We spent a hot morning in Kingcombe Meadows with the Beautiful Demoiselles and the afternoon along the railway track at Toller Porcorum with some amazing flies.
Sunday, June 22, 2014
Saturday, June 21, 2014
Chesil Beach and Portland Quarry
Another sunny hot day which we spent photographing the flowers and scenery along Chesil Beach (above) and Portland Quarry (below)..
Friday, June 20, 2014
Higher Kingcombe, Dorset
We are having fantastic weather on our Annual CCC trip to Kingcombe in Dorset. Hot and sunny so far and Damsel flies are in abundance even in the early morning mist. Andrea is looking after us wonderfully as usual at Higher Kingcombe Lodge
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Macro World in Our Cambridgeshire Garden
I am aiming to record the invertebrate life in our garden this year as fully as possible so I spent an hour lurking in the undergrowth today seeing what was living there. I now realise why the Frog Hopper is so named - it is responsible for the Cuckoo Spit foam on plant stems around its young (green nymphs). The Shield Bugs and Scorpion fly were good finds with several other species of fly not yet identified. I hope to get identifications and then post them on my Toft Invertebrates Blog.
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Shoreham-by-Sea Sussex
Very pleasant weekend in Shoreham - thanks to Stephen and Lesley for the loan of their flat right on the sea front. Great collection of beach huts,fishing boats and house boats - a photographers' site par exellence. The shingle beach is covered in flowers, some introduced like the Valerian around the beach huts but also lots of Yellow Horned Poppies and Viper's Bugloss. I spent quite a bit of time under the bridges over the Adur
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Nymans Gardens Sussex
Nymans, West Sussex, is an impressive garden developed by three generations of the Messel family, from the late 19th century, The garden reached a peak in the 1930s but in 1947 there was a fire in the house, which now survives as a garden ruin with the surviving rooms now open to the public. The quality and range of plants is phenomenal but not that of the statues etc! Testing 55-210mm on Sony Nex - the two images chosen are of a Hoverfly and the Honey Bee that it mimics.
Friday, June 13, 2014
Grantchester River Walk
A dozen CCC Members had an evening walk along the river at Grantchester in search of roosting insects. It was such a warm evening that the Banded Demoiselles were very much still active as in the first pair of images where a female has captured and ate a Mayfly. We also found a Mullein moth caterpillar and abundant Crane flies. Finished with a cooling drink in the Red Lion.
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