Showing posts with label Inny valley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inny valley. Show all posts
Sunday, September 14, 2014
moulty
Something that caught our eye this morning was seed heads of grass bent over by silk. As can be seen in the bottom picture the cast-off shell of a spider is attached to the web on the outside, and inside the silk cocoon one can see the tips of the legs of the previous owner (I guess) in its new skin. I am not sure whether this is for protection from predators while the exoskeleton hardens or some sort of devious spider trap.
done buzzin
This cold damp bumblebee was found this morning hanging by one foot from a scabious seed head, about to fall stuporose into the meadow grass below and be consumed by the many small predators there-in. Foraging bumblebees often run out of fuel like this especially first thing on colder mornings. In its dopey state it was easy enough to move the bee to a fresh flower head, where it quickly started feeding and refuelling to start another day's work.
Labels:
Inny valley,
insect life,
meadows
Sunday, August 03, 2014
Spot the butterfly
We saw two or three clouded yellows today, this is several weeks earlier than last year. Clouded yellows are usually migrants from southern Europe but I wonder if these are indigenous examples which have managed to breed last year and survived during the very mild winter. The meadow was full of large butterflies today, including these three silver washed fritillaries having a dog fight over Spot.
Labels:
butterflies,
Inny valley
Sunday, June 08, 2014
rainbow days
red, green, yellow and blue, everything is appearing
a tortoiseshell on ragged robin
a small skipper on campion
a female beautiful demoiselle (not that she needs to be told)
a yellow crab spider
the first common blue of the year
and brown, black and white too.
fresh speckled wood
trouble
Labels:
butterflies,
dogs,
Inny valley,
insect life
Sunday, May 04, 2014
Hi Ho Hi Ho Holiday
It's the best day of the year. The bluebell woods are in full bloom. Two Hungarian vizslas from Rezare are ambling over for a chat. The butterflies and damsel flies are out. The sun is shining. What more could one want.
Labels:
Carthamartha,
Inny valley
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Sunday, December 01, 2013
on the first day of winter
Alfie, today's guest dog. I have no idea what he was doing in the top picture, possibly looking for water-fowl or otters, but we had a 2 hour swim and run marathon along the Inny which exhausted the lurchers but not Alfie.
Labels:
dogs,
Inny valley
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Hard though it is to remember, these meadows were full of butterflies only a few months ago (see link). Below is an example of witches' broom, a gall of birch caused by a fungal infection
Monday, September 16, 2013
a strange looking bumblebee, which, even with the help of the Natural History Museum site (see link), I can't identify. It is probably a variant of something common. Only last night we were talking about grey wagtails, and lo and behold there was a small flock of them patrolling on the Inny this morning (the barely visible smudge of yellow on the rocks)
.
Labels:
birds,
Inny valley,
insect life
Sunday, September 01, 2013
15 in one day 2
It was all getting a bit crowded. Bramble and knapweed have almost stopped flowering, and the meadows are full of devil's bit scabeous. The patches of scabeous were covered with a variety of pollinators getting their last top ups of the summer, drunk with nectar they were very docile allowing this sumptuous aerial view of a peacock.
Labels:
butterflies,
Inny valley
15 in one day
We saw 15 species of butterfly today on our walk along the Inny, including several more clouded yellows. They always close their wings at rest, but the top picture shows quite clearly the black edging on the upper surface of the wings of these distinctive butterflies when seen on the wing.
Labels:
butterflies,
Inny valley
Sunday, August 11, 2013
butterfly heaven
the meadows were teeming with butterflies again today including this handsome painted lady, the first one I have seen this year.
Labels:
butterflies,
Inny valley
Thursday, August 01, 2013
something from the dark side
It was butterfly heaven in the meadows today. Above is a peacock feeding on knapweed, showing the stark contrast between its colorful upper wings and dark under wings. Below is a silver washed fritillary.
Labels:
butterflies,
Inny valley
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
agrions
Labels:
butterflies,
Inny valley,
insect life
Sunday, July 14, 2013
Meadow dogs
Hard though it is to believe it has been hot and sunny for almost two weeks now. This is the first spell of decent summer weather we have had since 2005. We spent this morning ambling through the meadows by the river Inny. There were hundreds of meadow browns and ringlets and I spent a long time trying to capture them on a photo to convey some idea of what our meadows are like now. This is the nearest I got (guest dog:- Meg from next door). Apart from one marbled white, a few small whites and some small skippers there were no other species of butterfly despite the warmth. However, at least a kingfisher appeared four times in quick succession, flying towards me and then up and away to give a flash of its brilliant orange breast plumage. The fish were biting, and so were the horse flies. There were several species of dragonfly and damsel fly. Always of course followed by the meadow dogs!
Labels:
butterflies,
dogs,
Inny valley,
meadows
Sunday, June 30, 2013
meadow life
for the first time this year the butterflies are stirring in the meadows. There were dozens of meadow browns (top) and skippers (middle) and the occasional ringlet (bottom), but no sign yet of the bigger and more colourful species, and no painted ladies.
Labels:
butterflies,
Inny valley,
meadows
Sunday, June 09, 2013
wending in the willows
the Inny at its greenest, and a female wide bodied chaser (or libellula) freshly emerged and drying off in the sun
Labels:
dragonflies,
Inny valley,
insect life
Sunday, March 03, 2013
Cornish daffodils
The recent cold dull weather has brought Spring to a grinding halt, but here and there are signs of the slow emergence of the first of our native harbingers of Spring. In the river valleys locally these slender and very beautiful little native daffodils are just starting to flower. Plus common dog.
Labels:
flora,
Inny valley
Monday, February 18, 2013
Inny valley
the Inny valley in late winter, showing the gentle slopes down to the river. The sun is out and the sheep are grazing.
Labels:
Inny valley
Sunday, February 17, 2013
purple nuns
even earlier than usual purple toothwort makes its annual appearance in the woods by the Inny
and an ambi-otic collie (Meg) making a guest appearance
Labels:
dogs,
flora,
Inny valley
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