Viewing posts by Tim
Milland morning walk was cancelled.
Beaten by rain, mud, mud and more mud!
You may not have seen the first batch, more now added
Go to "Gallery" and they are the last item on the drop down list.
Fred Coombes started this walking group - see more below.
No photos exist for that first leap into the dark - this photo is from the second walk on 8th March 1989
Fred Coombes relaxing with fellow walkers at the Duke of Cumberland. Anyone know who these girls are?!
This was Jeff's walk - Thanks to Marian, Maddie, June and Linda for stepping in with a Petworth walk
Walk will now be from the Silvia Beaufoy car park, but we'll meet as usual in Midhurst.
Those great mounds in the park are the work of Yellow Meadow Ants. Usually one queen, they bury the larvae of Chalkhill Blue Butterfies, thus saving them from predators. The colony may extend up to a metre underground.
Ant facts:
Ants and humans are the only creatures that farm other creatures.
Ants are arguably the greatest success story in the history of the animal kingdom.For every human there are about one million ants. In tropical regions; where ants are very common, their weight can exceed that of ground living'vertebrates' (animals with backbones) by up to four times!
The Asian weaver ant can carry weights of more than 100 times their own body weight whilst upside down on a glass! This video explains how.
Few hills on this walk and hopefully not much mud!
It is 1800 years since the walls and gates were first built around the Roman town of Noviomagus Reginorum. Today they are the most intact circuit of Roman town defences in Southern England. More than 80% of the original structure has withstood the test of time and virtually the whole of the circuit is publicly accessible.