10.0°C > 18.0°C: A few wisps of high cloud. Calm. Very good visibility; less hazy.
Sunrise: 04:50 BST
Priorslee Lake: 04:21 – 05:45// 07:05 – 09:22
I was right to take photos of the huge heads of Giant Hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum). They have now been taken down.
Bird notes:
- Just a lone Swift seen. The one at 04:30 turned out to be a noctule-type bat!
- Family party of Chiffchaffs seen with two very recently-fledged you barely able to stay on their perch.
- A Reed Warbler singing from the Ricoh Blackthorn hedge.
Birds noted flying over / near here:
- 1 Greylag Goose: inbound again
- 9 Greylag Geese: party of seven outbound; two singles inbound
- 1 Grey Heron flew E calling
- 1 Feral Pigeon again
- 5 Wood Pigeons
- 22 Jackdaws again
- 13 Rooks
- 3 Starlings again
Birds noted on the ‘football’ field [Wood Pigeons and Magpies excluded]:
None
Birds noted on the academy playing field [Wood Pigeons and Magpies excluded here too]:
- 2 Jackdaws
The ‘Homing Pigeon’ remained on the roof of the academy throughout
Count of hirundines etc logged:
- 1 Swift
- 4 House Martins
Count of warblers logged (singing birds in brackets):
- 15 (9) Chiffchaffs
- 17 (15) Blackcaps
- 2 (1) Garden Warblers
- 7 (2) Common Whitethroats
- 8 (7) Reed Warblers
Counts from the lake area:
- 2 + 5 Mute Swans
- 2 (1♂) Gadwall: departed (to The Flash?)
- 10 (9♂) Mallard
- 2 (1♂) Tufted Duck: pair arrived and departed
- 11 Great Crested Grebes
- 5 Moorhens again
- 21 + 9 (5 broods) Coots
- 8 Lesser Black-backed Gull: all very worn and scruffy; ages hard to determine. None stayed long
On / around the street lights pre-sunrise again:
Nothing
Insects / other things etc noted later:
I did my second circuit in the opposite direction from ‘normal’. It is more shaded and always produces fewer (but sometimes different) insects.
Butterflies:
- Small Skipper (Thymelicus sylvestris)
- Small Tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae)
Moths:
- Timothy Tortrix (Zelotherses paleana)
Bees / wasps:
- Honey Bee (Apis mellifera)
- Field Cuckoo Bee (Bombus campestris)
- Common Carder Bee (Bombus pascuorum)
- Early Bumblebee (Bombus pratorum)
- Tree Bumblebee (Bombus hypnorum)
- sawfly sp.
Damselflies:
- Azure Damselfly (Coenagrion puella)
- Common Blue Damselfly (Enallagma cyathigerum)
- Blue-tailed Damselfly (Ischnura elegans)
Hoverflies
- Marmalade Hoverfly (Episyrphus balteatus)
- Tapered Drone-fly (Eristalis pertinax)
- Eupeodes luniger
- The Footballer (Helophilus pendulus)
- Leucozona lucorum
- Tropidia scita
Other things:
- A robber fly sp. with prey
- A soldier fly, specifically a Broad Centurian (Chloromyia formosa)
- A few Harlequin Ladybirds (Harmonia axyridis): forms spectabilis and succinea both noted
- Oedemera nobilis (Thick-legged Flower Beetle or Swollen-thighed Beetle)
- 1 noctule-type bat
- 3 Grey Squirrels
Additional plant species recorded in flower for the year at this site:
- Red Dead-nettle (Lamium purpureum)
More high cloud today so a more interesting sunrise.
A different viewpoint. Almost at right angles to my mid-winter sunrise photos.
If the forecast is correct this is the last fine morning for a while and my last chance for this serene grouping of the Mute Swan family.
Only to come across this one observing the scene.
Whereas this one from a different brood still wants to be fed...
... doesn’t it.
What damselflies look like as they are hatching. I am sure experts can ID them from this. I can’t.
