Notes on nature

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Blackberrying

You know it's autumn when blackberries gleam in the hedgerows. What better symbol is there of harvest and times of plenty in the countryside? Around The Lodge, blackberries are eagerly awaited by creatures of all shapes and sizes...

Birds are perhaps the most obvious consumers of brambles. Thrushes and warblers love them, the sugars in the berries being easily converted to fat which will fuel their migration. You might see them gobbling up fruit, or perhaps spot the aftermath - messy birds with berry juice smeared around their beaks, or bright purple or pink droppings left behind.

On our lunchtime stroll yesterday, Lucinda and I stopped at several bramble patches to watch the diners. Along with the wasps and bees, butterflies were also partaking of the purply-black feast. We watched a vivid orange comma butterfly sipping delicately at a blackberry; closer inspection after it had flown off showed where its tongue left the berry looking deflated.

Smaller beings also enjoy the fruits of the bramble bush. Old folklore says that you shouldn't pick blackberries after St Michaelmas Day  - 29 September - because the devil spits on them, but the real culprit is the flesh fly, whose saliva makes the fruit go squishy. 

Though they're strictly carnivorous, dragonflies seem to congregate around bramble bushes, too. Southern-facing bushes appear to grow the best, juiciest berries and dragonflies appreciate a nice, warm resting spot, so perhaps it's just a coincidence.

The berries draw in plenty of insect life - dragonfly fodder - and the thorns mean they can perch safely away from predators. Common darters and migrant hawkers are the most common species at the moment, but last week I pushed my way through a bed of nettles to get a closer look at a fantastic brown hawker. Ouch!

Of course, we couldn't resist sampling a few blackberries ourselves. The nicest-looking ones are always just out of reach of human hands, but the birds and insects deserve them more than we do.

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Posted by Katie Fuller at 15:26 on 3 September 2008.  11 comments

Comments

Ray Lock
Posted on Friday, 26 September 2008 at 13:47
Not only birds enjoy blackberries. Our dogs over the years have always got excited when the berries are ripe, and, no doubt, because of their sense of smell choose ony the sweetest.
Janey
Posted on Friday, 26 September 2008 at 15:19

My neighbour's lovely honesuckle spills into my garden and I was surprised to notice last autumn loads of blackbirds eating the little black berries that appear on honeysuckle at this time of year - I didn't think they were particularly edible. Janey St Albans

Katie Fuller
Posted on Friday, 26 September 2008 at 17:06

Thanks for your comments. I'm shamefully ignorant about plants, but I always thought that the black bits on honeysuckle at this time of year were the middle bits of the red berries. Birds love eating the berries, insects love the flowers and honeysuckle provides useful cover all year, so what's not to like? So if any plant gurus are out there...

Crimlis
Posted on Friday, 26 September 2008 at 21:01
I always leave the hard cut of the Honeysuckle till the Spring, because so many birds love the berries. I knew there was a pair of typically shy Bullfinches around & was well & truly rewarded a couple of weeks ago... as I stood in the greenhouse, they feasted on the berries, not 4 feet away from me... what a beautiful sight!!!! And such a treat to be So close to them!!
Sylvia Hetherington
Posted on Friday, 26 September 2008 at 23:26
We used to have one cow who on the home for milking used to munch away at the blackberries. She was the only one who used to stop - the rest didn't seem interested.
Vicky Robinson
Posted on Saturday, 27 September 2008 at 14:56
Definately not just the birds eating blackberries in my garden. I have loads of blackberries overhanging a beck at the bottom of my garden and whilst carefully picking some I heard a rustle and looked up to find myself face to face with a young rat! I'm not sure who was most shocked! We both backed away carefully and I now make more noise when going down there!
nettie_hawkins
Posted on Sunday, 28 September 2008 at 9:58
I used to walk a spaniel first cross dog called Tipsy, on the Isles of Scilly. She would pick blackberries using her teeth to snap them off and appeared to enjoy them no end.
Penelope Reeves
Posted on Monday, 29 September 2008 at 19:00
I was out for a walk last week and came across a mouse or young rat on a small branch happily munching away at some blackberries. I managed to get quite close without disturbing him from his feast.
Eve Bloomer
Posted on Friday, 3 October 2008 at 12:38
We had 3 dogs, the oldist would pick blackberry's genly, the next one would just grap a mouthfull, thorns, the lot! but the youngest waits to be fed the blackberry's. Unfortunately the older dogs have both gone the blackberry fields in the sky, but younger still waits paitently to fed her treat.
JemNick
Posted on Sunday, 5 October 2008 at 14:19

I was down at Titchfield Haven, in Hampshire last weekend and spotted a Moorhen working its way across a blackberry bush, plucking berries as it went.

andy james
Posted on Wednesday, 8 October 2008 at 22:15
I watched 2 horses gobbling down blackberrys today andy

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