
Before we got to Sudley, we crossed the grassy central reservation between Templemore and Rathmore Avenues, which merge southwards into Brodie Avenue. A group of trees called the Liverpool Thorn Collection grow there, various rare relatives of the Hawthorn (Crataegus sp.) and Medlar (Mespilus sp.). There is nothing to see at this time of year, we need to be there for the flowers or berries, but we noted some new planting along the central path. One was a Field Maple Acer campestre variety ‘Elegant’. There were a also a couple of Turkish Hazels Corylus colerna, which grow into symmetrical trees with brown catkins and very florid spiky bracts around the nuts.

It wasn’t too cold, but we still needed our hats and gloves. It was overcast, with drizzle promised but it held off. It was what the weather forecasters call anticyclonic gloom. We climbed the field of Mossley Hill Athletic Club to the sound of bells from Mossley Hill Church. Sudley House is a Victorian merchant’s house and grounds in south Liverpool, built in 1821 by people with connections to the slave trade, but bought in 1882 by ship-owner George Holt, who was also an art collector. When his surviving unmarried daughter Emma (a pioneer of women’s education) died in 1944 she left the house to Liverpool Council on condition that the grounds were to be used as a public park, and that her father’s art collection was not dispersed. It is now part of National Museums, Liverpool.
In the grounds we heard a Blackbird, Great Tit, and some Parakeets. Magpies and Wood Pigeons lurked around. Daffodils were still shooting up, but not quite open yet, but there was a good display of snowdrops.

On the lawn east of the house is a big old Tulip Tree, which had one branch broken off a few years ago. There didn’t seem to be many cones on it, so didn’t it flower last summer? Is it sick?

There was a signboard which mentioned the Eight Oaks of Mossley Hill. They were planted to mark Liverpool’s 800th birthday in 2007, counting from King John’s charter in 1207. There was indeed a cluster of young Oaks south of the house, but they should be nearly 20 years old by now, and these don’t look old enough. The signboard is quite vague about their position.

There is also supposed to be a Crab Apple Collection, but that was even harder to locate. But we were happy to find Hazel catkins out.

A Great Spotted Woodpecker was drumming quite close to us but we didn’t see it until it flew off. We also spotted six or seven Ring-necked Parakeets in a cluster, all looking down as us, but they took fright at the sight of a camera! On the edge of the field behind the walled garden is a Larch I have noted before. They aren’t common this far south. Now I look closely at the little cones, about an inch across, I wonder if it isn’t the European Larch Larix decidua at all. Is it a Japanese Larch Larix kaempferi ? The cone scales on a Japanese Larch are “recurved” meaning they turn out, so that the cones look like tiny opening roses. That’s what these look like.

As we left via Mossley Hill church, we looked to see if there were any signs of Peregrine Falcons, which sometimes nest here. No, nothing doing.

Public transport details: Bus 80A from Liverpool ONE bus station at 10.10, arriving Rose Lane / Templemore Avenue at 10.35. Returned on bus 61B from Elmswood Road / North Mossley Hill Road at 2.20, changing at 2.25 to other buses at Mather Avenue / Rose Lane. I got an 86A to town at 2.29.
Next week we plan to go to West Kirby, where there are some uncommon birds lingering (Scaup, Merganser), and we hope they don’t move off this week. Meet Central Station at 10.00 sharp.
Anyone is welcome to come out with the Sunday Group. It is not strictly part of the MNA, although it has several overlapping members. We go out by public transport to local parks, woods and nature reserves all over Merseyside, and occasionally further afield. We are mostly pensioners, so the day is free on our bus passes, and we enjoy fresh air, a laugh and a joke, a slow amble in pleasant surroundings and sometimes we even look at the wildlife!
If you want to join a Sunday Group walk, pack lunch, a flask, waterproofs, binoculars if you have them, a waterproof pad to sit on if we have to have lunch on the grass or a wet bench (A garden kneeler? A newspaper in a plastic bag?), and wear stout shoes or walking boots. We are usually back in Liverpool City Centre by 3pm at the latest.
If you are interested in the wildlife of the north-west of England and would like to join the walks and coach trips run by the Merseyside Naturalists’ Association, see the main MNA website www.mnapage.info for details of our programme and how to join us.





























































































