BIRDING THE LUNE ESTUARY THE FOREST OF BOWLAND AND BEYOND.....................................................................................BARN OWL COCKERSAND IAN MITCHELL

Sunday, 27 March 2022

Upland Wanderings....

....and some interest in the garden.

On a beautiful calm spring day, it was good to get myself on Harrisend for 3 hours on Thursday, to find 6 Stonechat, seen as two pairs and a lone male and female, almost certainly having mates which I failed to see and make four 'probable' breeding pairs to date on Harrisend.

At least 13 Meadow Pipit seen, 2 Wren, 3 Dunnock including a male displaying to a female, 3 Red Grouse, and a male Reed Bunting, which was initially tricky alongside a male Stonechat, both in the far distance, 10 Greylag overhead flying west.

Five of fifteen 7-Spot Ladybirds. Pete Woodruff.

I found 15 7-Spot Ladybirds in four small clusters on Gorse, and saw 2 Peacock butterflies.

Two hours on Hawthorthwaite, produced 3 Stonechat, seen as a pair and a lone male. Also, 8 Red Grouse, 7 Meadow Pipit, and 3 Wren. The bonus bird was a Woodcock, flushed and flew about 400m to go down by Catshaw Greave.

I was grateful for the report of 2 Barn Owls seen on Wednesday, one of which was reasonably obvious to have been the same one seen by me at and around the foot of Hawthornthwaite on 20 January, the other seen at the woodlands at the bottom of Cam Brow. Reasonable to suggest perhaps these two Barn Owls are a pair....Many thanks for this Simon.
   
Interest In The Garden.

There was a lot of enjoyment to be had in the garden this week, with visits by Bees, Butterflies, Birds, Hoverflies, and a colourful if nasty little critter.                          

 

With some video footage made, a visit to see the Reed Bunting in a Brookhouse garden was a success. A bit of a surprise, and not the bird to be found on your feeders on a regular basis, and not one I'm expecting ever on mine in urban Lancaster.

European Hoverfly. Pete Woodruff.

The Eristalis pertinax found in our garden, developed into something a little more interesting, in that I discovered the larva of this hoverfly is the Rat-tailed Maggot, one of which was seen in the garden pond last year....The larva's name doesn't conjure up anything of beauty does it!

Tree Bumblebee on Pussy Willow 
 
Buff-tailed Bumblebee. Pete Woodruff.
 
As the most familiar bumblebee, this Bombus terrestris was basking on Camellia in the garden, unfortunately giving a rear view only.

Yellow Dung-Fly. Pete Woodruff. 

And the nasty colourful critter which I couldn't miss, is the golden-furred male Yellow-Dung Fly on the branch of a Willow in the garden yesterday.

Footnote.
Hard to believe in the 21st century, but as my experience has clearly shown, you can spend 5 hours in the Forest of Bowland like I did today - often spending much more time than that - and not see a single bird of prey....Hen Harrier, Red Kite, Merlin, Sparrowhawk, Buzzard, Peregrine Falcon, Short-eared Owl, Kestrel.  

6 comments:

  1. Enjoyed the Reed Bunting clip, Pete, and your other photos too. It's good to have insects showing in the garden again. You mentioned a colourful but nasty creature, but didn't follow it up with any clue as to what it was!?

    Good to see you are still getting out and about. I'm now going to be out of action for a while as I have to self-isolate for a while prior to having an op under general aneasthetic - nothing serious however(as far as I'm aware!)

    Take good care - - - - Richard

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for this Richard. Hope everything progresses positively after your 'op under general anaesthetic'.

    The nasty creature is the Yellow Dung Fly in the last image....Sorry if it was misleading, I have now edited the post.

    Regards....Pete.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I understand that the only unpleasant aspect of the Yellow Dung Fly, Pete, is the fact that it favours feeding on cow dung. References suggest that it is totally harmless and doesn't sting or bite!

    ReplyDelete
  4. The adult YDF actually feeds on other insects that visit the dung, whilst it can also feed on nectar for additional energy, which is probably what it was heading towards on our Pussy Willow when I found it. The larva buries into the dung to feed on it....Urghhhh!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Sad you never saw any raptors in all that time Pete.
    Things are starting to liven up now with this warm weather, detected my first bat the other night and the moth trap has been quite busy lately.
    YDF looks a bit nasty.
    Thanks for the blog

    Ian

    ReplyDelete
  6. Good to see you successfully managed to comment Ian, much appreciated.

    We have had bats around our house a few evenings ago, and yes, the Yellow Dung-Fly and the Rat-tailed Maggot are quite horrible critters to put it mildly.

    Thanks again for looking in Ian.

    EDIT.

    HAVING OVERLOOKED A REPLY, I'VE EDITED MY RESPONSE TO YOUR COMMENT IAN....'SAD YOU NEVER SAW ANY RAPTORS IN ALL THAT TIME PETE'....HOMO SAPIENS ARE PLAYING THE GREATER PART IN THE DEMISE OF BIRDS OF PREY. I THINK TRAGIC IS THE MORE APPROPRIATE WORD TO REPLACE SAD.

    ReplyDelete