Wednesday, 21 July 2021

The Chestnut Tree - Glenn Miller

 It was just the way that things go as most of our wanderings seemed to attact Wildlife of the smallest kind, but there are exceptions to every rule. Right Time, Right Place as we moseyed off the flash up the Moth Traps but just in time to watch this

AIRBUS
taxiing for take-off.
SMALL PURPLE BARRED

was first on show and a 'first for the year' so a decent start but followed in quick succession by even better quality in

LANGMAID'S YELLOW UNDERWING
which can present some identification problems, so always seek advice, with
the far more common and frequent
LESSER BROAD-BORDERED YELLOW UNDERWING
PRIVET
on the Heath is now flowering in all directions so no surprises that the leviathan that is
PRIVET HAWK-MOTH
has been caught daily over the past week and of interest might be the
LARVAE
of such a beauty and while we don't do Micro Moths there is, as ever, some exceptions to that rule when we capture the likes of
BOX-TREE MOTH
 while others in the traps included
LARGE AMBER SNAIL
LEMON SLUG
along with a minute
GARDEN SNAIL
while a number of adults were congegating on a
nearby fence post.
Otherwise, it was left to a couple of nervous looking
GREEN SANDPIPERS
clicked
and videoed through the windscreen for fear of flushing them, love the reflections, but then came the highlight of the month a long overdue visit to our dear, dear friend and erstwhile apprentice
CHLOE
in her and her partners very own
WONDERLAND
with firstly the tiniest of
SNAIL
continuing the theme on my wing-mirror,
tiny
FROGS
developing
HORSE CHESTNUTS
(Conkers)
and almost got a full-frontal of this
COMMON DARTER
and very nearly forgetting the
WOOD ANTs 
nesting in the traps.

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