|
Kestrel (c) Bark |
The moor is looking even more fresh and lush than it did
last week, and last week it had looked wonderful. It was warm and humid and the
standing water in the ditches and the
scrapes has been topped up again.
Grasses are tall and setting seed across the
main fields, brambles are starting to flower, and the hedges are spangled through
with wild roses that range in colour from pure white through to deepest pink.
At the reedbed the fresh new phragmites has finally made its way through and
over the top of last year’s dry reeds.
|
Young Blackcap and Robin (C) Bark |
There was still birdsong to be heard as I arrived in the carpark
field. Chiffchaff, Willow Warbler and Blackcap were going strong and as I
walked along the bridleway Sedge and Reed Warblers were advertising their
presence. There were several Cuckoos calling and we watched one, presumably a
female, sitting on top of one of the reedbed willows searching for a careless
Reed Warbler to parasitise. Several times Cuckoos perched up in the oak trees
behind the first screen calling intermittently.
|
Cuckoo in the oak (c) Bark |
A pair of Ravens cronked their way directly over my head on
Sunday morning. Their flight was not direct and purposeful, they tumbled and chased each other in what looked to be a mixture of display and sheer exuberance.
There were a couple of both Lapwing
and Redshank chicks around the scrape on Greenaway’s.
|
Lapwing chick and Snipe (c) Bark |
As the summer progresses,
we should be seeing some muddy margins from the first screen, which should
encourage passage waders. Last week a pair of Black-tailed Godwits called in
briefly.
|
Black tailed Godwits (c) Norman Smith |
At the second screen there are still several Common Tern chicks
showing on the tern raft. The adult birds are coming in and out with fish and
although somewhat diminished they will still fledge some juveniles. There was one
on Sunday that has almost learned to fly although it could only manage to flutter
up vertically a couple of feet before parachuting back down.
|
Adult Common Tern (c) Mark Chivers |
There is one Hobby that is taking up a regular perch on a
fence in the middle of Greenaway’s. By mid-morning this weekend it was up and
about chasing down dragonflies, skimming low over the ditches almost
disappearing at times below the height of the grasses.
|
Long Tailed Tit (c) Bark |
In the hedgerows and in the carpark field there are now frequent
mixed parties of young birds feeding together, taking advantage of the mutual
security that many eyes offer. There are still some family parties to be seen, where
the adults are feeding newly fledged chicks out in the bushes.
|
Marbled White Small Tortoiseshell and Painted Lady (c) Bark |
The sun has brought on butterflies in good numbers. There were
Small Tortoiseshells and a couple of Painted Ladies nectaring on the flowering privet
along the bridleway. Along the Roman Road there were Speckled Woods and a few Large
Skippers, in Long Meadow there were pristine newly emerged Marbled Whites.
There were a number of orangey day-flying moths near the first screen that
frustratingly failed to sit out anywhere that would give a clear view, I
managed just one useable picture, they may be some kind of Carpet moth…… any answers?
|
Mystery moth (c) bark |
Yellow Shell. A common day-flyer
ReplyDelete