Showing posts with label Gatekeeper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gatekeeper. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

isle of wight day 1-arriving on the island

we woke up near Southampton and were quickly on our way as we headed off to catch our ferry to the isle of wight. The day was bright, but slightly breezy but we managed to get our ferry and were quickly on our way to the isle of wight.
The ferry journey was not a patch on Arran last year, in terms of birdlife, in that there was only a cormorant to speak off, as well as a hand full of common terns flying past as we entered the harbour at Cowes. I would speculate that the terns were from the colony at Newtown estuary.
The drive down to our campsite seemed all too familiar even though it has been 4 years. This holiday was going to be different though. Since the isle is quite compact my dad had suggested that I use the buses to access many different wildlife sites, when my family were off doing other things. I had drawn up a map off all the sites with species that could be found there , and i had used an online records system to track down populations of insects that would otherwise not be well broad casted.
There was some degree off consistency with species that could be found at sites. Marbled white would be a new species for me, but there were a lots of sites that appeared to have this species. I even said to my dad-this holiday would be a disappointment were i not to see a marbled white.
It was ironic then that as we were driving round the campsite I spotted what appeared to fit the bill for marbled white fluttering around the campsite. I pleaded to get out of the car and was eventually allowed, and so i was able to track down the butterfly in question, hiding behind a hedge , and this proved that it was indeed a marbled white. so the first species that I saw after landing was ironically a new species for me, and a good record too, despite the fact that it spent most of its time at the top of a hedge!





-Marbled white
When I found my family, fully set up on our new pitch, My dad pointed out a buzzard circling nearby, I tried to get a few photos but sadly they didn't come out that well.




-Buzzard
my family went off to go and discuss the terms of our stay (?), and as i waited I spotted a very small blue appearance butterfly. It was very small indeed, even smaller than a common blue, but I didn't get a view of the inside of the wings but my suspicion is either a small common blue or a brown argus.



-Blue sp. Whilst i was watching that blue butterfly I spotted another butterfly flutter past me, another marbled white it appeared on the face of it. I was right again, but this one was not as shy as the other as this one landed on a caravan nearby-luckily its occupants were out!






-Marbled White


The marbled white left the caravan and flew over a hedge and into what appeared to be the children's play area. I was surprised to see that behind the play area was an area of rough grassland with mown grass paths, I think it was an intended nature reserve. There were quite a few butterflys there including common blue, meadow brown and large white as well as 6-spot burnet moth. At the bottom of the nature reserve there was a compost bin where there were a lot of thistles and a lot of gatekeepers to go with them. there was also a red admiral, which added a bit more colour. In bird terms there was a sedge warbler and a family of willow warblers.

-Gatekeeper



-common blue


when I got back to the caravan I was astounded to find a gigantic robber fly in the orning. It was about an inch long and kept continuing buzzing and attacking the plastic, until my dad let it out.




-Giant robber fly
after lunch we decided to go to Ventnor because it was a nice, sunny afternoon. I like Ventnor because of the common wall lizards that live in abundance amongst the town and surrounding beaches. When we arrived I had a look up one of the scrubby cliffs, and on the scrubby path I found a cricket of some description, which is always nice as we don't have an excess of crickets in Yorkshire, where as down here they are everywhere and many more grasshoppers!




-Cricket sp.


Back on the base, near the car I found my first lizard of the day, sunbathing underneath some twigs. it was easy to approach but hard to photograph because of the twig encroachments. so I tried to get some close-ups of its head, to try and highlights of the colours, which seemed more vivid than they were last time.





-common wall Lizard


we decided to move further up towards the end that we normally go to, so that my family could get out their canoes, I on the other hand opted to go for a walk along the beach to try and get some photos of more lizards. so here are the photos I managed-once again very vivid in colour and highlighting just how bold these lizards were in terms of how skittish normal reptiles are!



















-Common Wall Lizard I decided to try and get to a nature reserve high above Ventor called "rew down" which has the only colony of Adonis blue butterflys on the island. I didn't have my map, and i didn't really know where to go, so I bluffed my way, taking turns not knowing where they would end up. Whilst reading one road sign I spotted this lizard-adapting to the human environment.




-Common Wall Lizard


After that I managed a few more turns then decided to just head back down and catch up with my parents. When I got to my map it appeared that my speculative road direction choices were well speculated, and had I carried on about 500m then I would have reached where I needed to be, but such is life


It was nice to see the lizards again, my first real views since the last time I was here and also had my first new species in the form of marbled white.

