Who's had a good day today?

John Fenna

Lifetime Member & Maker
Oct 7, 2006
23,306
3,089
67
Pembrokeshire
My weekend was shaping to be rubbish - canoe coach revalidation 2 days of paying to renew my coaching awards by recapping on child protection and rafting /sailing/camping skills.
OK sat was only 3 hours of going over old ground - but it still cost me £40!
And the Sun was looking to cost more...
until a quick wordwith the staff...and I was on the training team to deliver part of the course:)
A quick show and tell of my wilderness camping set up, stove/fire options and my canoe sailing rig, a bit of input on the canoe raft sailing section and running the bank with a throw line and the clock showed 4pm!
Amazing how time flies when you are having fun in the sun!
And I did not have to pay anything - and it covers my revalidation!
All in all a great day:D
 

Biker

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Really enjoyable read Liam, sounded idylic.

My day was spent with my brother, he's over here with us for a long weekend and his daughter will be staying with us for the rest of July. So he and I split around 9.30 in the car to a local bootfair. My borther's really into Stem unk and likes making things so he was after brassy things. We got there and were soon hip deep in tut. He got himself a few bargains including a buffalo hide coat for a tenner. John the leather is gorgeous! You'd have loved making pouches out of that.

Got a few things for mysel finthe walk around, some DVD's and a drill stand for pennies. Had some lunch under a marque in the shade and just enjoyed spending time with my brother. Went off to another local craft fair which also had a bootfair attached and he gothimself a nice bargain of two replica flintlock pistols. These will probably end up on eBay after he's cleaned them up and tarted them up a bit, maybe even steampunked them. He was saying bootfairs in France are a whole different flavour to those in the UK.

Anyway, despite the sunburnt neck I now have, I had a really REALLY good day. Taking him back to the port at 2pm this afternoon.
 

Nagual

Native
Jun 5, 2007
1,963
0
Argyll
Had a great weekend! Went for a wee paddle on the loch, camped over night at a great spot - all in good company. Jason and Colin were out there from Friday evening, Tony and Pete and I joined them on Saturday morning. The midges were pretty tame as well. Trout were jumping, but not onto Tony's line, and he saw a massive trout which turned out to be an eel.. :D

A very relaxed evening, with some paddling and the telling of tall tales in good company... all in all a great weekend.
 

Hugo

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Nov 29, 2009
2,588
2
Lost in the woods
Sunday was good, had a Sunday lunch in Steyning then set off for a walk around Wiston estate area.
SHMBO picked a nice posie of flowers along with a couple of thistles.
Forgot to look for beech masts, but did look to see how this years wild plums are coming along.
 

Graham_S

Squirrely!
Feb 27, 2005
4,041
66
51
Saudi Arabia
I was working.
We had a dust storm so the aircraft I was going to launch didn't go.
Then I spent a couple of hours fitting external fuel tanks in 45c temps.
Rubbish day all round.
Still, weekend soon.
:D
 

locum76

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Oct 9, 2005
2,772
9
48
Kirkliston
Saturday was good, started with work (picking, packing, weeding, hoeing, rotovating) then Seraph's mum came round to give us our second ever night off from the baby. We went out for a meal at the Kingarroch in Craigrothie - scallops, then a rib eye with chips, then the cheeseboard. Hooked up with Eddie and Susan in the stag in Falkland for a few snifters....

Spent Sunday in the dark recovering.
 

Miyagi

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Aug 6, 2008
2,298
5
South Queensferry
Saturday was good, started with work (picking, packing, weeding, hoeing, rotovating) then Seraph's mum came round to give us our second ever night off from the baby. We went out for a meal at the Kingarroch in Craigrothie - scallops, then a rib eye with chips, then the cheeseboard. Hooked up with Eddie and Susan in the stag in Falkland for a few snifters....

Spent Sunday in the dark recovering.

Hahahahahahaha.

That's the best Chinese takeaway I've ever had from that wee place in Falkland.

I identified the unknown plant I saw yesterday as wild teasel thanks to" Brian the Hort" today.

Liam
 

PDA1

Settler
Feb 3, 2011
646
5
Framingham, MA USA
Sunday up at 5 and away to the White Mountains. On the trail at 9 and bagged two 4000 peaks, North & South Hancock. Great day except the final approach was ca. 1000 feet in a half mile. A bit much for these old bones. Rained off and on all day - could have been back in Wales. Today is July 4, so no work, which is just as well as i'm a stiff and sore as a very stiff and sore thing.
@Nonsuch: What is this thing you call "Scottish sunshine" I never saw anything like that when I was there.
 

Toddy

Mod
Mod
Jan 21, 2005
39,133
4,810
S. Lanarkshire
It's been glorious sunshine this weekend :D

Must be rare right enough though, even the Romans commented on the Picts working wonders in the morning and the evening, but in the heat of the day lying in their hut doorways with their feet up.....even back then it was too damned hot for us who aren't used to that big glowing yellow hot thing appearing in the sky :D

cheers,
Toddy
 

Nonsuch

Life Member
Sep 19, 2008
1,862
1
Scotland, looking at mountains
Sunday up at 5 and away to the White Mountains. On the trail at 9 and bagged two 4000 peaks, North & South Hancock. Great day except the final approach was ca. 1000 feet in a half mile. A bit much for these old bones. Rained off and on all day - could have been back in Wales. Today is July 4, so no work, which is just as well as i'm a stiff and sore as a very stiff and sore thing.
@Nonsuch: What is this thing you call "Scottish sunshine" I never saw anything like that when I was there.

