After yet another gardening break...
and we are almost ready for the growing season...
OK...OK... I know it has gone mid-AUGUST...
but the drought and then the heat held us back.
But, on the other hand, we'll be eating food "out of season"....
when it begins to get expensive in the shops...
So any bloggin' has taken a back seat...
We had a marvellous visit, though, at the start of May, by fellow LPO Refugers...
a reunion for LPO members who have declared their patch of land, or balcony...
as a Refuge LPO....
which visits a different persons refuge each year...
and this year, we had been asked to host the day...
with lots to see and lots talked about.... a guided walk around the Refuge...
broken around midday by a picnic lunch, plenty eaten... quite a lot drunk...
and then a great Orchid Walk from Susan of Loire Valley Nature in the afternoon.
The Moorhens decided to nest just beside the bridge this year...
having destroyed the patch of yellow iris...
there is only so much bending and destruction of the leaves that a plant can take!!
But the nest was very visible from the bridge and gave a very nice intro to the site...
and, for a change, had local naturalists... whispering!!
At the six egg stage... she finally laid nine. Five survived through the early days and were split 2 & 3 amongst the adults. |
Then Pauline led the group around the meadow using her new chariot!!
The day was nice, weatherwise... and plenty of wildlife seen...
and we even river-dipped...
with a net!
Pauline introducing the visitors to the meadow... the raised side bar of "The Chariot" can be seen on the right. |
Lunch was had.... and on the way to the orchids, we stopped on the 'flatlands' above Chaumassay to see if we could spot the larks that frequent the fields just there... and anything else that would be different from the valley fauna... and were treated to a wonderful exhibition by a male Hen Harrier... both quartering the fields and.... new for me... trying to flush small birds from the treetops.
As there has been a "vole crash" locally, I am presuming that this 'out of the ordinary' behaviour is a little observed method of hunting when times are tight.
The walk proved interesting...with a number of oddities spotted... the best for me, though, was discovering the very strange larva of a Bloody-nosed Beetle [Timarcha tenebricosa] le Crache-sang.... a "Jabba the Hutt" type of critter....
anyway...
here's a load of pictures from the day.
A "nest" of Peacock caterpillars on a nettle plant |
Susan of Loire Valley Nature giving a talk on the orchids at Chaumassay.... before leading a walk along the road and up through the woods to the right. |
Two colour shades of the Monkey Orchid [Orchis simia] Orchis singe... first, a reasonably normal version... |
....then a hypochromatic version. Hypochromatic means lacking in colour.... and this one is very pale... but you can see a tinge of pink. |
Then it was single file up the hill into the woods. |
And a male Crab Spider [Synema globosum]... named for the female's very spherical abdomen. This fella is 3 to 4mm from nose to tail... in fact, his front legs, at 4mm long, make him look much larger. |
We also dipped a net in the millstream before lunch and came up with a few goodies...
A couple of mayfly larvae... type again unknown... an Olive or a Dun of some sort... |
And, finally, a Freshwater Shrimp [Gammarus pulex]... along with a very small spire-shelled water snail. |
In other news...
the moth trap has had two airings per month...
middle and end on the "half-moons" as it cannot compete with a full moon...
and the identified species count is now up to 230 micro and macromoths...
with plenty more unidentified... mainly the micros.
My favourite spider, Argiope, is back with a vengance... they seem to be everywhere in the verger and one in the potager... plus some casually spotted in the meadow...
And the bief [millstream] has been declared out of bounds to fishermen... it has become a nursery for truitelles... baby trout.
More on all this in future posts....
1 comment:
What a great day! I wonder if you have the rare edible snails whether you have also different species of glow worms that use it as larval food? Amelia
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