Upstairs in the museum and the interior showed how impressive it was!
There were loads of statues and amazing mosaic floors.
Another example of a room with a mosaic floor with frescoes on the walls.
Back out into the town the next stop was the Temple of Diana - again restored, but much of the pillars are original stone. I prefer to see restored sites like this, showing how it really looked, than seeing the original stones just lying in place on the ground where they fell over the centuries. What's so interesting about this town is that modern life just goes on around most of these ancient sites. This site is on a modern day road with townspeople and tourists alike just walking and driving past, the former taking no notice, the latter in awe.
The Roman Forum. Ancient town, new town. I love this kind of thing!
The Puente Romano - the Roman bridge.
On the other side of the bridge was this stretch of Roman wall - I have no idea what it is relating to. Also in the collage is an invasive introduced species of terrapin from North America, the Red Eared Slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) and Cormorants sitting on the jetty.
On our walk back to the Moho, we passed the archaeological site of Moreria, which is excavating around the old city walls. I don't know which came first, the modern building or the archaelogical site. I suspect the latter, or there wouldn't be a nice space under the building for the dig.
The site was closed for the day as we walked past so I could only take some photos through the railings.
In this image I have lightened up the shadows so that the interior of the dig shows. There is really quite a large site underneath this building (or buildings).
And there we have the amazing town of Merida! This wasn't the last of our Roman visits during this holiday, but it was certainly the most incredible place we saw. Seeing all these ancient sites in place in the heart of a bustling modern day town made it so much more interesting and somehow easier to visualise how it was two thousand years ago. It was also a healthy day out - we walked about 7kms around the town!
We will certainly be going back to Extremadura as it was a most fascinating region, but the next trip post will come from - Andalucia!
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Monday, 29 April 2024
Wednesday, 24 April 2024
Spain Trip Oct 2023 - Part 4 Merida, Extremadura
Moving further south but still in Extremadura is the town of Merida which is filled with amazing Roman ruins. It was an important town back in the day, called Emerita Augusta and founded in 25 BC in the region known as Lusitania. Water was brought to the city from Roman dams nearby via three aqueducts. This shows the size of the Roman city which was similar to the modern day population of nearly 60,000 people. The site has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993.
Acueducto de los Milagros (Aqueduct of the Miracles) is a remarkable structure, obviously not anywhere near as impressive as the Pont du Gard which is another aqueduct and bridge, but it still has many spans and levels standing. In the picture below is one of the White Stork's nests which are perched up on the top!
I rather wished I had visited this deli shop as we passed by as it looked very interesting.
A model showing the extent of the Roman town in the museum, which we visited later on. Here you can see the following things which we visited: top right outside the city walls is the Aqueduct of Miracles, bottom right are the theatre and the amphitheatre, in the centre are the forum and the Temple of Diana (though I don't know which is which) and on the left, the Roman bridge. The archaelogical site of Moreria is going north from the bridge along the lines of the old city walls.
We first visited the site of the theatre and the amphitheatre. This view is looking at the back of the theatre. There were various copies of statues dotted about; the originals were in the museum.
The amphitheatre. You can see the original seating tiers but there are of course modern stones here and there too - I know that the theatre is used for modern day plays but maybe the amphitheatre is used too.
The theatre - it has been restored in places but many of the stones/pillars are very well preserved.
This mosaic flooring was within the theatre complex and must have been part of a building but I don't recall the name. The walls are painted too.
After a break for lunch we visited the Museum of Roman Art - a modern building that looked rather boring from the outside, but was nothing of the sort on the inside. First we visited the vaults, and on the way down was this well preserved section of Roman road. The building was cleverly built over it.
Inside the vaults it was pretty dark so most of my photos were not worth sharing. There were all sorts of stones, pillars, stone coffins and bits of painted walls like here. I'm not sure if they have been moved from elsewhere - I assume so.
I will continue in the next chapter as we are only halfway through my photos from Merida - and they have been whittled down from well over a hundred as it is!
Acueducto de los Milagros (Aqueduct of the Miracles) is a remarkable structure, obviously not anywhere near as impressive as the Pont du Gard which is another aqueduct and bridge, but it still has many spans and levels standing. In the picture below is one of the White Stork's nests which are perched up on the top!
I rather wished I had visited this deli shop as we passed by as it looked very interesting.
A model showing the extent of the Roman town in the museum, which we visited later on. Here you can see the following things which we visited: top right outside the city walls is the Aqueduct of Miracles, bottom right are the theatre and the amphitheatre, in the centre are the forum and the Temple of Diana (though I don't know which is which) and on the left, the Roman bridge. The archaelogical site of Moreria is going north from the bridge along the lines of the old city walls.