Monday, 4 July 2011

Elland gravel pits

It was a mild morning so I decided to take a bus trip to Elland Gravel Pits to see if there were any spring dragonflies about. To my surprise, the first thing that I saw upon entering was a rather stunning banded demoiselle, Which I was unaware lived this far north. unfortunatly I was unable to get a photo before it fluttered away up river. I decided to walk along the canal side, where I spotted a female blackcapp in a hawthorn bush. -Blackcap About 200m along the canal I found a path that lead away from the canal and into the woods, presumably to the river, so I followed it. When I arrived at the river I spotted lots of ringlets and a rather tatty speckled wood. There were rather a lot of ringlets, But they refused to stay still, until I found one on a bramble with its wings open. It was rather unfortunate that it was facing me rather than facing away so the photo doesnt look as good as it could do. -Ringlet Whilst I was walking along the edge of the river I got a shock at finding a brown hawker, which I had assumed was a late summer dragonfly, not an early summer. I assumed that it must be an early waker, but to my surprise I found several others along the riverside. I decided to go to the small pools near the feilds. Along the way I spotted more ringlets, plus small and large skippers and also an excess of burnet moths. When i reached the first pool I was dissapointed to find that it was almost barren, however a walk around it found me, what I thought at the time, a grizzled skipper, my first tick in calderdale this year, but it turns out the it was actually a latticed heath moth.
-Latticed Heath Moth The feild was full of butterflys and moths too. The moths being mainly 6-spot burnet and the butterflies including skippers and meadow browns plus ringlets.
-Small skipper Withing the long grass there were quite a few moths, but I had no idea what they were, so when I got home i looked them up and one of them is something a bit unusual apparently-a blackneck
-A Blackneck
Walking along the pools produced a variety of damselflies, including common blue, blue tailed and large red, but no dragonflies until I met up with the river again. Where I was surprised to find another brown hawker, so one was definatly not a fluke.
Walking back I spotted a gatekeeper butterfly in the shrubbery so I Followed it to try and get a photo.
-Gatekeeper I decided to walk back along the canal way so That I could see the pools that might have birds on them. on one of them I spotted a heron but when I got the binoculars out I found another three, so it must have been a family
-Grey Heron I also found some pretty spectacular butterfly catterpillars, proibably small tortoishell feeding on the nettles, but in some cases completly overunning the nettles.
-Caterpillar
When I arrived back at where I started I decided to go for a small walk upstrem to see what I could find. Almost immediatly I spotted a dragonlfy which was clearly not a brown hawker, as it diddnt have tinted wings. I Just couldnt manage to get a quick photo to allow for an I.d. I found a few veiwing platforms or something along the edge of the water, but they were old and rusty, so obviously not used very often.
However when i followed one I spotted another banded demosielle resting on a leaf.
-Banded demoiselle I tried to follow the dragonfly for a photo but kept loosing it. In one instance I stopped watching the dragonfly to find the demoiselle looking right at me. It had caught a midge or something and was just sat there staring right at me!
-Banded demoiselle I then spotted a second dragonfly hunting the river, this one was a brown hawker, but it was clear that the none brown hawker was quite upset about this as it kept attacking the brown hawker.
-Brown Hawker I spotted that the none brown hawker had moved upstream slightly where it was flying slower, so I headed up that way and was rewarded with an I.D photo proving that it was an emeror dragonfly.
-Emperor Dragonfly I watched it for a while before it began to head down to where I had been and then dissapeared. I waited a while before deciding to go and have a look where I had been. There I was rewarded with a stunning view of the emperor, but more importantly it was landed allowing me to get some shots, which were much needed.
-Emperor Dragonfly
So as you can see, it was a very worth-while trip, but I had to be heading home, so it ends here!!

Friday, 20 August 2010

elland gravel pits tuesday morning, when it was sunny!!

A bright crisp morning greeted me, and, as a result, decided to go and do something I had been planning all week, but the weather had not yet presented an oppertunity. That is, to get round to a birding site in calderdale via public transpot. My chosen place was elland gravel pits becuase I can imagine that it is much easier to get to than many of our upland reservoirs. elland is not exceptional for birds but there are many great insects and so a sunny day was required. By 9.00 in the morning I had planned my route, although I was still a bit nervous in case I caught the wrong bus. I managed to get there but with a bit of walking to do which dissapointed me. I had been hoping for a more direct route there considering that there was a bus stop right outside the enterance!

I was sson within the grounds of the reserve when the wildlife began to show. a first I spotted a brown hawker in the trees but as I drifted away from the tarmaced paths and into the woods I found myself surrounded by brown hawkers and Speckled woods!

Sadly none of the brown hawkers would stay still for a photo so I still needed a record shot. luckily another species which I needed a record shot for was showing quite well, the gatekeeper butterfly. I had been seeing quite a lot of these recently but only when i did not have the camera so, seeing as though now I did, I began to take some photos!


I continued walking and flushed a flock of long-tailed tits out of the trees to my right. I noticed a large gap through the bolsom to the riverside and decided to go and have a look down there. It was there that I managed to find my one and only landed brown hawker, hidden amongst the bolsom. Sadly it flew off before I could take any more, better, photos than this.

I drifted off towards where I found a large grassy meadow where I found another butterfly that I needed a photo of, the small heath. It took a while for it to settle but soon I was able to get the shots I wanted. Now, for brown butterflys anyway, I only need a wall brown record shot!


As I left I stumbled across another gatekeeper that was, luckily, less flighty and allowed me to get some more photos!


tradicaly the bus stop outside the enterance to egp was an hourly bus to brighouse so that was not much good. luckily my mum was in the area after going shopping so she came to pick me up. As I was waiting I managed to find some more rufous grasshoppers. I have seen so many recently that i can now identify them by their song!