A few days away at the start of June was always on the cards
and I had hopes that I would be able to get up to the Yorkshire coast with an
Albatross in mind but it was just too prohibitively expensive so we ended up
heading west and down to the spare caravan with the Outlaws at Dinham Farm near
Wadebridge.
Suffice to say it was a relaxing time away over the Platinum Jubilee but mainly
because the weather did its utmost to preclude almost all but the odd snatched
moments of evening sunshine, panoramic views or amble up a stream.
I love it down here but always feel frustrated that I do not
get more out of it. With rain, drizzle,
wind, low cloud and temperatures barely scraping 15C it at least gave me the
opportunity to finish writing all the words and editing the remaining pictures
for my last three Costa Rica blogs and even starting on the ones you are about to see here!
Please do not be fooled by blue sky pictures!
So the highlights…
A walk out of the breeze at Trago Mills up the River Fowey
as usual did not produce any Dippers (dogs in the river does not help) but in
the sunny spots I found Beautiful Demoiselles on cobalt blue wings, Large Red
and Azure Damselflies and a host of Hoverflies including two that I have not
seen in a while – Eristalis horticola and the imposing Sericomyia silentis.
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Beautiful Demoiselle |
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Beautiful Demoiselle |
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Beautiful Demoiselle |
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Large Red Damselfly |
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Large Red Damselfly |
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Azure Damselfly |
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Sericomyia silentis |
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Cheilosia illustrata |
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Cheilosia impressa |
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Cheilosia variabilis |
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Eristalis horticola |
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Eristalis nemorum |
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Helophilus pendulus |
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Rhododendron |
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Hemlock Water Drop-wort |
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Foxglove |
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Angelica and Wood Avens |
My ambles down the lane at Dinham were somewhat truncated as
the only footpath off it is completely overgrown and deliberately neglected
which leaves me on the road but there were still a few Hoverflies on the
Hemlock Water-Dropwort and Hogweed including Syritta pipiens with the swollen
thighs. I checked the tiny stream at the bottom of the hill and was pleased to
still find Water Crickets there and some tall Figwort in flower.
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Water Cricket |
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Episisyrphus balteatus |
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Episisyrphus balteatus |
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Episisyrphus balteatus |
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Eupeodes corollae |
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Platycheirus scutatus agg |
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Syritta pipiens |
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Empis tessellata |
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Nettle Tap |
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Sarcophaga |
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Scathophaga |
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Yellow Dung Fly - Scathophaga stercoraria |
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Yellow Dung Fly - Scathophaga stercoraria |
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A small Robberfly - think I saw this one near home recently |
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Graphomya maculata |
Nemophora degeerella was found nectaring too but the only moth I saw around the toilet block lights on the camp site was a Common Swift!
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Adela croesella |
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Adela croesella |
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Pammene aurana |
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Fenusa ulmi a sawfly |
Tawny Owls called at night and Blackbirds were the dawn
chorus. I failed to find any Cattle
Egrets but there were lots of Little Egrets down on the Camel. I saw no waders
on the saltmarsh as every time I looked at it there were three black labs
bounding across it.
A poodle southish saw us visit the serene Oriental Garden at
St Mawgan although the local campanologists were having a serious session of
extreme bell ringing at the time. The
pools within the garden still had Giant Pond Skaters and there were Water
Crickets here too. One of the ground cover plants used seems to be a
Begonia similar to the jungle ones of Costa Rica.
I managed one cliff top walk north of Boscastle at The
Strangles which afforded huge views up and down the coast. It was blue and clear and the Thrift shone pink
and the Burnet Roses looked like little fried eggs. A male Kestrel cruised past me at eye level
and a male Wheatear sung from a pinnacle but out to sea there was not one bird
at all.
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Cracking view but there was not a single bird over the sea |
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Burnet Rose |
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Thrift |
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Wheatear |
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Kestrel |
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Cinquefoil |
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Bird's Foot Trefoil |
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Red Campion |
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Speckled Wood |
Boscastle was visited as usual as it has fond memories of
Jinx playing with stones and there was time to then have a look up river from
the car park at the huge banks of Hemlock Water-Dropwort and Hogweed. They were alive with flies and I spent a
happy hour scrutinizing all and sundry.
The Hoverfly list of 26 species was quite impressive by my
own standards and included Scaeva selentica which was a new one for me.
