The Flash and Priorslee Balancing Lake9.0°C > 8.0°C: Sunny intervals between passing showers, one with hail. Fresh westerly breeze gusting strong in showers. Very good visibility except in showers.
[Sunrise: 05:17 BST]
* = a species photographed today
$ = a new species for me in this area
A later start in an unsuccessful attempt to avoid the showers!
I will be away again for a few days watching aircraft (weather permitting)
Priorslee Balancing Lake: 09:20 – 10:00
(115th visit of the year)
Note the later time and a single walk around only.
Bird notes:
- still the seven Greylag Geese goslings doing well.
- the wingbeats of over-flying Mute Swan(s) heard: my view was obscured by trees at the time.
- the pen Mute Swan of the resident pair in no longer visible on her chosen nest site in the reeds. I assume she is still here otherwise I would expect the cob to have departed.
- three broods of Mallard ducklings seen: a single; the well-grown twosome; and a trio. Another of the duck Mallard seen mating.
- just a pair of Tufted Duck.
- no gulls.
- no Grey Heron.
- I did not count the warblers as at the time of my visit many would not have been singing. However:
no Garden Warbler heard.
no Common Whitethroat either though at the time I was near its territory there was a sharp hail shower.
Bird(s) noted flying over here:
- 1? Mute Swan: see notes
- 1 Jackdaw
- 1 Rook
Counts from the lake area:
No doubt some things were sheltering unseen in the reeds
- 2 + 7 (1 brood) Greylag Geese
- 2 Mute Swans: see notes
- *19 (12♂) + 6 (3 broods) Mallard: see notes
- 2 (1♂) Tufted Duck
- no Moorhens
- 15 Coots
- 3 Great Crested Grebes only
- no Grey Heron
Hirundines etc. noted:
- >15 Swifts
- >6 Sand Martins
- *>15 Barn Swallows including a partial leucistic bird
- *>10 House Martins
Warblers not counted
- Chiffchaffs heard
- Reed Warblers heard
- Blackcaps heard
- no Common Whitethroat heard
- no Garden Warbler heard
Noted around the area later:
Spells of sun brought out a few things
Butterflies:
none: surprising in view of the sunny spells
Moths:
none
Bees, wasps etc.:
- *Grey-patched Mining Bee Andrena nitida
- *Common Carder Bee Bombus pascuorum
- *Early Bumblebee Bombus pratorum
- *unidentified ichneumon wasp
Hoverflies:
- Buttercup Blacklet Cheilosia albitarsus
- *Marmalade Hoverfly Episyrphus balteatus
- *Grey-spotted Boxer Platycheirus albimanus [Grey-spotted Sedgesitter or White-footed Hoverfly]
Damsel-/dragon-flies:
- *female Common Blue Damselfly Enallagma cyathigerum [Common Bluet]
Other flies:
- *root-maggot fly Anthomyia procellaris
- *dagger fly Empis tessellata
- Green Bottle Fly Lucilia sp.
- *Muscid fly Phaonia subventa
- Yellow Dung Fly Scathophaga stercoraria
- cranefly Tipula varipennis
- many, many unidentified species
Bugs:
none
Beetles:
- Alder Leaf Beetle Agelastica alni
- 7 Spot Ladybird Coccinella 7-punctata
- *Harlequin Ladybird Harmonia axyridis var. succinea
Flower:
- *Dog Rose Rosa canina agg.
A brood of three Mallard ducklings with their parents. These look at least a week old.
A single duckling with parents. Perhaps slightly younger than the trio?
A very strange-looking Barn Swallow with much white feathering including the tail. Many bird species have a few individuals that show the results of leucism with loss of pigmentation in some feathers. Blackbirds and Carrion Crows are particularly prone to showing white feathers. I do not recall seeing a Barn Swallow like this previously.
Another view.
The may, just may, be the same bird from below. There was a lot happening!
A puzzle: is this the same bird? It show white in the left wing but the tail appears black.
This is that same black-tailed bird (with unusually long streamers) with some pale feathering on the rump.
And again.
A decent count of House Martins today. The last of the true hirundines to arrive in any numbers (Swifts are a completely different family).
A soggy-looking Long-tailed Tit. I could sympathise.
Looking perkier here.
Trying to hide from the hail-shower (as was I) is what I believe to be a Grey-patched Mining Bee
Andrena nitida.
A delightfully scruffy species: an Early Bumblebee Bombus pratorum.
Was it something I said?
A different individual.
It would not come out in to the open. The orange "pile" of hair on the thorax is sufficient to identify this as my first Common Carder Bee Bombus pascuorum of the year.
An unidentified ichneumon wasp
My first Marmalade Hoverfly Episyrphus balteatus of the year and the only one I saw today.
It does not look very "grey spotted" but I am certain this is a Grey-spotted Boxer
Platycheirus albimanus. The spots (six in the male, four in the female - as I discovered yesterday) are too well-separated for the square yellow spots on a male Chequered Hoverfly
Melanostoma scalare.
This a female Common Blue Damselfly
Enallagma cyathigerum . She is successfully hiding the identification mark on the top abdomen segment and it is the layout of the dark and pale areas on the thorax that best identifies her. She may be an immature (teneral) though some females never acquire the blue colouration.
The distinctive pattern on the thorax makes this root-maggot fly
Anthomyia procellaris the easiest of this confusing group to identify.
One of many dagger flies
Empis tessellata today, this one signalling its intention to turn right. I am told you do not have to do this on a car driving test any more!
This is the Muscid fly Phaonia subventa
0513-24-3427p A Harlequin Ladybird
Harmonia axyridis of the form
succinea. Quite what it was doing ten feet up a street lamp pole is unclear.
A Dog Rose
Rosa canina agg.: the "agg." is short for "aggregate". Wild roses freely hybridise and identification of any specimen is hard for specialists.
(Ed Wilson)
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The Flash: 10:10 – 11:50
(112th visit of the year)
A quick canter around ahead of an incoming shower.
Bird notes:
- a pair of the Canada Geese seen with six small goslings
- just the trio of visiting Mute Swans remain.
- no Tufted Duck seen.
- the same two pairs of Coots as yesterday noted were each noted with four well-grown juveniles.
- both Great Crested Grebes were away from the nest platform and staying together. I was unable to determine whether one of them was carrying juveniles on its back.
Bird(s) noted flying over here:
None
Noted on / around the water:
- *16 + 6 (1 brood) Canada Geese
- 4 Greylag Geese
- 5 Mute Swans: (assuming the resident pen is hidden on the nest): see notes
- 26 (23♂) Mallard
- no Tufted Duck
- 4 Moorhens
- 19 + 8 (2 broods) Coots
- *2 Great Crested Grebes: see notes
Hirundines etc. noted:
- 2 House Martins
Warblers noted (the number in brackets refers to birds singing):
- 4 (4) Chiffchaffs
- no Blackcaps
Notes around the area:
Moths:
- *1 Chocolate-tip Clostera curtula
Flies:
- unidentified midges
Paddling too fast in to the distance is the pair of Canada Geese with their six goslings.
It is possible this Great Crested Grebe is sheltering juvenile(s) under the slightly fluffed up feathers on the back.
This Song Thrush was feeding on the ground as I approached and jumped up on the branch.
I stopped and stayed still and it decided I was harmless and carried on.
Different street lamp pole; similar unhelpful position. Another Chocolate-tip moth Clostera curtula
(Ed Wilson)
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2009
Priorslee Lake
Wheatear
(John Isherwood)
2006
Priorslee Lake
2 Ruddy Ducks
(Ed Wilson)