We first visited the site of the theatre and the amphitheatre. This view is looking at the back of the theatre. There were various copies of statues dotted about; the originals were in the museum.
The amphitheatre. You can see the original seating tiers but there are of course modern stones here and there too - I know that the theatre is used for modern day plays but maybe the amphitheatre is used too.
The theatre - it has been restored in places but many of the stones/pillars are very well preserved.
This mosaic flooring was within the theatre complex and must have been part of a building but I don't recall the name. The walls are painted too.
After a break for lunch we visited the Museum of Roman Art - a modern building that looked rather boring from the outside, but was nothing of the sort on the inside. First we visited the vaults, and on the way down was this well preserved section of Roman road. The building was cleverly built over it.
Inside the vaults it was pretty dark so most of my photos were not worth sharing. There were all sorts of stones, pillars, stone coffins and bits of painted walls like here. I'm not sure if they have been moved from elsewhere - I assume so.
I will continue in the next chapter as we are only halfway through my photos from Merida - and they have been whittled down from well over a hundred as it is!
Monday, 15 April 2024
Orchids at home and fresh oothecas found!
I bought some goodies for my little friends in the garden - a butterfly house which is a place for them to shelter when the weather is bad - all you do is add some twigs for them to perch on and put it somewhere sheltered, not in full sun. I'm going to put it up on our shed near the pool. The other is as it says on the label. It comes with pebbles which you put in the bowl then partially fill with water so bees and butterflies can land on the pebbles and have a drink. The reason for the garish yellow colour is because insects are attracted to this colour apparently. I'm going to put it in the nectar bar.
The first wave of orchids has been incredible! I got out and marked every one that I could see before Keith did the first mow of the year in mid March. It looks a bit odd with dozens of yellow labels, but they do the trick! It does take him a lot longer to mow now though. One day the postman came to the door with a parcel and asked what they were for! 😁
Whilst I was outside with my phone I took a few pics of the view - here looking towards the Montagne Noir on the left and the local Malepere hills on the right. Now (a month later) there is yellow here and there from the rape fields.
Moving to the right we are looking in the direction of the Corbieres hills which is the direction of the coast.
By the end of March the first wave of Ophrys sp. orchids had been flowering for a while, but the next wave of orchids' leaves were up, so many of my labels have moved to those ones. The Magnolia had started flowering as well but has many more flowers on now.
Bertie.*** Of course, when I called him gently to get him to look at me, he started walking towards me. 😀
Above and below are Early Spider Ochids (Ophrys sphegodes), which the vast majority in the lawn are.
And this is a Sombre (or Dingy) Spider Orchid (Ophrys fusca).
Last week I noticed a Yellow Bee Orchid (Ophrys lutea) up on a high bank beside one of our neighbour's properties, so I couldn't get a very good photo. We had quite a few in the garden last year, so I kept checking. A few days ago I suddenly found 25 of them in our front lawn!
Just up the road on the banks and verges the Lady Orchids (Orchis purpurea) have started flowering. We don't have any in our garden, so I am willing them to move in our direction!
I noticed some also in a neighbour's front garden, which had been recently mown. These orchids are smaller, so have managed to cope with being mown but still managing to flower!
I counted about 50 here! This is just a part of their front garden - it's rather large. The brother in law of the owners who lives next door mows it with a proper tractor.
Now onto the Praying Mantises. An exciting find - live oothecas! K discovered them, three, attached to the underside of the drain cover beside the pool patio! Now, there is a possibility that some or even all have been parasitised, but I will keep an eye out and hope for the best. They are supposed to hatch in the spring when the temperature is at least 17C.
Different shapes - some longer than others.
Everything changes so quickly in spring, doesn't it? It's hard to be up to date with spring posts!
*** I never told you about Hallie. In October she succumbed to the kidney disease that I mentioned last summer and we had to have her put to sleep. I didn't feel like saying anything at the time, and it's never felt the right time in any other post really. But I'm mentioning it now just because I've posted pics of the boy cats recently. 💔💔💔
The first wave of orchids has been incredible! I got out and marked every one that I could see before Keith did the first mow of the year in mid March. It looks a bit odd with dozens of yellow labels, but they do the trick! It does take him a lot longer to mow now though. One day the postman came to the door with a parcel and asked what they were for! 😁
Whilst I was outside with my phone I took a few pics of the view - here looking towards the Montagne Noir on the left and the local Malepere hills on the right. Now (a month later) there is yellow here and there from the rape fields.