With so much white on the body this has to be a Field Cuckoo Bee (Bombus campestris).
As yesterday: ginger thorax, black body and white tail = Tree Bumblebee (Bombus hypnorum).
Not a hoverfly as I originally thought but a soldier fly, specifically a Broad Centurian (Chloromyia formosa). It has a very ‘brassy’ appearance and rather obvious yellow halteres. The eyes are covered short hairs. This is a male: the female (whose eyes do not meet) has a violet-green abdomen.
A close-up of the most open flower at the base of the spike.
(Ed Wilson)
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The Flash: 05:50 – 07:00
(85th visit of the year)
Bird notes:
- Seems as if most of last year’s mixed species goose family are back. Single adult Greylag and Canada Geese and three cross-bred birds on the island together.
- The Canada Geese goslings AWOL again.
- The pair of Gadwall refugees again from the lake where they were earlier but not later.
- One duck Mallard tucked up where I could not see properly. May well have had ducklings with her.
- While I was walking away down squirrel alley a pair of Tufted Duck flew over inbound. Whether this was an additional pair or one of the very restless pairs I had already logged is hard to know.
- One Great Crested Grebe with at least two juveniles tucked up inside fluffed-up back feathers. The other adult busy fishing.
- Some Coot juveniles still in nests and remained uncounted. A new brood of two juveniles noted.
- A Great Spotted Woodpecker calling in squirrel alley. One from the Ricoh area?
- Several Nuthatches around the nest site area with young being fed.
- A Reed Bunting was singing more or less continually from the east side while I was on the west side. Then shut up.
Birds noted flying over / near The Flash:
- 2 Cormorants: singles
- 2 Jackdaws
- 1 Jay
Hirundines etc logged:
- 15 Swifts
- 1 House Martin
Count of warblers logged (singing birds in brackets):
- 6 (5) Chiffchaffs
- 4 (3) Blackcaps
- 1 (1) Reed Warbler
Counts from the water:
- 3 + 7 (1 brood) Mute Swans
- 1 Greylag Goose
- 3 Greylag x Canada Goose
- 22 Canada Geese
- 2 (1♂) Gadwall
- 22 (15♂) + ? (? brood) Mallard
- 4 (2♂) Tufted Duck: but see notes
- 2 + 2? (1 brood) Great Crested Grebes
- 6 + 1 (1 brood) Moorhens
- 16 + 12 (7 broods) Coots: some brood counts incomplete?
Otherwise of note
- caddis fly species on one of the lamps: exact species not determined.
I know I have also done this pair of Gadwall before but the lighting was just so perfect. I gave it another go. The drake at the back is certainly quickly losing his finery.
Had to zoom this in a lot. Just visible are two juveniles on the back of this adult Great Crested Grebe. I guess the reason the adults have been difficult to find these past few days is that both parents have been at the well-hidden nest whilst the eggs hatched.
Gotcha! At last a decent photo of the singing Reed Warbler here.
Then of course it became easy-peasy!
“Was that me that made all that noise?”
The hole in the Ash tree is not their nest hole. A junior Nuthatch on the left gets fed.
Perhaps it didn’t like the look of that morsel?
After some deliberation I have concluded that this rather plain-looking insect is a caddis fly and not a longhorn micro-moth as I originally thought. What appear to be very short front legs are likely the palps that caddis flies use as sensory organs – adults do not feed. As for the species I am stumped. Most show some (confusing) marks on the wings, otherwise the wing venation is usually obvious. Neither is present here here.
(Ed Wilson)
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Between the lake and The Flash:
Noteworthy
- Moorhens heard at both pools
(the vegetation is so overgrown that it is hard to see in to the pools now)
- Great Spotted Woodpecker again
- 1 Blackcap singing at the lower pool
also
- Mottled Pug (Eupithecia exiguata), this time on the roof of the Priorslee Avenue underpass
(Ed Wilson)
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On this day..........
2019Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2018
Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2015
Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2014
Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2006
Priorslee Lake
Cuckoo