This website is provided by the
"Sulehay Volunteer Group" .

Who are they?

Grass Vetchling (Lathyrus nissolia) in Ring Haw fields

Sulehay Nature Reserve

Badger in Sulehay Forest

What to Look Out for . .
in September

The information on this page is intended to highlight specific features within the nature reserve that would be of interest to the visitor.
To provide additional information on a subject, we frequently provide links from this page to webpages produced by other organisations.
Note also that some links take you to websites to listen to recordings of bird sounds. These links will only work if your computer has the necessary audio features.

To view a different period, click on the appropriate link in the table below.
Look out for in:
Jan/Feb March April May Jun/Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec

Interesting Features to be seen in
September
Fruits are now forming on many of the trees and shrubs. You may see crab apples, hazelnuts, acorns, dogwood (black berries in small clusters), elderberries (large clumps of tiny black berries), wild service (small brown berries in clusters), blackberries, maple (small ‘helicopters’), ash (like bunches of keys), old man’s beard (white tufts), spindle fruits (pink and lumpy), hawthorn berries and rose hips. All of these are a food source for animals.

Squirrels are especially fond of hazel nuts and are acrobatic enough to collect nuts from the ends of the branches. Some fruits are buried for later use and those which are forgotten may germinate in the spring.

Jays often bury acorns, while the seeds of blackberries pass through the guts of birds, perhaps to be deposited far away.


In the undergrowth, the bunches of bright red fruits of wild arum show up prominently among the decaying leaves of dog’s mercury. The trailing stems of black bryony also produce bright red fruits. Both of these are poisonous.

This is also the time of year when many types of fungi produce spores in a variety of toadstools, puffballs and other forms.


There are still many insects on the wing. Migrant hawker dragonflies are much in evidence in the clearings, accompanied by large numbers of the smaller ruddy darter. The male ruddy darter . has the red abdomen and the female is an olive green colour.

Butterflies include red admiral and speckled wood in the forest, with some small heath , common blue and small tortoiseshell on the marjoram in the quarry.

Bush crickets and grasshoppers are also abundant.


Mixed flocks of small birds continue to move around the canopy, with tree creepers, tits, nuthatch, goldcrest and warblers all moving along together, keeping in touch with constant calls. Go to the Northamptonshire Wildlife website sound gallery to hear examples of bird calls for many of these species.

Soon these will be joined by migrant redwings from the north, heralding the start of autumn.


This page checked/updated: 8 Aug 2006. Back to top