With not a “rain-drop falling on my head”, a welcome cloud covered sky, temperature which all enthusiasts of our kind just hope for it was only the ‘wind’ that was putting a Mocha on it, so we took a precautionary Alka-Seltzer.
of the month and by definition the year, with just a brief look as to how such creatures might be named!
Many moths have been given the name of the person who first identified them as a new species in this country, for example, that above, named after A. J. Dewick, who trapped moths in Essex and caught the first one in the UK at Bradwell-on-Sea in that county in October 1951. (Plusia is a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family.)
Additionally, we had potted an un-recognised specimen which would surely qualify as f.f.y. had it not escaped and disappeared behind the pillows on the bunk. We see a 'night-light' being left on to entice it out of cover. Otherwise, things still look rosy as during that process c2
commuted from the Garden Pond
En-Route
to S.P.C. 13 we were pleased to connect with one of the pair of nesting
and within, for the first time we spotted the
With the traps laying bare there in the Main Compound we took our daily look at the
Late Bronze Age Tumulii
It having been Sunday, the only day we are allowed entry to the
Eco Recycling Works
for safety's sake, up to 300 vehicles a day, we hoped and expected to find
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