Sunday, June 30, 2013

Harriet's house

Our martins continue to do well behind the sparrow barrier. Meanwhile swallows have built a nest in the porch of our neighbours and it is now full of hungry mouths. The nest is very similar to a martin's nest but more coarsely built and with much wider access making it much easier for the adults to fly in and out.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

parliament convenes

A great gathering of rooks over the village, maybe to introduce the young to the old.

Flutters and flies


A juvenile chaffinch showing the subtle colouration in the feathers. Unfortunately this juvenile is injured in some way and is unable to do more than flutter away. Below is a hoverfly, one of 276 species identified in Britain but impossible to identify (I think) on the wing.


Tuesday, June 25, 2013

by the church

Summer has arrived and the lanes are full of foxgloves and ox eye daisies.

Monday, June 24, 2013

more from the bee's eye view


one of the smaller flowers in the meadows is eyebright (above), and like everything else this year bastard balm (below) is flowering very late. It is noticeable how similar the basic structure of these meadow flowers is, with a landing pad, and colour coded docking sites.




bee's eye view




The glades and fringes of the meadows were full of cowwheat today but there was no sign of any heath fritillaries. In fact we only saw three miserable meadow browns and a speckled wood in the entire course of a long walk. The meadows are also full of rattle but it has only grown to a few inches above the ground. There were some butterfly orchids (the smaller more fragile 'lesser' variety) and lots of marsh orchids. The structure of the cowwheat flower is fascinating, and the little fur collar on the hood is virtually imperceptible to the naked eye.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

red flags


No further comment required ? The new robber barons are enclosing the land, and the peasants can go starve. Be a banker, or a lawyer, make your money gambling with other people's money, contribute nothing, manufacture nothing, use their money to buy their land, hunt, shoot and fish. Just keep them out. Power only speaks to money.

beetle mania


we came across this group of dor beetles on a track in the conifer woods near Carthamartha. There was no obvious evidence of droppings and the beetles seemed to be producing the moist mud balls by themselves. Some beetles had paired off and were burrowing deeper. Very faint stridulations were audible. Is this common behaviour and what were they doing? I have posted these pictures on Wild about Britain where someone will definitely be able to provide an answer. I feel fairly sure they are mating but I have never seen a collection of these beetles like this before (a colony seems to be the correct collective noun).

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Marting about

In this picture there are at least seven martins flying around this funny little meadow opposite our paddock. Even though it is a dreary, windy, rainy day there were many more very excited birds darting about. I have no idea what they were hunting but they were protected from the wind and rain by a stand of large sycamores. They are very hard to capture on the move in this sort of light.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Ascendant


There is nothing quite like the sound of a skylark, but even with 20/20 vision, an excellent camera and a telephoto lens they are still difficult to see (top picture) but further digital enlargement makes them a bit clearer . This skylark was singing above a field of miscanthus (elephant grass) that was cropped recently so maybe they can use these otherwise barren fields to nest in.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Martinot line update

So far so good. After some hesitation, the martins have completed one nest and are well on the way to finishing the second nest. It sounds as if a martin is sitting in the nest on the right. The pesky (but much loved and well fed) sparrows have not tried to take over the nest or intimidate the martins yet, but we may have to risk life and limb to extend the Martinot line along to the corner of the eaves because as history shows the enemy can always go round the the undefended corner at the top.

udder joy

So that's what milk is really for.