Caroline Gill's Wildlife Record: Suffolk Horizons (and the World beyond her Window)
Showing posts with label Holly Blue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holly Blue. Show all posts
Saturday, 11 April 2020
Butterflies
We were thrilled to have a Green-veined White in the garden yesterday.
We also had a male Brimstone (which I failed to photograph), two Holly Blues (ditto) and this beautiful Peacock. I am continuing to record my sightings on the Butterfly Conservation 'Garden Butterfly Survey'. It will be interesting to see how my list develops. I will post a summary soon of my sightings so far.
Sunday, 12 August 2018
Last Big Butterfly Count of the Season
There was a certain 'early autumn' feel as we set off on our final Big Butterfly Counts of 2018. It wasn't actually raining at that point, but it wasn't exactly sunny either. We decided to visit one of the two Local Nature Reserves near our home as previous visits have produced the Green and White-letter Hairstreak.
There were few white butterflies about; and the Holly Blues, often flitting around the ivy, came top in terms of numbers. We counted a couple of Speckled Woods, a Gatekeeper and a Meadow Brown. Where are all the usual Peacocks and Red Admirals, I wonder? There was no sign of a Comma on the blackberries, which seemed a bit unusual. Today's weather has, of course, to be factored in; but even so ...
Still, a fifteen minute count is a count whether or not a butterfly shows up, so we refused to be too disheartened. We have done more counts than ever this year, and I feel a certain sadness that the counting season for Butterfly Conservation is over. The results will be very interesting.
Labels:
Big Butterfly Count,
Holly Blue,
Home patch,
Speckled Wood
Saturday, 11 August 2018
Lound Lakes, Southwold Beach and A Pair of Late Visitors of the Spiny Kind
I'm a sucker for a boardwalk, and when I read that there was one at Lound Lakes, owned by Essex and Suffolk Water and managed by Suffolk Wildlife Trust, I was keen to go and find it. As it turned out, it was not particularly long (the boardwalk at Wicken Fen is my favourite ... and it has lizards), but it offered good views of one of the lakes and the very active dragonflies. We heard a lot of splashing but failed to see any jumping fish.
This shows the view from the start of the boardwalk ...
We had hoped to see butterflies, and indeed we did see a few. David also spotted this rather handsome Dock Shieldbug ...
Do you think this would be an owl box? I felt the hole was rather small.
The butterfly above is a Meadow Brown and the one below, a Gatekeeper.
The photo above was the view from our picnic bench, looking out across the countryside in this area where Norfolk and Suffolk meet.
Eagle-eyed David (below) spotted this grasshopper (above). Such good camouflage!
I can hardly believe that I saw two more Silver Y moths today. It is proving to be a good year for them.
The butterfly below was very skittish: I was longing to get a photo of it with its wings out, but this opportunity eluded me. It seems to be a Holly Blue from its distinctive underwing dots and dashes. I am guessing it was a male as the black border was hardly noticeable.
We left Lound Lakes in the afternoon and reached Southwold at about 5.30 pm. I have not seen so much sand on the beach before and have certainly never seen such a marked sandbank.
I suppose Saturday is 'change-over' day, but for a warm August afternoon, the beach seemed surprisingly empty (though there were plenty of cars in the carpark).
We visited the beach at Southwold quite a lot during my teenage years, and I have always felt that it is one of the best beaches for pebbles.
I got quite good at identifying some of them at one stage, and am delighted to find that The Pebbles on the Beach: a Spotter's Guide by Clarence Ellis has just been republished by Faber.
I couldn't resist including the next photo: it isn't a colourful pebble, but its markings reminded me of the fossils found on Charmouth beach during the recent BBC4 Beach Live: Jurassic Coast programmes presented by Lucy Cooke, Dan Snow and Niall Strawson, which we have been watching (a month late!) this past week. It also reminded me (well, just a bit) of the Sea Potatoes that have been washed ashore near Penzance.
And just to add at the end of this somewhat rambly and diverse post that when we went out to look at the sky with Perseid showers in mind, not only did we find cloud and rain but also a tiny hedgehog. Thankfully when I went back to look, there was a large adult as well, presumably the mother. I suppose the rain had brought out the slugs ... I didn't want to alarm the youngster with flash photgraphy, so here is a photo of a previous visitor enjoying our garden under cover of darkness ...
Labels:
boardwalk,
hedgehog,
Holly Blue,
Home patch,
Lound Lakes,
pebbles,
Southwold,
SWT
Tuesday, 22 May 2018
Small Butterflies at Sutton Hoo (and a Holly Blue in the Garden)
There were a few butterflies fluttering about at Sutton Hoo, but not in the numbers we had hoped to see. We watched a couple of skittish Speckled Woods, but they didn't pause for the camera. However, Small Coppers always put on a good show despite their tiny size, and there were several about, some of them flying in pairs.
There were no tours round the royal burial mounds, which surprised us on a sunny afternoon, but it was lovely to see the trees back in leaf and blossom.
We had a good view of Woodbridge over the river Deben. You can see all the dandelion clocks in the foreground.
The soil at Sutton Hoo is sandy, and this suits a butterfly that is even smaller, I believe, than the Small Copper, namely the Small Heath. We noticed a few of these exquisite creatures. In some ways the Small Heath resembles the Gatekeeper, but it is much smaller and has one white spot on each forewing instead of a pair.
