Thursday, 18 July 2024

Lowestoft Life - 17th -18th July 2024

There is just time to squeeze in one last post before I escape to the East Africa tomorrow.  With a bit of sunshine yesterday there was time to head out for a lower Broadland circuit (passing 30 or so Spoonbills and Glossy Ibis on Breydon on the way through) and it held just long enough to have a walk down the track at Ormesby Little Broad.

The sun was on the usual Bramble clump and it spent some time fly watching.  The Eristalis nemorum were still holding sway with many E pertinax around the flowers while what looked like a small Xylota scurried around sap sucking on the leaves.  The name Chalcosyrphus nemorum popped into my head and that is indeed what they were.  They got stroppy with the local Helophilus pendulus and Tropidia scita.

Chalcosyrphus nemorum

Chalcosyrphus nemorum


Anasimyia contracta

Anasimyia contracta

Eristalis pertinax

There were plenty of blue Damselflies once again and two Brown Hawker terrorised the area above the clump while a Willow Emerald was the first of the season for me.


Willow Emerald

Blue-tailed Damselfly

Ruddy Darter

Neoscona adianta - quite a pale one



Rutpela maculata

Big leafhopper sp


Golden Wandering Snail

Red Legged Shieldbug

Lagria hirta


A roving flock contained Goldcrests, Treecreeper, Tits and squeaky Blackcaps while invisible Common Terns called from the broad.

Blackcap


Back at home there were several dinky little Dichrorampha vancouverana around the Yarrow and the females looked to be egg laying.  The Hop is going mad and I am awaiting moth mines but it also severed as a warm up spot for a pair of Small Whites and a rather ragged Comma.  The solitary Whirlygig Beetle is still twirling happily on the pond despite its lack of buddies.

Small Whites

Comma

A Hedgehog in the Wren's garden yesterday evening!



The trap went on and this morning it felt like it was a poorer night but I still had 45 species compared to 61 the night before.  Even now the number of new species is not letting up and over the two nights ten new ones arrived.  Not all were teeny weeny micros and I had three Leopards with their curiously long bodies, a silky White Satin and a sharp Brown Line Bright Eye.

Coleophera alcyonipennella

Coleophera alcyonipennella

Coronet - wow

Cydia fagiglandana

Peppered Moth - intermediate form

Leopard Moth

Leopard Moths

Brown Line Bright Eye.

Crambus pascuella

Buff Arches


Platytes alpinella

Platytes alpinella

Crocosmia Lucifer - appeared in the top bed

Yellow Achillea

Majoram

This stunning Glad just appeared!


Time to get a few more jobs done and the final pack before the journey to Entebbe begins tomorrow.

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