In spite of fine weather, butterflies seemed slow to start appearing on the buddleia this year and did not come in substantial numbers until the first week in August. Normally one or two tortoiseshells visit the small bushes in the front garden during July but this year, the first non-white visitor was a comma. In fact small tortoiseshells have not been at all frequent, whereas commas have become considerably more common - up to four at the same time visiting the back garden.
The predominant species besides have been peacock and large white with occasional small white, speckled wood and red admiral. There have also been two flyovers by holly blue and I was quite pleased to identify a single green-veined white, a second brood specimen that could easily be taken for a small white at first glance.
| Comma |
| | Green-veined White |
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It's becoming an annual routine to photograph nymphalidae on the buddleia each year so I'm thinking to do less of it. However, one more irregular occurrence while mowing the lawn nearby was this moth, which I take to be a large yellow underwing.
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Large Yellow Underwing |
Last Sunday I went on another excellent bee walk led by
Charlotte Rankin at the Swedish Bee Garden in Saltwell Park in Gateshead. As well as all the main species of bumblebee, there were a couple of red-tailed cuckoo bees and a vestal/gypsy cuckoo bee and a few minute furrow bees with a greenish body sheen. On checking, there are a vast number of furrow bee species but one that seems more common in our area is the turquoise furrow bee.
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Red-tailed Cuckoo Bee |
With Charlotte's assistance we got into some of the less normal hoverfly species, including the batman hoverfly and swollen-thighed hoverfly and there were even some bee grabbers, flies that attach themselves to bees in flight to lay their eggs in the bee's waist. I had the good fortune to find a colourful example, which from research may well be the four-banded bee grabber. Several of us had never heard of bee grabbers before including myself so I can't claim to be an expert..
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Four-banded bee grabber? |
As we were mostly capturing species in pots for identification, most of the resulting photos unfortunately failed to meet my tough editorial standards.
Lastly I got out for a day's fishing at Brenkley on Wednesday. In an effort to catch regularly, I float fished maggot close to the surface and must have caught 20-30 roach and perch, almost all of them pretty tiny. Meanwhile the leger rod I put out for bigger fish did nothing whatsoever. Apparently a lot of the carp were trying to shelter from the sun under the bridge at the other end of the pond.
I'm losing interest in coarse fishing slowly but surely and think I might try out my late dad's vintage fly fishing gear before winter sets in.
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