There is the hard news full of fear and fright and then there is the soft news. Today it is the Charlcombe Lane Toads that provide the happy news. It is their spring time of massing once more at the ponds to follow the annual ritual of mating. Volunteers go up to the lane and help the toads and frogs also across the lane to safety from passing cars and once more this little haven of protection fulfils its duty to the natural world. The lane is closed down for 6 weeks.
My son and I dug two ponds in the Bath garden many years ago. The first one was smallish and it was hard work, we left the rubber sheeting inside the dug out pond folded over. Next morning I came down and flicked the sheeting over and there inside were two newts waiting for the water. The valley had at one time had a stream running through and somehow the newts must have understood the meaning of the hole we had dug.
This pond gave great pleasure, frogs came down to mate and we had tadpoles swimming around, until, tiny as your thumb, small frogs would appear in the grass. It is not all sweetness and light though, occasionally one would find a drowned female frog, the instance of rape in the frog world was wretched, as males piled onto the poor female.
Damselflies and dragonflies clung to the iris leaves in the summer, and once the miracle of rebirth, as a chrysalis hanging on, slowly gave birth to a dragonfly as I sat there on the stones we had surrounded the pond with. The second pond was larger and wider, also shallow and the goldfish had young in it, though of course the heron was a visitor to the ponds in search of a tasty snack.
Golden eyed dragonfly emerging
Creating a garden for the many creatures that should be allowed to occupy it. 2008