Moving to the right we are looking in the direction of the Corbieres hills which is the direction of the coast.
By the end of March the first wave of Ophrys sp. orchids had been flowering for a while, but the next wave of orchids' leaves were up, so many of my labels have moved to those ones. The Magnolia had started flowering as well but has many more flowers on now.
Bertie.*** Of course, when I called him gently to get him to look at me, he started walking towards me. 😀
Above and below are Early Spider Ochids (Ophrys sphegodes), which the vast majority in the lawn are.
And this is a Sombre (or Dingy) Spider Orchid (Ophrys fusca).
Last week I noticed a Yellow Bee Orchid (Ophrys lutea) up on a high bank beside one of our neighbour's properties, so I couldn't get a very good photo. We had quite a few in the garden last year, so I kept checking. A few days ago I suddenly found 25 of them in our front lawn!
Just up the road on the banks and verges the Lady Orchids (Orchis purpurea) have started flowering. We don't have any in our garden, so I am willing them to move in our direction!
I noticed some also in a neighbour's front garden, which had been recently mown. These orchids are smaller, so have managed to cope with being mown but still managing to flower!
I counted about 50 here! This is just a part of their front garden - it's rather large. The brother in law of the owners who lives next door mows it with a proper tractor.
Now onto the Praying Mantises. An exciting find - live oothecas! K discovered them, three, attached to the underside of the drain cover beside the pool patio! Now, there is a possibility that some or even all have been parasitised, but I will keep an eye out and hope for the best. They are supposed to hatch in the spring when the temperature is at least 17C.
Different shapes - some longer than others.
Everything changes so quickly in spring, doesn't it? It's hard to be up to date with spring posts!
*** I never told you about Hallie. In October she succumbed to the kidney disease that I mentioned last summer and we had to have her put to sleep. I didn't feel like saying anything at the time, and it's never felt the right time in any other post really. But I'm mentioning it now just because I've posted pics of the boy cats recently. 💔💔💔
Monday, 8 April 2024
Wildflowers on the Sentier Botanique near Montreal
On the 22nd March, a lovely sunny day when the temperaures had freakily risen to about 25C, we went for a walk to the Sentier Botanique (botanical walk) which is about 12 minutes drive from home. It's a woodland walk in an area where there are many wildflowers, many of which are ones that I am familiar with from northern Europe, but there are also sunny banks which have Mediterranean garrigue plants! Totally weird but it makes it oh so interesting.
Where we park is next to a stream, which I was really surprised to see was dry. It’s been running every time we’ve been here in the past, even in summer the first time we came here. I thought we’d had a wet winter, but obviously still not enough to refill the water table. Worrying times.
First butterfly we saw was my second only Comma since moving here! I didn't get a shot of it though. It's crazy that what I consider a common (garden) butterfly is rarely seen around my new neck of the woods.
The most common flowers out at this time were Celandine, Pulmonaria, Cuckooflower, Greater Stitchwort, Wood Anemone and Vinca. There was also the beginning of the wild cherry blossom and Tree Heathers. Interestingly, not a single orchid was seen.
Cuckooflower or Lady's Smock are the most commonly used common names for this flower (Cardamine pratensis). They are an important food plant of the larvae of the Orange Tip butterfly.
There were plenty of butterflies around, many of which were Orange Tips (Anthocharis cardamines), but it was not surprising given the amount of Cuckooflowers here. They were all very active though, so I was only able to get some butterfly shots by zooming in. No chance of any macros as they didn't stay on a flower for longer than a few seconds!
There were also a lot of these Wood Anemones (Anemonoides nemorosa) on the verges of the path.
We then came to a place where the path either loops around to go back to the car park, or you can walk a bit further on, and down into the valley bottom where there is a little stream (that joins the bigger stream by the parking) and a waterfall. We've not seen much more than mud for the stream and a few drops of water for the waterfall, but this year it was completely dry.
It was heavier shade here and as we descended the temperature noticeably dropped - which was quite nice on this unexpected hot day! It was a bit too dark for my photos (my camera can't cope) so my photos are not sharp and are noisy. But it was nice to see some different plants in this different habitat.
Top left: Anemone hepatica, Top right: Cowslip (Primula veris)
Bottom: A parasitic plant known as Purple Toothwort (Lathraea clandestina) which grows in conditions just like this, near streams in valley bottoms in shade, where it can parasitise the roots of various trees.
We then had to walk all the way back up the steep slope, but thankfully rope handrails had been provided which made it much easier. I don't think I could have got down there without it and it certainly helped pulling myself back up! 😀
Back to the sunlight and we decided to return along the path that we came on, as I recall the return path being less flowery and less interesting. I probably wouldn't have got these butterfly photos if we hadn't stuck to the nicer path.
