On Thursday and Friday we travelled to a site near York. We should have been there next Friday, but the stinking Tour de Yorkshire was going right through the nearest village at lunch time, so the am group wouldn't be able to escape home for hours, and the pm group wouldn't be able to get here.
Willow Warbler
On Friday morning I opened the car door to hear a distant Cuckoo - probably the earliest for several years. Later we saw it fly over a heath, and then over everyone's head as we were almost back at the car park
Record shot of a Cuckoo
Ditto
On Thursday we took the path left through the old airfield. The best bird here was a displaying Willow Warbler. There wasn't as much life as the previous week. However, in the afternoon when we came against to the barren "crop of lawn" we timed things just right to coincide with a small herd of Fallow Deer which were just emerging from the distant conifers. Some record shots are given below. A Red-legged Partridge was much closer on the lawn in the morning.
Fallow Deer
Ditto
There was no sign of the exquisite songsters on the first major heath this week, or of the laughing waffle - although both these species were located on the Friday. However, after lunch we saw one of the strange bee flies, and a plethora of beautifully bejewelled Tiger Beetles. They failed to show on the Friday - it was just too cloudy!
Tiger Beetle
Ditto
Ditto
Tiger Beetles just launching
Tree Pipit - archive photo
The walk around the old brick section was quite uneventful, but we did see and hear the marvellous song flight of a displaying Tree Pipit, and both sessions enjoyed views of a Grass Snake. In the afternoon I actually had my camera with me, so was able to snatch a photo. The pipit was singing from a slightly different area on Friday, but there was no Grass Snake, because of the lack of sun.
Grass Snake
Record Shot of Green Woodpecker
Ditto
Male Kestrel
Lizard
Lizard
On the return journey we had an amazing close view of a Treecreeper, although a Great Spotted Woodpecker, played much harder to get. The same area contained at least 2 Jays early doors, and the morning group saw a Blackcap carrying nesting material.
Other birds: Chiffchaff, Buzzards, Kestrel etc
Treecreeper
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Willow Warbler
Brimstone
Mistle Thrush
Possibly Orange Jelly Lycogala terrestre (c) 2016 Jane Robinson
Ditto
The strange Orange Jelly found by some of the group has been tentatively identified by John Nicholson as Dacrymyces stillatus. Barry Warrington has got back to me with the correct identification: Lycogala terrestre. Barry reports: Your specimen is in its early stages, as it gets older, it darkens to a mucky greyish colour. Thanks, Barry.
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