My activities have been somewhat constrained over the past three weeks for various reasons. Principally I took a tumble from the bike and jarred my shoulder badly but other matters have intruded - shopping for a new car, sorting a minor emergency with the front door, birthday celebration arrangements and getting more involved with the local Amnesty group.
As a result any sightings during the fine weather were restricted to the garden.
I don't know if it made the difference but I changed the contents of one of the feeders so it contains a mixture of suet pellets and peanuts, but recently a couple of rare birds have turned up regularly over the past few days.
Here I am referring to the house sparrow and the common starling:
 | Sparrow |
|  | Starling |
|
Now of course you immediately think that these birds are not rare at all but, as I have surely mentioned before, they rarely turn up in my garden, and now visit repeatedly.
One can only speculate why...
The starling looks on inspection to be a young bird and maybe doesn't know any better. However they frequently appear on the rooftops, including mine, without actually visiting. Sparrows can be seen on a daily basis less than fifty yards from my front door but until now have been totally outnumbered by dunnocks. Perhaps both have been intimidated by the number of jackdaws that turn up and the latter turn up less often as I tend to chase them off. Both species can appear in twos and threes as well as one-offs.
There were also some sightings of bees and butterflies but still quite restricted.
One white that actually settled briefly was a petite male large white, which surprised me a bit as i associate them more with the back end of summer.
The most common visitor continued to be the dark-edged beefly but there were still not so many bees - the odd buff-tailed bumblebee queen or worker and a tree bumblebee. The one new occurrence was a common carder bee. The hairy legs and long whiskers indicate that it is a male.
 |
Common Carder Bee |
Elsewhere locally there have been sightings of mining bees, a red mason bee and one very early green hairstreak.
Now largely recovered, I need to get out more.
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