Flooded Meadows at Old Amersham

Monday, June 29, 2020

21st - 23rd June.

Sunday night set the trail-cam onto the roof of a bird table in the garden hoping to catch the local kestrel or tawny owl using it to perch on. A wood pigeon triggered a 20 second clip at 5.05 Monday morning and it picked up a call that I, Don and a few others can't ID as yet, but we're working on it. Possibly involve getting up early, waiting and hoping it calls again.
Tuesday 23rd and another hot day, went to Pitstone Hill for a good walk before the temperature rose, hoping for butterflies and birds. Heard a corn bunting's jingling song from the car park and later saw another on a fence post. Followed the path along the east edge and on to Aldbury Nowers with large numbers of marbled white very active all the way with a few stopping to feed on knapweed and field scabious. Also large numbers of meadow browns, ringlets & small heaths all very active.
Large skippers feeding on yellow asparagus pea.
Small skippers on bramble flowers... 
... along with a few dark-green fritillaries, so called because of the green underwings.
 
Many skylarks singing in the air and from the tops of bushes.

Meadow pipits feeding young and being chased off by a fine looking male stonechat.
 
A good show of orchids, both pyramidal and common spotted with a few chalk fragrant seen. Stewart.
Images Copyright : Stewart Dennis.

Sunday, June 28, 2020

Grass Snake.
























Set the camera trap next to the Mallards nest, as two of the clutch didn't hatch, my thinking being that they would prove irresistible to a predator, a cat checked them at midnight, a Vole skirted around the edge, with this Grass Snake also sliding by, the eggs still remain untouched.
Don.

Saturday, June 27, 2020

Mallards.

A pair of Mallards bred in the garden for the first time, nesting in vegetation by our pond, on hatching the family only spent a day with us before moving on to the pond at a nearby farm, where within a day all but one of the ducklings had been predated.
Here they are seeking the safety & security of their mother.

Don.

Thursday, June 25, 2020

16th - 21st June.


June 16th and interesting to see how quickly adult starlings start developing winter colour after their breeding season has finished. Had an adult turn up at the feeders this morning with its beak turning black already.
Later  we went to BBOWT Aston Clinton Ragpits to look at the orchids that grow at this small but special site where thousands of orchids grow and flower at this time of year. Amongst the pyramidal, chalk fragrant, common spotted. twayblade, greater butterfly flowering now are a few bee orchids, some caged  for their safety.
 
First marbled white butterfly of the year seen along with large and dingy skippers.

Also a few Roman snail seen, our largest British snail, introduced in the Roman times.
17th June young great spotted woodpeckers coming in regularly to the feeders and also noticing how quickly the moorhen chicks are growing.
21st walked from home to check the violet helleborines growing nearby, looking good and hopefully be flowering soon. Stewart.
Images Copyright : Stewart Dennis.

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Monday, June 22, 2020

Lesser Black - backed Gulls.

It's not often you see Lesser black backed Gulls in Little Missenden in the summer, but then again it's not often you see a good flow of water in the River Misbourne in the summer!!
Don.

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Grand Union Canal.

9th June parked up at Wilstone and walked the farm track/footpath to the Aylesbury Arm of the Grand Union Canal first passing an awful case of fly tipping on the farm track. Nearing the canal damselflies started showing including white-legged
 
blue-tailed.
 At the canal turned right and a juvenile grey wagtail was on far bank. Soon passed a family of newly fledged sedge warbles flying back and forth across the water. Adults catching damselflies to feed their young.  Banded demoiselles and emperor dragonflies seen. The canal was quite busy with narrowboats, a young couple I spoke to as they were navigating a lock had come from North Wales and were heading for the East Coast.
Passed a lock keeper's cottage noticed coupled red-eyed damselflies egg laying on floating vegetation and also female emperors egg laying.
Joined the Grand Union and back to the car passing the reservoirs and a paired pair of broad-bodied chasers and shoals of fry at Wilstone. 
13th on a walk from home, an early ringlet butterfly, past an interesting mix of mares with foals.

Stewart.
Images Copyright : Stewart Dennis.

Friday, June 19, 2020

Early June.

End of May and the starling numbers building in the garden,over forty on occasions. Many family groups flying in, feasting on the fatballs and the ground feeders and using the birdbaths, all squabbling like starlings do.
Good to watch the male bullfinch coming close and the great spotted woodpecker taking away beakfulls of fatball to feed their young.
1st of June another hot day, peacock caterpillars beginning to leave their webs in the nettle tops.
An evening walk and clouds of aphids seen in the sunlight.
This vixen caught an unusual prey item, obviously still suckling her cubs, bringing home dinner.
Weather changing turning much cooler and windy, most of the starlings seem to have disappeared, virtually overnight, a few mainly juveniles coming in now.
3rd June watched a family group of treecreepers in nearby woods searching for food and also glanced up at a kite's nest as I passed quickly by.
Came across a common blue on the path and it not having warmed up yet I moved it to safety.
All four moorhen chicks doing well in the garden and clearing up underneath the feeders and now the starlings have gone, young great and blue tits are busy feeding.
Watched a magpie searching through a hay field for whatever it could find.
Stewart.
Images Copyright : Stewart Dennis.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Ox - eye daisies.

Ox - eye daisies are at their peak now, with many roadside verges which have been left uncut full of bold patches which sway in the breeze. These are in my butterfly patch in the garden.
Don.