Since I've just adopted a camera and it needed testing, I thought I might correct this lack of visual information in some small way.
This first picture is a bit of a lie because it is taken from about 3 inches off the ground. I'm standing in a bog and the conifer tree is next to a small pond in a dip in front of me. Behind me the silver birch scrub has been cleared to restore the heathland and below the line of trees on the horizon you can see a line of flowering gorse. This is about 200 yards from my normal route.
This chestnut pony was in a small herd of about 10 mares. She looks a bit pregnant to me and will likely foal at the end of May or the beginning of June.
This grey is a particularly hairy individual. She has her winter coat. This picture was taken close to my longer route to work a couple of weeks ago.
This is a striking patch of tussocks on the edge of a marsh I pass regularly. I've been meaning to take a closer look and a photograph for ages. These features are the result of years of colonisation by ants that have created raised mounds in the marshy ground so that they can keep their nests dry. The whole area is closely cropped by ponies and deer and develops a unique and fascinating flora.
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