In sultry heat, I took a path that climbs relentlessly through Blacka Plantation to Blacka Moor and the Hathersage road. The light was as fabulous as the stunning green foliage and ferns all around me and I had just heard a cuckoo, somewhere in the woods. Overhead, the sky was as blue as a robin's egg, up there above the canopy.
Though I was climbing at a sensible pace, as I reached the top of the gradient I admitted to myself that I needed a short rest to catch my breath. There was a large smooth-topped rock in the middle of the path and it was wordlessly inviting me to sit there, so I did.

The cuckoo kept calling with its woodwind sound. Two notes over and over. To me the most reassuring sound of any English summer. Only the male calls "Cuck-oo!" as he declares his willingness to mate. The female has an entirely different call, a trilling sound that is less commonly identified than the plaintive male call.And as I sat there on my rock, I thought I would never leave. A hover fly hung like a miniature drone in a shaft of sunlight. Two bumble bees flitted about, searching and inspecting tiny flowers as an American grey squirrel fearlessly descended a tree that I could have reached out and touched but stayed stock still and watched the squirrel as he darted down the stony woodland path.

I felt at one with the scene as, like William Wordsworth perhaps, I looked "upon that inward eye/ Which is the bliss of solitude". It was only when I heard the impending approach of a mountain biker that my reverie was halted. I rose from my stone seat and proceeded.
In the top section of Blacka Plantation, the rhododendron bushes are currently blooming. How they ever got there, I have no idea.
The home of nearly all members of the rhododendron family is the Himalayan region in Asia. Until 1763 there were no rhododendrons on this large island here on the eastern perimeter of The Atlantic Ocean.

They were introduced by a certain botanist with the same sort of ignorance that saw cats and rats arriving in New Zealand, rabbits in Australia and European starlings in North America. Why couldn't they just leave well alone? Perhaps we know better now - but I am not so sure.
Rhododendrons are almost as invasive and undesirable as Japanese knotweed. In the nineteenth century they were planted on many country estates and gradually got away, invading moorland, riversides, coastal margins and woods.
Though I am never a fan of invasive species - flora or fauna, I reluctantly admit that rhododendron blooms can be very appealing as I hope my pictures from Blacka Moor Plantation demonstrate.
Some invasives are attractive. I think that's why some people import them.
ReplyDeleteSo the male cuckoo's call is his wish to mate ?
ReplyDeleteEnglishmen once informed The Times when they heard the first cuckoo.
You are the Richard Jefferies of Blacka Plantation.
Described as half man and half hawk, Jefferies roamed North Wiltshire.
PJ Kavanagh told me he'd modelled the hero of his novel *People and Weather*
on Jeffries, who died in 1887.
Will the rhododendrons still be an invasive species in 2087 ?
I love all the spring blooms we see right now, invasive or not they're beautiful.
ReplyDeleteDifferent plant but similar colour: agapanthus are invasive in Australia though it seems not in the UK because it is too cold.
ReplyDeleteIt is scant comfort that Australia has had its revenge with the spread of Eucalyptus trees, especially in so-called "Mediterranean" climates.
These are beautiful photos and your narrative made me wish I had been on this walk with you.
ReplyDeleteFirstly, may I congratulate your football team for ascending the dizzying heights of the premier league.
ReplyDeleteBehind where we live was/ is a huge Rhodedendron plantation. It is currently being ripped out to build more houses. They are bordered on one side by "Cockridge woods" which they are not allowed to destroy but sadly this has not been adhered to. Swines.
It was my childhood playground.
Your photography is so good. Even though "my" Rhodedendrons have vanished I am transported back and can touch their waxy leaves and admire their beautiful flowers.
I do wish I could walk as well as you, I feel like I'm missing out. As I've said before, Outside is where I'm happiest.
So glad I can yomp alongside you by the magic of the internet.
Smashing post!
I also agree they are very appealing, though the invasiveness less so. Your walk sounds delightful, with the resting on the rock.
ReplyDeleteThat is a great compliment from Haggerty, Neil. To be equal to Richard Jeffries, an exquisite writer from Coate, Swindon, is something to be treasured. He is a favourite of mine. As for wild rhododendron Ponticum, it moves at a slow pace on the banks by the rail lines, slowly taking over the woods. You should take a machete with you on your walks and destroy it.
ReplyDeleteStrangely, unlike many plants, rhodies, as we call them here when we can't spell the full word, never got into bushland as far as I know. Probably too dry for them. I do like them.
ReplyDeleteRhododendrons are beautiful, but shut out much native vegetation. Our local woods are full of them, but they are gradually being reduced or removed and the areas opened up. It has made a huge difference to the bird and plant life. The woods now look like English woodlands, rather than jungles.
ReplyDelete