It's about as elusive as Nessie, but when it comes out it is truly stunning (everywhere is emerald green from all the rain, even in July, and the air is crystal clear)…and everyone is in a good mood! Round our way there are about 10 days per summer like that.
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,888
2,140
Mercia
Had a great weekend - but it was more than a little warm. Bird watching on Friday, gardening on Saturday (our telegraph tall peas are now 7 foot tall - even with me nibbling on the shoots :)). Sunday I had a fantastic time at a Practical Shotgun match. Needed to reapply suncream after the first four hours :D. The course of fire designer had a great sense of humour - the horseback shooting stage was both hard and popular!


Shooting from a horse (PSG) by British Red, on Flickr

Red
 

Bushwhacker

Banned
Jun 26, 2008
3,882
8
Dorset
Watched the legendary Wurzels playing in a barn on Friday, Tractor show on Saturday with cider-fuelled shindig in the night and Hunt show on Sunday.
The weather made it even better.
 

Andy2112

On a new journey
Jan 4, 2007
1,874
0
West Midlands
Not a particularly exciting weekend but we decided to look for a dog for the family, so on Saturday we went to a local rescue centre to see a 12 month old Lurcher, unfortunately she had bitten a few people in the past which put doubt in my mind so i had to say no :(, she was gorgeous too. The quest continues this weekend when we go to Evesham to see a couple of Jack Russells who are at a rescue centre.
 

Retired Member southey

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Jun 4, 2006
11,098
13
your house!
I very much enjoyed reading about your day, Liam!

Gordy

Me two!

Had a corker on Saturday evening/ Sunday evening both of which helped kick off my wildlife watching/tracking jaunt, just luck spots followed by a bit of alarm call following to get in front of this chap,( pic at full zoom, had the dogs with me so kept a good distance, need to make a camcain)
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then the evening before, as we bumbled into the field this Roe was browsing on the oak on the other side.
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check out my supremely alert Boy! he is just ridged, pointing to the beast! or at least pointing to the beasts poo maybe?

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Cool!
 

pango

Nomad
Feb 10, 2009
380
6
70
Fife
Saturday would have been a write-off had I not taken it into my head to go and spy on my badgers in the evening. The old fella is always a hoot (although I try not to laugh out loud), as he emerges between 9 and 10pm and goes through his habitual "bear necessities" routine against the same tree, then on his back with legs akimbo and not very dignified, dances over some fallen boughs to his next scratching post and then heads off, dead East! Oddly, I've never seen him returning, despite all of the cramped buttocks, dead-legs and resisted fags.

On Sunday night I headed back to a different part of the same ancient woodland -a rare thing in Fife- got a fire going, hanged my hammock and tarp, collected firewood, made a hazel "chair", ate dinner, then sipped a number of miniatures of Glenfiddich with beer chasers and listened to the evening's woodland entertainments, as a couple of Auld Scotch Sangs fae me would have spoiled the ambience!

Wildlife;
A Roe buck emerged suspiciously at the edge of my camp clearing and stood for longer than expected before spotting me and fleeting into the undergrowth
A badger moved around the edge of my fire-glow and I have a strong suspicion it might have been the old fella from a kilometre away.
Tawny Owls hooted in the woods and something that sounded like a p!ssed-off Tawny... a Short Eared Owl? My nerves weren't subjected to that of a Barn Owl.
An immature Great Spotted Woodpecker tapping amongst the trees responded to my poor impersonations... but he wasn't very good at it either. He flitted amongst the trees around my camp before landing about 20 yards away to tear furiously at the sphagnum for a good 3 or 4 minutes. I think he was unhappy and left as I fumbled for my camera.
I wakened in the morning to a Lintie (Linnet) singing in the thicket, what more can you ask?
A Jay did a few fly-pasts in the morning to form a triangular observation zone. I later heard him scolding at something or other in the woods.
A flourish of Long Tailed Tits gave the margins of my clearing a frantic seeing to, accompanied by families of Blue Tits, now they're entertainers.
A couple of Yellowhammers made a guest appearance, along with the usual unidentifiable (for me) Warblers and Pipits.
3 Treecreepers forages on the trunks of birches, hazel and willow, probably a mother and young.
The local Buzzards made their presence known to all.

Unknowns;
After dark, I heard a 1-2 second long, deep throaty rumbling sound, which I at first thought was a trial-bike being sharply revved in the distance. The sound was repeated over about 10 minutes and was coming from a crop of clover 200 yards away. My next thought was Corncrake -which I've never heard personally- but the sound was too deep and they shouldn't be in my neck of the woods anyway. Any suggestions greatly appreciated!

I have in the past witnessed "something" grey darting through/between the trees in hunting mode, something that looks like an oversized sparrowhawk.
Dare I say it...:nono: because that's not supposed to be here either.

All in all, a terrific Sunday night out just a 10 minute drive from home. Ye couldnae beat it wi a stick!

Oh, I just tried to post photos and discovered I don't have that permission. Help?

What is this thing you call "Scottish sunshine" I never saw anything like that when I was there.
I returned to work in India with acute sunburn one June after stupidly falling asleep in Glen Etive following an early morning wander on Ben Starav. As an American work-mate sympathised, "Well who'd a' thunk it?", but it took me quite a while to live that one down!
 
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