These are male Brimstones (Gonepteryx rhamni) although we also have Cleopatras here, which are a brighter colour with orange on the forewing. My focus is off on the first photo, but it has focused nicely on the Lungwort (Pulmonaria officinalis) that it is feeding on!
On a Cuckooflower (Cardamine pratensis).
There were Bee Flies buzzing about all over the place. I love these insects! This one is Bombylius major and it's a parasitic insect, laying its eggs near the entrance to where the nests of certain species of solitary wasps and bees are. In fact, what they actually do is, whilst flying, flick their abdomen towards the entrance hole and chuck eggs towards it! Needless to say, only a small amount of larva get into the host nests to eat the larvae and food stores within, but presumably, that is all that is needed.
This is only the third Speckled Wood (Pararge aegeria) that I have seen in over four years here and I actually saw one in our garden last autumn which was a nice surprise! Yet they were the most common butterfly in my last garden in Brittany.
At home, we’ve had an amazing show of the earliest orchids - pics to follow in a later post. I must get this posted.
Happy Spring! 😄
Where we park is next to a stream, which I was really surprised to see was dry. It’s been running every time we’ve been here in the past, even in summer the first time we came here. I thought we’d had a wet winter, but obviously still not enough to refill the water table. Worrying times.
First butterfly we saw was my second only Comma since moving here! I didn't get a shot of it though. It's crazy that what I consider a common (garden) butterfly is rarely seen around my new neck of the woods.
The most common flowers out at this time were Celandine, Pulmonaria, Cuckooflower, Greater Stitchwort, Wood Anemone and Vinca. There was also the beginning of the wild cherry blossom and Tree Heathers. Interestingly, not a single orchid was seen.
Cuckooflower or Lady's Smock are the most commonly used common names for this flower (Cardamine pratensis). They are an important food plant of the larvae of the Orange Tip butterfly.
There were plenty of butterflies around, many of which were Orange Tips (Anthocharis cardamines), but it was not surprising given the amount of Cuckooflowers here. They were all very active though, so I was only able to get some butterfly shots by zooming in. No chance of any macros as they didn't stay on a flower for longer than a few seconds!
There were also a lot of these Wood Anemones (Anemonoides nemorosa) on the verges of the path.
We then came to a place where the path either loops around to go back to the car park, or you can walk a bit further on, and down into the valley bottom where there is a little stream (that joins the bigger stream by the parking) and a waterfall. We've not seen much more than mud for the stream and a few drops of water for the waterfall, but this year it was completely dry.
It was heavier shade here and as we descended the temperature noticeably dropped - which was quite nice on this unexpected hot day! It was a bit too dark for my photos (my camera can't cope) so my photos are not sharp and are noisy. But it was nice to see some different plants in this different habitat.
Top left: Anemone hepatica, Top right: Cowslip (Primula veris)
Bottom: A parasitic plant known as Purple Toothwort (Lathraea clandestina) which grows in conditions just like this, near streams in valley bottoms in shade, where it can parasitise the roots of various trees.
We then had to walk all the way back up the steep slope, but thankfully rope handrails had been provided which made it much easier. I don't think I could have got down there without it and it certainly helped pulling myself back up! 😀
Back to the sunlight and we decided to return along the path that we came on, as I recall the return path being less flowery and less interesting. I probably wouldn't have got these butterfly photos if we hadn't stuck to the nicer path.
These are male Brimstones (Gonepteryx rhamni) although we also have Cleopatras here, which are a brighter colour with orange on the forewing. My focus is off on the first photo, but it has focused nicely on the Lungwort (Pulmonaria officinalis) that it is feeding on!
On a Cuckooflower (Cardamine pratensis).
There were Bee Flies buzzing about all over the place. I love these insects! This one is Bombylius major and it's a parasitic insect, laying its eggs near the entrance to where the nests of certain species of solitary wasps and bees are. In fact, what they actually do is, whilst flying, flick their abdomen towards the entrance hole and chuck eggs towards it! Needless to say, only a small amount of larva get into the host nests to eat the larvae and food stores within, but presumably, that is all that is needed.
This is only the third Speckled Wood (Pararge aegeria) that I have seen in over four years here and I actually saw one in our garden last autumn which was a nice surprise! Yet they were the most common butterfly in my last garden in Brittany.
At home, we’ve had an amazing show of the earliest orchids - pics to follow in a later post. I must get this posted.
Happy Spring! 😄
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