Amorous foxes
Read more about these gorgeous creatures in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Amorous foxes
Sprinklings of history, a smidgen of genealogy, a dash of art, a dusting of architecture, & lashings of Nature, all mixed together with my eccentric fascinations
Amorous foxes
Read more about these gorgeous creatures in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Amorous foxes
Lesser emperor
Read more about this stunning unusual dragonfly in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Lesser emperor
I've written about Brits and their beach huts on this blog before, back in June 2019, so I won't rehash here what I've said before; you can read that for yourselves if you're interested by clicking on the link above. Suffice to say that the concept of the beach hut is alive and well – one might even say thriving – in the Dorset seaside town of Weymouth.
In that previous blog I wrote: 'My eye is drawn to the design of the different huts and their wonderful vibrant colours, and the way they sit in the land- or town-scape. They are very photogenic, and I hope to find more to photograph.' Well, now I have and here they are....
Greenhill Gardens, on Weymouth beach front, is home to two separate and very different areas of beach hut constructions. The earliest, most imposing and most unusual is the two-storey building containing a total of 45 beach chalets, 31 on the ground level – the earliest part of the building, and an additional 14 on the second level (according to the English Heritage website – I didn't actually count them). You can read a brief summary of the interesting story behind their construction on the Greenhill Gardens website.
The gardens also contain a further two single-storey terraces of huts, colourfully painted and located in a slightly elevated, well-maintained garden setting. For more comprehensive detail on the actual buildings and the reasons they are Grade-II listed, here's a link to the entry on the Historic England website.
This final grouping of beach huts is set to the north of the Greenhill Gardens huts, and appears to be a more modern construction that includes a shallow pool in front. Though my photographs don't show any of the huts in use, that is simply because I wanted to avoid invading people's privacy – many of the huts were in use during my three visits to Weymouth this past summer.
A Common tern up close
Read more about this stunning bird in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: A Common tern up close. There's even a video with this one.
Sanderlings, sand runners
Read more about super-cute sand-scurrying
Sanderlings in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Sanderlings, sand runners
Though I've not published any architectural posts on this blog for some time, I haven't stopped looking at the unique and unusual features I see around me, especially now that I am venturing away from home for short breaks in different locations.
One of those locations is Weymouth, a seaside town on the south coast of Dorset, where I've mostly been enjoying the excellent opportunities for viewing wildlife that are available in the local area. However, I quickly realised that Weymouth was an interesting town that deserved more of my attention and I was delighted, when I walked along a different route to one of the local nature reserves and took a closer look as I passed this church, to notice the magnificent gargoyles adorning the side of the impressive building.
This is the Church of St John the Evangelist, known locally and on its own website, simply as St John's. The history section on that website says the church was built between 1850 and 1854, and has been restored several times since then, initially in 1883, again in 1960, and it underwent major work in 1985.
The church is Grade 2* listed, so there's a full description on the Historic England website. Not surprisingly for this location, just a few miles from the Isle of Portland, the church was constructed from 'coursed and square Portland stone with cream ashlar dressings'. Though the gargoyles are mentioned ('on the E side there is a large carved gargoyle figure at the outlet from the central valley to the transept' – the gargoyle pictured in the photographs above, and 'large stone gargoyles at the chancel end' - shown below), there is no explanation of their features or significance.
Like most gargoyles, these creatures are fantastical beasts, a weird combination of human and animal characteristics that are likely just products of the stone carver's imagination but which probably also held some meaning for local Christians. Many gargoyles are thought to represent demons, others evil-doers, who have sinned and been consigned to hell fire and damnation; all are probably intended as a warning to impious members of the congregation not to the stray from the path of righteousness. Though decorative, gargoyles also have a practical function, helping to funnel rainwater away from the building to protect the masonry from damage and erosion.
If you ever get to Weymouth for a visit, try to tear yourself away from its many seaside attractions and walk the short distance east along The Esplanade for a look at the superb gargoyles adorning the side of St John's.
