The world has become so much more colourful just in the last week. Honesty flowers and the bright yellow Marsh Marigolds are so bright that if you look at them in direct sunlight it makes your eyes run.
Tuesday, 30 April 2013
Monday, 29 April 2013
Flowering Redcurrant
The smell of the redcurrant is my favourite spring smell. Not obviously flowery it's got a distinct fruitiness to it. I'm happy to see some of the Tawny Mining Bees on these flowers,
also one of their favourites.
Friday, 26 April 2013
The Comma
Yesterday's warm, sunny afternoon brought out butterflies. I watched this Comma chase away a Holly Blue butterfly. He seemed very territorial about the flowering redcurrant leaf he kept returning to.
Commas get their names from a small, white, comma-shaped mark on the underside of each hind wing. Sometimes hard to see because they usually settle with their wings open, but I was lucky this time.
Thursday, 25 April 2013
Thrushes
Yesterday I saw both sorts of thrush in the park. They are quite easy to tell apart.
Mistle thrushes have a grey head and neck and round spots on their chest.
The Song thrush is much browner, smaller and has upside down heart-shaped spots on it's chest.
Wednesday, 24 April 2013
The Jackdaw's Nest
Spring seems to have lasted three days, now it feels like summer. Butterflies are beginning to appear, Brimstones, Holly Blues and Commas and birds are busy nesting. I found some very noisy jackdaws who had made a home in a dead tree. They had managed to find one with two floors. They were coming and going through both holes.
Monday, 22 April 2013
Tawny Mining Bee
A little row of holes in the ground give away the presence of the Tawny Mining Bee. The beautiful deep orange-brown female comes and goes from one of the nests.
The bees like to visit gooseberry and currant flowers between April and June.
So lovely to see some insects again. Summer is on the way.
Friday, 19 April 2013
Sausages
Fine Feather Press had a morning out at a farm. The piglets were entertaining. But when they were asleep in a line they looked like sausages with ears. Oh dear.
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