Doug Shepherd's photos

Track towards East Ayton

Horse Chesnut hanging low

Final resting place

Walking Companion

22 Nov 2024 21 27 90
Nerys - My 12 year old Welsh Cardigan Corgi Like most dogs, she always enjoys a walk in the snow!

Rural ice sculpture (HFF everyone)

A walk under the autumn canopy (1 x PiP)

A little sunlight at last

13 Nov 2024 28 35 159
River Derwent in Forge Valley is sunlit after a overcast and dull morning.

The road, the fence, and the river (HFF everyone)

06 Nov 2024 24 23 112
The road is Seavegate, which runs through Forge Valley for approximately 2.5km, alongside the River Derwent. At the top of the hill the road enters East Ayton and becomes Castlegate.

Woodland Autumn Carpet

A little light on Seavegate Gill

02 Aug 2024 17 19 135
Part of the morning dog walk.

Life goes on.....

Down by the Derwent - (Spot the Heron)

08 Jul 2024 23 26 213
The river Derwent between East and West Ayton. Perhaps better enlarged

Rural HFF Everyone

08 Jul 2024 29 46 192
12/7/24 Might be better enlarged

Himalayan balsam

26 Jun 2024 19 19 144
Beautiful but not welcome The example above was found beside the river Derwent in Forge Valley, North Yorkshire. Introduced to the UK in 1839, Himalayan balsam is now a naturalised plant, found especially on riverbanks (in this case the River Derwent, North Yorkshire) and in waste areas where it has become a problem weed. Himalayan balsam tolerates low light levels and also shades out other vegetation, so gradually impoverishing habitats by killing off other plants.Himalayan balsam is considered an invasive non-native plant and is listed on Schedule 9. Under the provisions made within Schedule 9 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. The flowers of Himalayan balsam produce large amounts of nectar and are therefore very attractive to numerous bee species. Himalayan balsam is a tall growing annual, 2-3m (6-10ft) in height. Between June and October it produces clusters of purplish pink (or rarely white) helmet-shaped flowers. The flowers are followed by seed pods that open explosively when ripe. Each plant can produce up to 800 seeds. These are dispersed widely as the ripe seedpods shoot their seeds up to 7m (22ft) away. Once established in the catchment of a river the seeds, which can remain viable for two years, are transported further afield by water.

Hoverfly gets the gold prize

Eye to eye (1 x PiP)

27 Jun 2024 19 23 141
No idea what it is

1721 items in total