Near Little Round Top, I disturbed another Brown Hare which had been lying in the long grass.
Willows are starting to colonize the middle of the Test marsh and perched in these there were 2 male Reed Buntings. As I made my way towards them, a male Pheasant exploded from the reeds and scared the life out of me! In the distance a Grasshopper Warbler could be heard trilling.



Common Milkwort (Polygala vulgaris), an easily overlooked flower, is growing on the heathland above the Test:


Milkwort is so named because of the false belief that it could increase the milk production in nursing mothers. The scientific name reflects this: Polygala means 'many-milk' in Latin (poly = many + gala = milk).
The Greenside Reservoir is normally frequented by Buckfast-drinking youths and quadbikes, so not really a place to stop for long, unless you want company. At the Southern end there is a dam and a platform extending into the reservoir with a 'crown of thorns' gate.
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I walked through the native tree planting between the Greenside and the Jaw/Cochno Reservoirs. Here I saw a Roe Deer and a Cuckoo. On the ground, from here to the Jaw/Cochno, there were lots of Marsh Violets.
Violets:
In the Kilpatrick Hills there are 3 species of violet & pansy: the Common Dog Violet (Viola riviniana), Marsh Violet (Viola palustris) and Wild Pansy (Viola tricolor).
Marsh Violets (below) have circular leaves and the lower petal is marked with bold, reddish-purple lines. The flower has a short, violet-coloured spur (back of flower). Both leaves and flowers have a waxy, fleshy quality which the Common Dog Violet lacks. This violet grows on marshy, open ground.




In contrast, the Common Dog Violet has pointed, slightly arrow-shaped leaves and the lower petal is white at the innermost edge and marked with fine, blackish-purple lines. The spur is long, paler than the flower and notched. This species grows on grass & moorland but reaches highest densities in woodland.


At the Jaw & Cochno Reservoirs there was the usual flock of Greylag Geese (3). I followed the forestry plantation fire-break from the Jaw to the Kilmannan where I saw another Roe Deer.
The coniferous plantation around the Kilmannan Reservoir has recently been felled and the air was swarming with twittering Swallows. Somewhere nearby, a Common Sandpiper was piping away. The Forestry Commission have built a new bridge across the river that leaves the Eastern side of the Kilmannan, I avoided this churned up area and followed the river upstream where small trees and Gorse bushes line the banks. Sitting on the bank with my binocs, I watched a Chiffchaff picking insects delicately off leaf surfaces.
As I passed the Kilmannan on my way home, I spotted a female Goosander, far out in the middle of the loch.
In the fading light I saw 3 Roe Deer (2 does and a large buck), at Little Round Top.

A pellet of some kind?

This is lovely, I am sitting in a library in London (writing a novel) and wished I had been with you. Beautiful description. Thank you.
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