Sparrows and swallows we have known in England but we have encountered some unfamiliar creatures in our Cypriot back garden.
There are sun-loving lizards who sit on the rockery and the wall and then scuttle away; locusts, and praying mantis. We christened one rather splendid preying mantis who had clearly just eaten a sizeable meal the "queen of the bush" as she took up residence in one of the shrubs in the garden. Another built an egg sac on the back of our post box. Come to think of it perhaps it was the same female and she'd previously been digesting her mate! After a couple of months a tribe of weeny mantis emerged.
Some lizards have made it into the house. One lived under the dishwasher for several weeks; we named it Slinky. A gecko, Shrimpy, may still be lurking upstairs providing pest control. Salmon pink and almost translucent with beady dark eyes it was first spotted clinging to the overhang of the top stair.
Other things we've spotted and managed to capture on camera are a big black beetle and a tiny frog with a big leap.
But perhaps the most amazing sight, and the most alarming, was the whip snake. Being a girlie my immediate reaction was of course to shriek, get the children indoors and shut the doors! But once I'd regained my composure and ascertained that snakes found in Cyprus are rarely poisonous to humans I went for a closer look. The snake was in fact in the process of constricting something. I couldn't tell if it was a rodent or a bird.
I really must dig out some facts and useful links for Cyprus wildlife. It has been interesting seeing new things but I do miss the English landscape and particularly the birdsong which is so evocative. I caught a snippet on the CBeebies website of all places the other day of woodland sounds. I want my robins, blackbirds, tits and wood pigeons back!
30 June 2010
05 June 2010
Swallows
Now that most of the sparrows living in our verandah roof have fledged (although we're still finding the odd corpse) our attention has now been grabbed by the swallows. We'd been seeing them flying around and occasionally swooping down to drink from the swimming pool. Then one evening they started showing an uncommon interest in the underside of the verandah roof. We thought they might be after insects but it transpired that they were looking for a nest site.
Last weekend they started building just outside the kitchen window and fascinating viewing it was. The pair worked together, one bringing mud (although in this dry climate it must have been been pretty dry) and the other bringing straw. Given the amount of building materials that were dropped we were surprised how quickly the nest took shape and by Sunday evening they were both sleeping there.
The female is now sitting - with luck in a fortnight or so there should be babies. Watch this space ...
Last weekend they started building just outside the kitchen window and fascinating viewing it was. The pair worked together, one bringing mud (although in this dry climate it must have been been pretty dry) and the other bringing straw. Given the amount of building materials that were dropped we were surprised how quickly the nest took shape and by Sunday evening they were both sleeping there.
The female is now sitting - with luck in a fortnight or so there should be babies. Watch this space ...
03 June 2010
Hot, hot, hot
The temperature is gradually cranking up here, currently in the high 20s C, around 80F. In Limassol we can expect an average temperature of 33 (91) during July and August, and no rain until October. We hit 33 already on Monday! By contrast in Troodos high in the hills the temperature is about 11 degrees lower, quite a contrast for such a small island.
It's amazing how quickly you acclimatise. When I visited in early February it seem positively balmy (well it was, compared with the UK) during the day and was astounded to see so many people in their woolies, but when the temperature doesn't generally drop below 20 degrees for a full six months you start to understand how 12 degrees could feel chilly. My perception and tolerance of heat has already altered and I'm now reasonably comfortable at the current temperature as long as nothing too strenuous is involved.
We obviously get plently of sunshine (in Limassol an average of 9.1 hours per day) but being in the eastern Med it doesn't stay light as late in midsummer. Sunset is around 8.30pm even at the equinox. This has the advantage of both an absence of those really depressing dark winter mornings and the fact that the temperature starts to drop off from late afternoon.
There is a commensurate lack of rain too (an average 18" per annum in Limassol) but when it rains, boy can it rain! I got caught out one day in April with monsoon-like conditions. An hour round trip to collect Elizabeth from school took double the time with a landslip closing the highway and the roads in town churned up and flowing brown.
Some useful links:
It's amazing how quickly you acclimatise. When I visited in early February it seem positively balmy (well it was, compared with the UK) during the day and was astounded to see so many people in their woolies, but when the temperature doesn't generally drop below 20 degrees for a full six months you start to understand how 12 degrees could feel chilly. My perception and tolerance of heat has already altered and I'm now reasonably comfortable at the current temperature as long as nothing too strenuous is involved.
We obviously get plently of sunshine (in Limassol an average of 9.1 hours per day) but being in the eastern Med it doesn't stay light as late in midsummer. Sunset is around 8.30pm even at the equinox. This has the advantage of both an absence of those really depressing dark winter mornings and the fact that the temperature starts to drop off from late afternoon.
There is a commensurate lack of rain too (an average 18" per annum in Limassol) but when it rains, boy can it rain! I got caught out one day in April with monsoon-like conditions. An hour round trip to collect Elizabeth from school took double the time with a landslip closing the highway and the roads in town churned up and flowing brown.
Some useful links:
- Limassol climate averages
- Cyprus climate averages (thank goodness we don't live in Nicosia!)
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