Potter wasp emerging from window frame. Photo by Lucinda KingEvery year, we hear about lots of weird and wonderful places that birds have decided to nest, but birds aren't the only creatures that pick what can seem odd places to build a home.

Last week, while staring out of my window at work (again!) I realised that some sort of wasp was paying particular interest in part of the window frame - going in and out of a hole carrying something.

It was fascinating stuff to watch, and only when the wasp misjudged the hole and spilt what she was carrying on the window sill could I see that it was in fact a little clump of sand.

And how do I know it was a female? Well, after several failed attempts to get a photo, I finally managed to snap a few, and track her down as the nattily named Ancistrocerus parietum, or (easier to say and remember!) as being part of the potter wasp family.

It turns out that it is the female who searches for the nest site, builds the nest and brings in food for her young - namely tasty larvae that she seals in with her eggs so that her young have something to nibble on as they grow!

And true to this description, this week, she has been carrying green caterpillars - as big as her body - into the nest.

Potter wasp on window frame. Photo by Lucinda KingI think it is totally amazing that this wasp not only has the ability to find the caterpillars, but that she also flies back to the nest with them. Surely, this is a feat up there with the weight that ants can carry.

I've got a new respect for these creatures, and it just goes to show that sometimes you don't have to go far to see things that are new and amazing.

I'd love to know if any of you have found nests in unusual places. Please leave me a comment below.

And, if you're interested in getting closer to your garden wildlife, if you join the RSPB before 12 July the joining gift is the RSPB Garden Handbook - perfect the next time you see something a little out of the ordinary!

Get all the latest news fromYnys-hir - the home of BBC Springwatch 2011!

Parents
  • We are lucky enough to have mason bees back in our garden this year.  They have moved into our ladybird box again that we purchased from the RSPB.  The bees cut round disc shapes from leaves and plug up the entrance to the holes.  We were informed last time by someone at the RSPB to take the box in over the winter months and put it back out in March, and sure enough the bees all flew off safely in the Spring.  We managed to get some great photographs of them and their sealed up home.

    Another welcome visitor to our garden this year has been a slow worm.

Comment
  • We are lucky enough to have mason bees back in our garden this year.  They have moved into our ladybird box again that we purchased from the RSPB.  The bees cut round disc shapes from leaves and plug up the entrance to the holes.  We were informed last time by someone at the RSPB to take the box in over the winter months and put it back out in March, and sure enough the bees all flew off safely in the Spring.  We managed to get some great photographs of them and their sealed up home.

    Another welcome visitor to our garden this year has been a slow worm.

Children
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