The 1st August was another grey day – not that
it has been cold and I had a quick half hour down at the North Denes Net Posts
searching for insects. There were plenty
of Field and Meadow Grasshoppers in the swathes of Yarrow, Dittander and Sea
Radish that abounds here.
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Field Grasshopper |
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Meadow Grasshopper |
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Field Grasshopper |
I found a couple of Long-winged Coneheads including a
strangely coloured bronzy buff one.
There were not many Butterflies around and no early chats on the posts
but I did snap a couple of micro moths.
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Aethes smeathmanniana |
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Dichroampha vancouverana |
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Long-winged Conehead |
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Wild Radish |
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Dittander |
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Field Bindweed |
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Fat Hen |
A quick look at the sea produced no terns at all but a
constant stream of Kittiwakes going both ways and a few gulls loafing on the
groynes. One tiny juvenile Lesser
Black-backed Gulls caught my eye for not only being very small but also being
incredibly slim and attenuated.
I know that there is a lot of size variation but I have
bever seen one quite like this and I pondered as to whether it could have been
a juvenile Baltic (L fuscus fuscus) especially as there have already been
juvenile Caspians along this stretch of the coast already? Enquiries on line suggested that there is no
way currently to separate the races of juveniles.
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juvenile Lesser Black-backed Gull mmm... |
Mothing in the garden was very poor with a Red Underwing
being the best although it escaped my clutches!
Antony had better luck and added a few more to my list including Small
Rivulet and Citron Plume from his garden and Oblique Striped that he had reared
out from eggs.
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Flame Shoulder |
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A very pale Turnip |
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Citron Plume |
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Lathronympha strigana |
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Oblique Striped |
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Small Rivulet |
The 6th August saw me on Wren Chicken duty where
a Volucella inanis was my first of the year and reminded me that I had see a
Volucella zonaria in my own garden on the 2nd. I then took myself down to Walberswick for
the short walk down to the spot where the Zitting Cisticola had been bouncing
around for a few days.
I have a very pragmatic take on some birds. Zitters are one of those. They zit, the bounce, they occasionally land
in view, the bounce again, they zit again – and repeat but I do like them and
so ambled down to the spot. I stopped
50m short of the group of birders who where looking the other way and promptly
heard it singing alongside me much to the delight of the Herts birder I had
walked down with.
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Zitting Cisticola - Chris Darby |
A couple of minutes later it started again and we watched it
for a couple of minutes doing its thing before landing beyond the stream
bund. Seven minutes had elapsed and as I
could not envisage that I would gain anything more and so turned round and
spent a lovely time walking back and looking at the fine display of littoral
flora. There were a few Butterflies but
no Whites landed close enough for further scrutiny but I was pleased to see my
first Lesser Marsh Grasshopper for some time. A lone Whimbrel was with Redshank
on the pools and Common Terns and a couple of Sandwich Terns moved north off
shore.
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Sea Pea |
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Yellow Horned Poppy |
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Sea Spurge |
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Sea Holly |
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Sea Cabbage |
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Bladder Campion |
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Restharrow |
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Bird's Foot Trefoil |
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Whimbrel |
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Lesser Marsh Grasshopper
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From here I headed to Wangford Quarry but most of the quarry edge flora was mostly over with Small Flowered Evening Primrose, Great Mullein and Viper’s Bugloss still putting out some colour. There were very few Butterflies but I was very pleased to find a single Grayling. I think this is the first I have seen inland around here.