The Small Copper below looked rather ragged, but perhaps most of the 'marks' are grains of sand as I suspect the adult butterfly had only recently emerged.
It was a joy to hear and watch a couple of Skylarks.
*
21 May 2018
Having enjoyed sightings of the Small Copper and Small Heath at NT Sutton Hoo, it was lovely to find a Holly Blue in our own garden - and one that actually stopped to perch for a few seconds.
If you are in the UK, you might like to vote for your iconic insect on the BugLife site here. I was torn between two in the England list!
Monday, 8 August 2016
Tree Following for July and Early August 2016
Welcome to my Tree Following post for July and early August 2016.
These tree posts form part of a wider project initiated by Lucy Corrander from the Loose and Leafy blog and continued by Pat at The Squirrelbasket.
I am based in Suffolk, UK, where I have been keeping an eye on a Silver birch, B. pendula. I have added in a small Cherry sapling, Prunus avium Sylvia, for my second tree.
You will find the other Tree Follower links by clicking through to the Mr Linky button here ... so do take the chance to have a look at the new posts!
*
Every so often something inspires me to write a short diary post about my trees, so here is one about the Silver Birch ...
Diary for 21 July 2016
Time: 12.46 (afternoon)
Conditions: warm, dry and cloudy
I looked out and saw the mother Magpie with her single offspring. They made their way together to the base of the feeder on the Silver Birch and began pecking around beneath it, giving out the occasional squeaky call. Suddenly a Jay flew in, and landed on the coconut and proceeded to feed. After a few moments, perhaps disturbed by the Magpies, the bird flew off over our fence towards a large oak tree that borders the local nature reserve. I was about to return to my desk when I realised that the Jay had now been joined by a mate (or adolescent offspring), and the two birds disappeared together.
If we have Jays and Magpies rearing young in our neck of the woods, it can hardly bode well for the smaller garden birds, and yet the population of Blue tits and Great tits, in particular, seems healthy at the moment ...
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Jay |
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This post is largely for an odd numbered month (July), so I will only post the sightings seen since the last round-up. My next Tree Following post (August and early September) will include the complete list.
Highlights this month have included the appearance of two new butterflies for my garden record, the Gatekeeper and the Holly Blue. The Gatekeeper made a beeline for the patch of garden around the Cherry Tree. The Holly Blue was spotted in the same patch - but, not surprisingly - on a Holly. I do not expect that my chosen trees had anything to do with its arrival in the garden, but I include this butterfly because it touched down within a metre of the Cherry.
We experienced a 'flying ant day' - pictures here.
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Gatekeeper |
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Holly Blue |
The season is turning fast. Daylight gives way to dusk at about 8.30pm. The first leaves on the Silver Birch are turning yellow. The seedhead catkins are a rich brown.
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First of the turning leaves, Silver Birch, August 2016 |
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Silver Birch (and part of the bird feeder) |
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Silver Birch seeds caught in spider's web on a post |
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Silver Birch - seed cases, August 2016 |
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Cherry tree, 5 August 2016 |
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Cherry tree, holed leaf, 5 August 2016 |
The patch around the Cherry has been weeded, and the little tree has had a growth spurt. I suspect a Leafcutter bee is taking rounded chunks out of its leaves. I rather fear that wasp season is about to begin, and last year we had a few hornets, too ...
Avian sightings
- TFb1 Great Spotted Woodpecker (a male)
- TFb2 Great tit (several, often on feeder)
- TFb3 Long-tailed Tit (large family, including juveniles)
- TFb4 Blackbird (several)
- TFb6 Blue tit (several frequently on feeder, including juveniles)
- TFb7 Robin (the feisty Robin has put in frequent appearances)
- TFb8 Magpie (several)
- TFb9 Wood Pigeon (up to ten perching around the feeder area)
- TFb10 Dunnock (two)
- TFb14 Jay (two)
- TFb21 Chaffinch (one, 5 August 2016)
- TFb23 Collared Dove (a pair, one pecking directly underneath the Silver Birch)
Mammal sighting
- TFm4 Grey Squirrel [Jan/Feb 2016] [Feb/Mar 2016] [Mar/Apr 2016] [Jul/Aug 2016]
Insect sightings
- TFi7 Large White Butterfly [July 2014] [Jul/Aug 2016]
- TFi15 Marmalade Hoverfly [July 2014] [Jul/Aug 2015] [Jul/Aug 2016]
- TFi22 Green bottle flies [August 2014] [May/June 2015] [Jul/Aug 2016]
- TFi23 Ants [August 2014] [Apr/May 2015] [May/June 2015] [Jul/Aug 2015] [Sept/Oct 2015 Acer negundo] [Jun/July 2016] [Jul/Aug 2016]
- TFi28 Unidentified Moth [Nov/Dec 2014] [Feb/Mar 2015] [Jul/Aug 2015] [Sept/Oct 2015]
[Jan/Feb 2016] [June/July 2016] [Jul/Aug 2016] - TFi39 Gatekeeper Butterfly *New* [Jul/Aug 2016]
- TFi40 Holly Blue Butterfly *New* [Jul/Aug 2016]
And finally ...
MY PREVIOUS TREE FOLLOWING POSTS
- June 2016 to July 2016
- May 2016 to June 2016
- April 2016 to May 2016
- March 2016 to April 2016
- February 2016 to March 2016
- January 2016 to February 2016
- December 2015 to January 2016
- November to December 2015
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- November to December 2014
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