.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)


A couple of images of an Emperor Dragonfly laying its eggs on water weed stems. I liked the ripples in the first shot and the Common Blue damselfly resting on the dragonfly in the second. I will have to have another go using a tripod with a slower shutterspeed to get a smaller aperture and hence more depth of field. These were 1/800th shutterspeed.jpg)
There are strips of land seeded with local wild flowers - beetle banks to encourage beneficial insects such as ground beetles that consume slug eggs and other species that predate aphids. Lots of large skippers were enjoying the Greater Knapweeds that are just coming into flower.
Very pleased to catch a Peppered Moth in my light trap last night as it was very much part of my biology teaching through the years. When first studied 200 years ago, all moths were like this one, pale and speckled and so hidden from predators on lichen-covered branches. With Industrialisation, lichens died out and trunks were generally soot covered. This led to the selection of the naturally occurring dark forms and predation of the light forms. The melanistic form predominated up to the second half of the 20th Century. 
We had been at this event for 7 hours when Bryan rightly suggested we should go back and start downloading the numerous images. I said 5 more horses or 5 minutes more at the water splash. The this happened. Fortunately neither rider nor horse were injured though the rapid inflation of the safety jacket caused some discomfort.