Thursday, 3 September 2020

There Was an Old Lady Who Lived in a Shoe - Nusery Rhyme

As if the season hadn’t already started off on a ‘bright note’, with
Dave and all, it seemed like it was destined to continue on opening the first
Moth Trap
to find another ‘Vulcan’ by the name of
 OLD LADY
 Common enough, but valued on capture by your average Moth'er
(unmarried or otherwise)
it does have rather a strange characteristic known as 
ESTIVATION
which in the true sense of the word is a prolonged torpor or dormancy 
(also effecting some other insects, fish, or amphibian) during a hot or dry period.
In this instance, when the Insects emerge from the cacoon, they congregate in groups
until the time / temperature is right to take to the wing fully!
 However, we were soon distracted from that with the merriment subsiding as recovering the
Bund Trap
for inspection, there lay the body of our
WOOD PIGEON
(Squab)
with no signes of predation or other misadventure there was
but a single loose feather?? On picking it up, for dispossal, it was found to be
deceptively heavy?
Ever Onward
and while the Heath traps were not overbourne with Insects there were welcome appearaces of
 FEATHERED GOTHIC
 along with
 AUTUMNAL RUSTIC
 both like the ancient female
'first's of the year'.
At the Gravel Pit there were but a pair of
 MALLARD
and while nothing to get overly excited about
one ½ of them was an adult male
looking as though interested in a
 'bit of nonesense, nudge - nudge, wink - wink'
and not seen in this plumage here for a number of weeks now!
Driving along the Solar Panel Fence-line towards the Heath
 there was an encounter with this 
 unusually obliging
 ROE-BUCK
 before finding the Heath
shrouded by fine mist.
There we found but a single
still not full adult
 ROBIN
 With all days being unpredictable
we live for the odd one that proves to be
 BLISTERING!
Maybe Manana - Adios Amigo's.

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