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A Feeling of Africa


Saturday, 13 September 2025

I walk with ... beauty


Beauty before me, I walk with.
Beauty behind me, I walk with.
Beauty above me, I walk with.
Beauty below me, I walk with.
Beauty all around me, I walk with.
—Navajo Night Chant

Camera : Canon EOS 550D
Taken in my garden at my wildlife pond (Tarlton, Gauteng, South Africa)

Southern masked-weaver, male – Ploceus velatus – surveying his domain from a rock at my wildlife pond.

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Wednesday, 10 September 2025

Red Bishop

 

W&N Watercolour on Visual 140gsm

Feeding the birds in the winter is a wonderful activity. Your feathered friends will appreciate your efforts as food is scarce especially at that time of the year. This is the Red Bishop (Euplectes orix) (Male) – his nest-building is absolutely masterful and he spends a lot of time hanging from the nest, his wings shivering in anticipation as the female hops from perch to perch, deciding whether to have a closer look or not.

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Saturday, 6 September 2025

Velvet Spider (Eresidae)


This black Velvet Spider had lived in the bark of an old log in my previous garden in Gauteng for approximately 2 years and she let me coax her out for a photographic session every now and then. These spiders are robust and deliberate in the way that they walk and she even allows me to gently stroke her abdomen and thorax, which is covered in thick, smooth, velvety hairs.


The velvet spiders (family Eresidae) are a small group (about 100 species in 10 genera) of almost totally Old World spiders (exception: a few species are known from Brazil). The most commonly seen genera are Gandanameno and Dresserus to which the common name velvet spider applies more specifically.




Velvet spiders are found under rocks or bark resting in a sheet of dense white silk and are often confused with baboon spiders. They can live up to 5 years. Free living but rarely leave the safety of their webs. Even though these spiders can be large in size (up to 18mm) they very rarely bite. Not much is known about the affects of their venom. It is highly unlikely that this spider’s venom is of importance to humans. 


Wednesday, 3 September 2025

Listen to the Guinea Fowl

W&N watercolour on DalerRowney 220gsm heavy-duty sketching paper. 

The Helmeted Guinea Fowl is an African family of insect and seed-eating, ground-nesting birds resembling partridges, but with featherless heads and spangled grey plumage. They are the ultimate low-cost, chemical-free pest control and if your garden is already established and can withstand the scratching, you'll have a healthy and pest-free garden. And be rewarded with some wonderful antics from these lovely birds. We used to have a lot of these lovely birds passing through our property, but sadly, due to progress and the area becoming very built-up, I am seeing fewer and fewer of them.