In spite of changeable weather, sporadic sightings have still continued.
A week ago on Sunday was the last day clear of rain, when on a bike ride I spotted the first red admiral I have seen since early March plus a few whites, although still to find a small white that will pose for the cameras.
Apart from that I found my first garden bumblebee of the season - a queen - rooting around the ground last Friday.
| Garden Bumblebee Queen |
You can just make out the yellow strip straggling abdomen and thorax though the the tail stripe is almost totally invisible.
Since then it has been very hitty-missy but I did manage a few sightings on Tuesday.
Heading into the summerhouse I discovered a small bumblebee battering itself on the glass. It never settled but was easy enough to capture in a bug box, where it perhaps understandably continued to struggle. However I saw enough to identify it as a male early bumblebee. The giveaway was a small orange tip at the tail.
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| Early Bumblebee |
When I left the summerhouse immediately afterwards to check something else I returned to find, comically enough, a buff-tailed bumblebee battering itself against the same pane of glass. This time the bug box served as a rescue mechanism.
Otherwise the supposedly rare red-girdled mining bee put in a lengthy visit (the fourth in total) and a large nomad bee posed perfectly of a leaf of garlic mustard.
| Another Nomad |
As ever, it's hard to identify nomad bees precisely though I would say it seemed different to the one I mentioned in my last post.
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No I'd never heard of the Platycheirus family either. I'm relying on expert testimony here.

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