Eventually the weather had to perk up, resulting in an increase in activity both in the garden and elsewhere.
One of the first signs of this about ten days ago was finding a large number of nomad bees swarming around my forget-me-nots. I've never seen so many together and hardly any were actually settling, so a bit of a scunner.
I was fairly comfortable identifying Gooden's nomad bee and in subsequent days reckoned I'd identified male and female Panzer's nomad bees, one of which also turned up (I think) at Bolam Lake on Friday.
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The presumed female I caught in a bug box at home had entirely red and black bands on the underside, which tallied with a photo on the internet.
For reasons that are hard to define too closely, I'm not convinced that this is a panzer's. Perhaps it's a bit too large, particularly in the thorax area. So I started to wonder about flavous nomad as the nearest alternative but a bit of research show's that Marsham's and Kirkby's nomad bees are possible locally. So I'm now unsure about nomad bees with any red markings...
... unless it's Gwynne's Mining Bee, or something completely different?
After careful consideration, I think chocolate mining bee. I saw one last year I believe.
Okay the tail looks a bit weird but I got a really good look at the double stripe around the waist. You can just about make it out.
Then, just as I was turning to go back to the car, someone someone spotted on osprey flying close overhead with a large fish between its claws.
Then much more recently, this item turned up and also fell victim to brief imprisonment the bug box.
Nomad Bee |
For reasons that are hard to define too closely, I'm not convinced that this is a panzer's. Perhaps it's a bit too large, particularly in the thorax area. So I started to wonder about flavous nomad as the nearest alternative but a bit of research show's that Marsham's and Kirkby's nomad bees are possible locally. So I'm now unsure about nomad bees with any red markings...
Also, as there are so many nomad bees, where are the mining bees they predate?
Also confusing has been the continuing lack of butterflies settling in the garden. The couple that have were both green-veined whites but I had to take a bike trip along the Tyne before I could get a snap of an orange tip - a rather bedraggled female.
Now orange tips are everywhere including five in the garden yesterday, but still not settling or only briefly.
One clear certainty is that the red mason bee is back in big numbers and the wee bug hotel (more like a bug B&B really) is doing a roaring trade.
Red Mason Bees
I was also fairly confident of identifying a Hawthorn Mining |Bee at Bolam Lake...
Hawthorn Mining Bee |
... unless it's Gwynne's Mining Bee, or something completely different?
For a few days now, I've puzzled over this small bee that landed on a californian poppy:
Chocolate Mining Bee |
After careful consideration, I think chocolate mining bee. I saw one last year I believe.
And again on bees, I definitely saw a garden bumblebee the other day.
Garden Bumblebee |
Okay the tail looks a bit weird but I got a really good look at the double stripe around the waist. You can just about make it out.
Lastly on a quick tour of a few lakes in Northumberland, it really looked like our small group was not going to see anything beyond standards like tufted duck, canada goose, common tern and great crested grebe.
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Dazed and confused indeed!
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