Tuesday 13 August 2013

Honey on Monday... Cut-leaved Maples... Evening Bonks.... Woolly 2CV...

A few disjointed notes...

Saw a large raptor try and land in the small willows...
too slim to be a Common Buzzard... but too heavy for the top...
it tried the walnut... for a moment...
saw the tail as it flew on toward the Poplars... not the Black Kite...
managed to get the big 'scope on it... head "too small" for a Buze variable...
it kept stretching its neck out... panning around...
at last, a profile view... it looked like a Honey Buzzard [Pernis apivorus] Bondrée apivore!

The Honey Buzzard has a cuckoo-like profile... but with a hooked beak!
This bird was all brown, no grey head... so probably a juvenile.
Pauline's been hearing a raptor call that she couldn't identify...
need to check the call later.
The local birdbook says that they are presumed to breed here...

With the recent sun everything has warmed up...
so we've got the insects back...
butterflies through this weekend included a Great Banded Grayling...

This is a BIG butterfly... it is difficult to confuse with anything else.

lovely drifting flight... like many large butterflies...
including the almost transparent Flambé [Scarce Swallowtail - I prefer the French name: more descriptive] that I have just seen.
It had no colour and, at first I couldn't work out what it was...
so went to "'avagander" and saw that it had lost all the scales on both wings...
it looked strange, being able to see the lower wings through the upper!!
Wish I'd had camera in hand for that one... sorry reader[s?]!

A few days ago we had something go "bonk" in the evening....
large it was... bigger, bodywise, than a Stag Beetle...
For once Chinnery actually had it identified.... as Susan of LVN confirmed, once I'd sent her the pix.
It was a Longhorn Beetle... Prionus coriarius... no common names [it isn't common]...
the larvae live in the roots of trees...
"surtout les souches!" [Above all the stumps].
Most beetles have an....
"I learnt take-off, I learnt most of level flight... but boredom set in and I bunked off the landing classes!" mode of flying...
and this one was no exception!
It hit the lounge door... stopped flying immediately... and dropped!
Straight into the glass jar that is half full of Kestrel pellets.

Longhorn Beetle [Prionus coriarius]

Jaws designed to mill wood... they are offset like a crossbill's beak.

The door is 96cms wide... the jar it fell into 7cms... a one in fourteen chance...
she [female, Susan reckoned] had obviously been out with the boys when that "how to land, gracefully" class was on!

You can see by the movement that she'd begun to wake up!!
Upside down was the only way I could make her stay still enough to be recorded!
She tried to take off...
it is a Benedicta Mayonnaise jar...
it bulges to about 9cms in the middle...
this allowed her to open her wing-cases and attempt lift off...
but with the wing cases open, she couldn't fly through the opening.
I rescued her, gave her a night in the fridge to slow her down...
then photographed her in the morning.

Free at last... she makes off into a shady corner to await nightfall...
and another "blunder about"... the missing foot didn't seem to hinder her!!


When last in Le Blanc... for their Fête de la Nature...
I saw a very nice cut-leaved Maple that had been planted all over the place...
sometimes, these are nice from seed, but never like the original....
that would have been grown from a cutting.
I collected some of the still slightly green seeds and planted four of them in a pot the next day...
they've come on well... but with a marvellous leaf shape I've never seen in a maple before...

A Leaf cutter cut leaf Maple... styling by beeeeee!

...a leaf cutter bee has had fun trying to confusculate me!!

I also saw my first "recognised" wool carder bee Anthidium sp...
wearing a nappy as described and pictured here in "Days on the Claise"...
must have seen them before... just unaware!
And, on opening the '56 2CV passenger door, I found this.........

Mobile Home?
[or makeup remover]
Carder bee "wool" balls.





Sunday 4 August 2013

Moving pictures....

Regular readers will know that I occasionally use some of my brother's pictures....
but I felt I had to publish this...
now he's into moving pictures...
on the Breckland Express!!
even though it has nothing to do with Aigronne Valley Wildlife....
[although it is famous for the Stone Curlews on one of the Thetford Forest heaths.]

You can find the original on Nick's flickr pages...  the picture next left from this.

All in all a total of five of his pictures were used on this train.
Not bad, methinks... certainly one for the portfolio!!


There is more on the Brecks. including yet at least another of Nick's pix in the header [the one with the light streaming through the trees], here at The Brecks.
For lovers of natural history, I would happily recommend an exploration of this area...
apart from the Ice Age relict pingos on Thomson Common, there are sites where freeze/thaw action toward the end of the last Ice Age created geometric shapes...
mainly hexagons...
in the soil by separating the stones from the soil...
in these areas a different growth occurs on the two types of substrate...
and the resulting shapes can be seen from the air.
This leads to a more open habitat that favours plants that find competition difficult.

06/08/2013... Just discovered that there was only one other photographer involved...
Debbie Harris of 2up Photography...
she gives a fuller account of the launch on her website...
there's a nice shot of Nick in action fouteen pictures down...
he's developed quite a good "image stabilizer" [much like a darts player]...
I think he needs to come and do some raking of the grass here!!


To take a leaf [sic] from Susan of DotC:
Meadow update...
we lost about half of one of the original five "trognes" in the storm that followed one day after the last posting. I managed to cut a way through the rank vegetation, yesterday, with Betsy and found that it is still connected at the root end.

So, this winter, I will cut all the top growth off at an oblique angle and let it regrow as a supplier of small rods... and become a nesting place for the birds.

Almost all paths are re-cut...
and future work noted...
a lot of clearance this winter being one of the priorities...
it is getting really too dark and gloomy up the weir end!!

Butterflies abound.... huge quantities of Gatekeepers are around... also the biggest numbers of Marbled Whites and Clouded Yellows I've seen.... both in the teens [visible at any one time].
I've not yet managed to photograph the Clouded Yellows...
they only stop and pose when they know I haven't got a camera!!

The huge Sauterelles [Bush Crickets] have arrived in the potager area...
so watch out you Doryphores....
to the Sauterelle, orange means food...
not "yuck"  don't eat.
The Glow-worms are glowing...
saw three the other night...
two were using our white calcaire path as an "amplifier"

I'll post more on all this, but, with the harvest in full swing, watch out for the bigger raptors...
we've had Hen and Montague's Harriers around after hay has been cut....
but, as the rape in the field next door was being cut, a Black Kite was following the combine... swooping to catch rodents that had been pushed into open ground!
And, on the way to Loches, I caught the unmistakable profile of a Booted Eagle heading towards an area being worked!

No pictures of mine... don't want to detract from Nick's picture [as if mine could!!]