Scaeva pyrastri
Scaeva selenitica
Eupeodes corollae
Eupeodes luniger
Syritta pipiens
Tropidia scita
Eristalis tenax
Eristalis pertinax
Eristalis arbustorum
Eristalis nemorum
Eristalis horticola
Syrphus ribesii
Syrphus torvus
Volucella pellucens
Volucella bombylans
Leucozona lucorum
Merodon equestris
Episyrphus balteatus
Myathropa florea
Platycheirus albimanus
Platycheirus scutatus agg
Rhingia campestris
Cheilosia variabilis
Cheilosia impressa
Cheilosia illustrata
Helophilus pendulus
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Cheilosia impressa |
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Cheilosia variabilis |
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Cheilosia variabilis |
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Eristalis arbustorum |
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Eristalis nemorum |
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Eristalis tenax & Honey Bee |
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Eristalis tenax |
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Eupeodes corollae |
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Helophilus pendulus |
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Leucozona lucorum |
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Merodon equestris
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Merodon equestris |
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Myathropa florea |
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Rhingia campestris |
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Scaeva pyrastri |
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Scaeva selenitica |
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Syritta pipiens |
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Syrphus torvus |
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Volucella pellucens |
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Volucella bombylans |
There were many Sarcs in various sizes and Phil has helped
me sort out a Morellia and Muscid but there were also lots of
Greenbottles. Most however were not
Lucilia but Neomyia and from looking at my pictures most of those I imaged well
enough were N cornicina but with at least two N viridiscens.
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Sarcophaga |
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Sarcophaga |
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Morellia |
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Lucilia sp |
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Neomyia cornicina - my go to guide from Phil Collins |
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Neomyia cornicina |
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Neomyia cornicina |
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Neomyia cornicina |
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Neomyia cornicina |
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Neomyia cornicina |
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Neomyia viridescens - my go to guide from Phil Collins |
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Neomyia viridescens |
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Neomyia viridescens - I counted bristles |
I found one tatty Eudasyphora cyanella (I think) and several
imposing Mesembrina meridiana along with the stilt legged Chrysopilus cristatus
and shiny green Chloromyia formosa.
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Chloromyia formosa |
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Chloromyia formosa
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Pollenia |
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Pollenia |
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Chrysopilus cristatus |
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Eudasyphora cyanella |
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Mesembrina meridiana |
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Mesembrina meridiana |
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Scathophaga stercoraria |
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Sicus ferrugineus |
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Sicus ferrugineus |
There were Dock Bugs and Green Tortoise Beetles on the Oxeye
Daisies and what I am convinced is a very tiny black Tumbling Beetle called Mordellistena
pumila or similar.
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Dock Bugs |
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Green Tortoise Beetle |
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Tumbling Beetle - Mordellistena pumila |
There was a good selection of Bumblebees with Bombus
terrestris, pascuorum, pratorum, lapidarius and hypnorum, a host of Honey Bees,
lots of micros and two quite distinctive ones one of which I think has to be
Colletes succinctus given the location.
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Bombus pascuorum |
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Bombus pratorum |
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Bombus terrestris |
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Bombus terrestris |
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Bombus terrestris |
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Help please |
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Colletes succinctus I think |
Nettle Taps were the only Moth but I did find several cats
of Depressaria daucella (thanks Antony) making silken homes within the
Umbellifer heads. There were very few
Butterflies with a Green Hairstreak being the pick while Rutpela maculata and
the similar but smaller Pachytodes cerambyciformis collecting pollen from the
big heads too.
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Nettle Tap |
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Oedemera nobilis |
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Rutpela maculata - with Fox head! |
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Rutpela maculata |
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Pachytodes cerambyciformis |
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Pachytodes cerambyciformis |
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Bombylius major |
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Dark Bush Cricket |
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Depressaria daucella |
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Depressaria daucella |
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Green Hairstreak |
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Green Hairstreak |
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Peacock |
Wall Pennywort was flowering well just into the woods and I
could smell the remnants of the Ramsons and see the crown like fingers of fresh
Harts Tongue Ferns. Grey Wagtails were on the river which once again was
Dipperless.
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Harts Tongue Ferns |
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Wall Pennywort |
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Sedum album |
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Horsetails |
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Meadow Cranesbill |
The beach at Polzeath is free for parking after 6pm and a
few years back I took some fun sunset surfing images but there was no swell and
just a few paddleboarders trying to make the most of it. It was nice to paddle my feet though in the
rather chilly Atlantic.
The journey home was breezy with scudding clouds with a
couple of Red Kites and a super high Kingfisher over the A30 at Ottery being
the meagre highlights.
Awesome blog, wonderful pictures and beautifully worded
ReplyDeleteLast unknown flower is White Stonecrop, Sedum album. Great mix of fauna/flora.
ReplyDeletemany thanks. - just found the comments!
DeleteSeems you have removed the restrictions on comments which stymied me in the last year or so. Happy to be able to comment and continuing to enjoy your blogs. Hope your career change bears fruit (and $$). Looking forward to even more.
ReplyDeleteSorry, turned them but had no notifications of actual comments happening!
Delete