Showing posts with label Buff-tailed Bumble bee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buff-tailed Bumble bee. Show all posts

Friday, 24 March 2017

More insects... and the first daisies


These photos are a bit of a mixed bag, taken in our garden in bursts of sunshine. The wind has been a chilly one, but in sheltered spots, there have been signs of insect life. 


The flowering currant is always a favourite with bees.






The most colourful corner - Flowering Currant and Forsythia




I was delighted to find this little clump of Daisies. May there be many more as the days grow longer. N.B. For those of us in the UK, the clocks change this weekend. 


And a first Dandelion in the garden, emerging round a paving slab.

Saturday, 18 May 2013

Nature Reserves: Bluebells at Arger Fen

I believe this is a Buff-tailed Bumblebee

We had been told that Arger Fen was a good place for bluebells, so we decided to see for ourselves. The reserve, not far from Sudbury in Suffolk, belongs to the Suffolk Wildlife Trust. There were wonderful deep swathes of blue flowers, reminding me of the days long ago in the 1960s when we used to dance 'in and out the dusky bluebells' at nursery school in Kent. These days the flowers are a protected species.


We heard a male Cuckoo calling overhead, and sheltered under a tree to listen. Since the early 1980s, Cuckoo numbers have been in decline for about 30 years, and the bird is now a red list species. Having said that, we have heard more Cuckoos so far this year than in practically all previous years put together. We caught a fleeting glimpse of the male this afternoon as he sped through the trees once his song was over.
It was lovely to smell the Wild Garlic wafting in our direction ...


... and there were plenty of Horsetail appearing in the swampy areas ...


... but the Bluebells stole the show. 



Arger Fen is one of only two woodland sites in the east of England to have wild cherry trees, and I kept a sharp eye out in the hope that I would see them. 






Friday, 15 June 2012

Home Patch (21): This Morning's Visitors

The Chaffinch was chirping noisily from his branch ...
I don't know if he realised he had an audience!
On the subject of finches, you might enjoy Adam Tilt's Garden Bullfinch post here.
The Grey Squirrel was competing for his perch ...
... keeping an eye on the Chaffinch.
A Buff-tailed Bumblebee was busy in the Escallonia ...
... flitting from flower to flower in the gusty wind.
The Dunnock hasn't appeared today so far, but I'm still hoping he will ...

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

Home Patch (10): A Bumblebee ... but which?


I found this sluggish bee in my garden back on 17 April, and it has been puzzling me ever since. I had a hunch that it was a queen, but something about it made me think it was a bit different to the other Buff-tailed Bumbles I had been watching.

I began to think that it was perhaps a Cuckoo Bumblebee, Bombus bohemicus, and visited Stuart's Donegal Wildlife blog for assistance. However, I now have my doubts for various reasons. You can't see the back legs in my photo, and I don't know whether the honey coloured parts in the front legs are signs of pollen. 'My' bee has a central golden band ... so perhaps it is just another Buff-tailed Bumblebee after all.

Now that I have been alerted to the existence of the Cuckoo Bumble, I will be on the look-out for these wily creatures. Do let me know if you can give me an ID for the creature in my photo!

  • Colour guide for identification purposes from the Natural History Museum

Thursday, 12 April 2012

Home Patch (3): Elusive Birds ... and Other Observations

The 'shy' bird was hiding in the budding branches this morning ...

... and I was delighted to catch it on camera, albeit from some distance.

Is it a Dunnock (or here), I wonder?

A Buff-tailed Bumble bee? Possibly a Queen ...

... was enjoying the flowering currant.

Last night I spotted this moth through the window ... just a record shot!

Here is the web, but where is the spider?

There is something exquisite about a drop of water, something akin to 'a world in a grain of sand' ...

These dew drops remind me of a feature on the secret life enclosed in a droplet in a recent WWT Waterlife magazine.

The resident Robin seemed a bit tamer today, and allowed me to take two photos ...

I wonder what my next sighting will be ...
Those who have been reading my recent posts will know that we have recently moved to Suffolk, UK, and that I am exploring the wildlife in our new 'home patch'. I also noticed some (more) 7-spot Ladybirds: these will feature in the next post.