Friday, 27 June 2025

Home Comes up Trumps

Barn Owl
Ditto
The biggest garden surprise since the Ring Ouzel on 29 April 2011.  I saw a very pale bird crash land within the privet hedge being mobbed by our nesting Magpie.  I thought it looked like a Barn Owl, but was that possible?  I walked very quietly to the hedge, and found it skulking in the spaces inside.  It can’t have heard me coming until I was almost on top of it.  It walked to an opening and flew out towards the large cross.  This photo was taken a few minutes later while it was ensconced in the Garden of Remembrance.  After a rest it flew towards the neighbour’s fence, from which it toppled into their garden.  They are currently away, so hopefully it would be able to regain its equilibrium before the heavy rain shower 30 minutes later.  As we are within the confines of the city of Hull, its origin is rather a mystery.  I hope it returned there without any further mishap.
White Admiral
On Monday I checked out Chambers Farm Wood, but it was too windy & the sun soon went behind the clouds.  Despite this a few good butterflies were on the wing.  The following day a class member saw a Purple Emperor.
Comma
Ditto
Broad-Bodied Chaser
Field Grasshopper 

Purple Emperor (c) 2025 Paul Green
Silver-Washed Fritillary (c) 2025 Paul Green
White Admiral (c) 2025 Paul Green
On Tuesday we made our first 'spring' visit to an estuarine reedbed.   


On Tuesday we visited an estuarine habitat for the first time this term.  The first hide was the best with an immaculate, though distant Spotted Redshank, a Greenshank, & 3 Green Sandpipers.  A Barn Owl was flying in the distance, but proceeded to get closer until it flew directly in front of the hide.  An immature Bearded Tit cavorted in the reeds long enough for everyone to enjoy the sighting.


We went to the next hide, which is still fairly new.  The best bird here was a female Bittern, which was spotted on a couple of occasions.  The next hides were less rewarding, but we did manage to see most of the usual suspects, including: Marsh Harrier, Pochard, Gadwall, Starling.  We heard, but didn’t spot a Cetti’s Warbler.  

Avocets

Greenshank & Green Sandpiper
Spotted Redshank, Greenshank & Green Sandpipers
Avocets Attacking Other Waders
Ditto
Avocet & Spotted Redshank 
Barn Owl
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Female Bittern
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Sedge Warbler

On Wednesday it was too cloudy for butterflies, so we went to our standard replacement site.  There is always a lot to see here, and we comfortably exceeded 40 species.  The highlights may have been the young LRPs.

Long-tailed Tit
Immature Pied Wagtail
Tufted Duck
Common Tern
Common Tern (c) 2025 Tony Robinson
Ditto
Egyptian Goose
Great Crested Goose
Little Grebe (c) 2025 Tony Robinson
Ditto
Lapwing
Corn Bunting
Corn Bunting (c) 2025 Mike Hind
Meadow Pipit (c) 2025 Mike Hind
Marbled White
Comma (c) 2025 Mike Hind

Thursday saw us on sandy shores once more.  The first thing to hit us were the great number of Swifts, and later, Sand Martins heading south.  A Sedge Warbler sang vociferously and occasionally performed its elliptical aerial dance from the car park.  The first lane wasn’t quite as replete with butterflies, as the previous week, but the lack of sunlight was probably the cause.


The Little Terns were very distant, but we did enjoy closer views of their Sandwich cousins.

Sedge Warbler
House Martin
Immature Whitethroat 
Ditto
Curlew
Avocets
ditto
Sandwich Terns
Ditto
Commas

5-Spot Burnet Moth
Ringlet 
Small Skipper
On Friday we made our final visit to the supermarket.  After 6 previous visits to see the seabirds, I completely forgot to take any photos of the Puffins, Razorbills, Guillemots, Gannets or Fulmars, but we did actually see them.   There was an unusual falcon over the car park, which was originally identified at a distance as a Kestrel by another observer, and later as an immature Peregrine, when it was closer.  It was obviously too big to be a Kestrel and the tail was far too long in proportion to the wings to be a Peregrine.  It has since been identified from photos as a Saker.  My photos are all out of focus.
Shag
Ditto
Ditto
Meadow Pipit
Skylark 
Kittiwake
Linnets - mainly males
Ditto
Stonechat

Ditto
Six-Spot Burnet Moth
Painted Lady
Red Admiral
Roe Deer

This week's moths

21 June

Aleimma Loeftlingiana
Bird-Cherry Ermine
Box-Tree Moth
Celypha Striana
Common Lutestring
Common Rustic
Common Wainscot
Endothenia Gentianaeana
Ditto
Issus Coleoptratus
Marbled Orchard Tortrix
?
?
Mottled Rustic
Ditto
Ringed China-mark
Scalloped Oak
Small Square-spot
The Eighty
The Spectacle
The Uncertain 
Willow Beauty
22 June
Agapeta Hamana
White Satin Moth

Ditto
Summer Chafer
Silver Ground Carpet
Dusky Brocade
Cydia Amplana
Brown Eye-Bright Line
Agapeta Hamana

 25 June

Elephant Hawk Moth

Lackey
Scarlet Tiger
Ditto
Ditto
Swallowtail 
The Uncertain 


26 June
Buff Footman

Buff Ermine
Eana Incanana
Elephant Hawk Moth
Eudonia pallida
Marsh Lance/Marbled Brown
Minor Unknown 
?
Mottled Beauty
Mottled Rustic
Rufous Minor
27 June
The Clay
Common Emerald
Triple-Striped Pug
Green Pug
Large Yellow Underwing
Minor Unknown 
Ditto
Ditto
Pug sp.
A few photos from a class member’s long sojourn in the Algarve.
Sardinian Warbler (c) 2025 HughWood 
Little Egret (c) 2025 Hugh Wood
Ditto