with Light.
The three sections within the exhibition (an example of each),
Botanics
Postcards
Oils
reflect my passions. In each I have been playing with light, creating illusions of form and mood, from delicate watercolour flowers, whimsical postcard sketches and wider views of mountain vistas in oils.
All the paintings and digital images are at reduced prices for this opening online exhibition.
Here are some examples of images in the Gallery section:
Children’s Illustration
Nature Artwork
General Artwork
Oils
Landscape Photos
Animal Photos
Plant Photos
People Photos
Texture Photos
Building the website has taken many hours and my son Robert has kindly taught and tutored me, I am so grateful!
I would love to share it with you, so please click on the link:
I hope you will enjoy browsing!
We have now been 96 days in Lockdown here in South Africa. Winter has set in, but the shortest day has passed. Just after the Winter Solstice a small spark ignites, although it is a slow return to Spring and Summer, the darkest hour is past. Bared branches begin to proffer tight buds, gradually loosening, to eventually unfurl into brilliant rainment.
I love the quiet moment when the balance swings; hope, new life and warmth will return. June colours have been a rich warm range of hues, belying the cool winter days.
Our coldest mornings were the 15 and 16 June at 1 degree Celsius, as a cold front was moving through we also had some frost, however only 5mm of rain fell on the 17, our total for June. The warmest daytime temperature was 21 degree Celsius on the 2, 3 and 26 June. The average temperature for the whole month was a cool 11 degrees Celsius.
Wednesday 3 June:
I found two different discarded snail ‘homes’,
Monday 8 June:
Every June I wait in anticipation for frothy white drifts of flowers to appear on the
Thursday 11 June:
Saturday 13 June:
A surprising number of flowers on my walk
neither of these Watsonia species ‘should’ be flowering, a bit confused?
The scent is so evocative of winter, the
have started flowering.
Monday 15 June:
Tuesday 16 June:
The second frosty morning revealed ice decoration on
Thursday 18 June:
Saturday 20 June:
This year the Winter Solstice was as often happens a truly stunning sunshiny winter’s day.
Thursday 25 June:
Tuesday 30 June:
The African Hoopoes forage regularly, though I’m certain they will move on soon.The Black-backed Jackals continue to call every night from the valley. On a few mornings I have seen Common Gray Duiker, but not the Common Reedbuck that usually graze around here. We found a fresh bone on a walk, this ties in with intensified poaching that is occurring in the area. I can only hope that some survive.