




Funny. I know them only from the zoo, not in the wild. I know they have been brought to the UK.... Here is a Muntjac taken through the double glazing of my house into the garden ...
I am saving a lot of time not having to mow my lawn.You Brits must be melting there! Is there any living vegetation left in that lush green land of yours that normally gets so much rain and so little sunlight?
I can't imagine any plant life there has ever experienced such temperatures, and wouldn't be adapted to such extremes.
I do lots of garden photography and I pity the state of all the fancy and immaculately tended English gardens you have there!![]()
You found something good even in the bad... I have been at that temperatures back in the time and I know how it feels.I am saving a lot of time not having to mow my lawn.
Yet another heron, this time a "search pic". But note two things:
1st, it is standing in the shadows. My guess it was because of the more than 33 °C
2nd, note the huge sand spit with the traces in the BG.
That is normally the pond bottom with at least 30 to 50 cm water on top. The water would reach up to the herons belly.
All dried out
I haven't seen that in any summer before.