Spider: Agalenatea redii
Read more about this handsome arachnid in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Spider: Agalenatea redii
Grey seal
Read more about my Grey seal sighting in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Finally, a Grey seal
Smart Magpies
Read more about these very intelligent
birds in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Smart Magpies
Leafhopper: Graphocephala fennahi
Read more about this stunning leafhopper –
and see what colour it really is – in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Leafhopper: Graphocephala fennahi
Red-veined darter
Read more about this stunning dragonfly –
and see if it really does have red veins – in my daily nature post on
earthstar.blog: Red-veined darter
Chalkhill blues
Read more about these gorgeous butterflies and see a slideshow of photos of them and their unique environment in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Chalkhill blues
Weevil: Curculio
glandium
Read
more about this darling little weevil in my daily nature post on
earthstar.blog: Weevil: Curculio glandium
Parent bug mother and eggs
Read more about this beautiful British
shieldbug in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Parent bug mother and eggs
Grebe vs eel
Read more about this tussle between a Great
crested grebe and an eel, and find out who won the battle, in my daily nature
post on earthstar.blog: Grebe vs eel
An exuberance of Marbled whites
Read more about, and enjoy my photo slide
show of, this beautiful butterfly, in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: An exuberance of Marbled whites
Ruby-tailed wasp
If you want to see this stunning little wasp in full technicolour, check out my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Ruby-tailed wasp
Foxes in the garden
Read more about this stunning Fox, and see its whole family at play, in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Foxes in the garden
Lifer: Norfolk Hawker
Read more about my sightings of this magnificent new-to-me dragonfly in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Lifer: Norfolk Hawker
Meet Chrysotoxum cautum, one of the five large hoverflies that feature in one of this week's daily nature posts on earthstar.blog. Click the link to find out more about the Five big hovers.
Read more about this stunning caterpillar, and those of other species, in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Cool cats, 2
Cacopsylla ambigua
Read more about this member of the jumping plant lice family in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Cacopsylla ambigua
Scribbled wingwaver
Read more about this stunning little fly with the most wonderful name in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Scribbled wingwaver
The Mocha
Read more about this gorgeous moth, The Mocha, in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Anyone for a mocha?
A Wasp beetle
Read more about this wasp-mimicking beetle in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: A Wasp beetle
Fine streaked bugkins
Read more about this Miris striatus nymph in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Fine streaked bugkins
Leafminers: Elachista cinereopunctella
Read more about these leaf-mining moth
larvae in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Leafminers: Elachista cinereopunctella
Mining bees
Read more about the Andrenidae mining bees in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Mining bees
Peacocks aplenty
Feast in the beauty of Peacock butterflies in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Peacocks aplenty
Starlings and bee-flies
Read more about Starlings and bee-flies in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog: Starlings and bee-flies
Happy Spring!
Read more about the profusion of butterflies I spotted during a walk to celebrate the vernal equinox in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Happy Spring!
Mating Toads
Read more about mating Toads in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Toads having a moment
Zebra spider
Read more about this cute little spider in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Zebra spider
Water vole
Read more about this Water vole in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: First Water vole of the year
Rook pair-bonding behaviour
Read more about Rook behaviour, and see a
bonus video, in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Rook pair-bonding behaviour
Velvet shanks
Read more about this fungus and the tree it's growing on in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Velvet shanks and a Wych elm
First hoverflies
Read more about my first two hoverflies of
2025 in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: First hoverflies
Read more about these unusual fungi in my
daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Fluted bird's nest fungi
Marsh tit
Read more about this rare bird in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Marsh tit Monday
Read more about local weather phenomena in
my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog: Cold weather snaps
Black-throated diver (or loon)
Read more about this stunning bird in my daily nature posts on earthstar.blog : Black-throated divers
Vapourer moth cocoon and eggs
Read more about it in my daily nature post on earthstar.blog : Vapourer cocoon and eggs