Hello all blog readers – apologies for the absence of blogs over the last week, I have been away on holiday. However, it’s now back to business as usual and my first task this morning was the monthly Wetland Bird Survey (WeBS). It’s a glorious day here, with plenty of birds to see and loads of insects on the wing. Here are this morning’s WeBS results and other highlights –
49 mallard
29 tufted duck
16 gadwall
8 pochard
1 shoveler
55 mute swan – with the year’s first chicks
38 greylag goose
19 canada goose
8 shelduck
102 coot – with the first chicks
4 moorhen
1 grey heron
1 little egret
7 great crested grebe – with the first chick of the year
12 lapwing – one pair with a brood of 3 chicks on phase 3
4 oystercatcher
1 greenshank
8 black-headed gull
1 great black-backed gull
2 common tern
Up to 3 hobby over the visitor trails going after dragonflies, grasshopper warbler reeling from the south western corner of the visitor trail, cuckoo singing from silt lagoon 6 (the reedy one behind the Beach Hut) and a chorus of reed warblers – definitely more than before I went away on holiday.
New insects on the wing today include common blue and red admiral butterflies, the first four-spot chaser of the year, Phyllopertha horticola – the garden chafer and a lovely specimen of Pyrochroa serraticornis – the red headed cardinal beetle. The grasslands are starting to look smashing as well, with several species in flower now including grass vetchling, bird’s-foot trefoil, common vetch, smooth tare, ox-eye daisy, ragged robin and yellow rattle.
I will do I am a member of the Newark Photographic Society and they like the natural history shots named correct Thank you very much I will get a rare 1 soon for you