Friday, April 12, 2013
oil beetle
we seem to be a local hot spot for the violet oil beetle. It likes this habitat of grass, wild flowers and leaf mould to be found on the edge of glades and woody hedgerows. This is a male, and he was warming up in the sun. Given their very complicated life cycle (qv, and link) it is amazing that they seem so common around here.
Labels:
insect life
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Pest (or pet), the lack of growth in the grass is driving the local warren inhabitants back into our gardens.
Labels:
wildlife
getting together
birds are busy pairing up ready for the breeding season. Male and female robins look very similar. They pair up in late winter/early spring. The female chases the male until he accepts her but then he cements the relationship by feeding her, often on the ground. Male and female bullfinches are strikingly different and much more secretive. They are described as 'sedentary' and rarely move far from their local patch.
Saturday, April 06, 2013
Thursday, April 04, 2013
more excitement
first it's long tailed tits, and then it's red wings in the paddock. They are another of our winter migrant visitors, and normally they have left for Scandinavia by April. The cold dry weather seems to be upsetting these natural rhythms but enhancing the bird watcher's daily enjoyment.
Labels:
birds
relativity goes tits up
Our neighbours all report seeing long tailed tits regularly in their gardens but they seem to avoid our feeders (too full of hungry sparrows?) so it was very pleasing to see one (on the frozen apple tree) for the first time today.
two suggested universal laws of nature:-
1. Buy any garden furniture or barbecue equipment after 1st March and it will rain incessantly until September.
2. Put some fertiliser and weed killer on a grass lawn and it will not rain again for several months.
Clearly these two laws must interact, and this would suggest that you should only buy garden furniture a day or so after fertilising the lawn, or conversely fertilising the lawn several hours after buying garden furniture. This may be one of those higher dimensional problems with a solution in an alternative universe.
Labels:
birds,
philosophy,
weather
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