Wednesday, 30 June 2010
Never get enough bees
This week I've found them in a variety of habitats - in dry shadows beside the Channel Tunnel yards......
....and beside a lily pond......alongside the 14th fairway.
Also on the golf course was the greatest profusion of Goatsbeard clocks I've ever seen.
Returning to the Channel Tunnel, there is a line of this plant along the middle of the dry track (path, not railway). My original guess attracted some helpful corrections, and I now know what Common Cudweed looks like.
The Tawny Owl family is still around the garden, their strange noises accompanying the slurping of my cocoa.
Sunday, 27 June 2010
Butterflies and moths (shock)
I hoped for the first Marbled Whites on the beach, and indeed they were there -just a few. Last year the first emergence was on 20th June, and by the 26th there were 200.
There are still a few Small Blues at the usual sites, and for a change I took interest in the many moths along the shingle, as the East Kent Mercury (a good local paper) had reported that Sussex Emeralds and Bright Weaves had bred in this area. The one below might be the latter, or maybe not.
The broomrapes have started to emerge, again about a week later than last year, and as usual I'll tentatively identify them as Ox-tongue Broomrape. They certainly grow very close to Oxtongue Hawkweed, one of their usual hosts.
A surprising find at Otty Bottom was a few stalks of Dropwort, a plant that I hadn't noticed here (or indeed anywhere else in the parish) before. Maybe I've previously been distracted by the orchids, of which I counted 9 Pyramidal and 130 Fragrant.
Despite the hot weather there is still a need to do some gardening, even if it is mostly pulling bindweed and Traveller's Joy (gardener's hate) out of the hedges. While doing this, I found a nest and a tentative fingertip touched something warm and downy.
I feel a webcam project coming on.
Thursday, 24 June 2010
Belated Spider Orchids
V.S. Summerhayes in his seminal book Wild Orchids of Britain describes the lip "which is thought to resemble the body of a large garden spider, is four-angled rather than circular [as in the bee orchid] and often widens somewhat towards the front. At the very tip it is furnished with an upturned fleshy three-lobed appendage". A true scientist, he comments on the fine detail but perhaps loses something of the jovial character and beauty of the flower.
I counted 28 spikes and in some places they were growing with Man and Pyramidal Orchids.
*************************
Notes from the shortest night..........
A Tawny Owl landed on a small tree as I sat on the patio in the dusk, drinking my late-night Ovaltine. It looked at me, I looked at it, then it silently flew back into the trees.
This was followed by some strange wheezing sounds, as if a child was quietly snoring. I found a torch and picked out a young owl on a branch nearby, still wheezing.
We visited Clowes Woods to hear Nightjars; shortest night/bright moon, so they were late - a Woodcock passed twice on its roding flight at about 10, followed by a Nightjar at about 10.15 - churring away on a high exposed branch.
Walking back to the car, we saw two glowworms in the grass, glowing - not flashing while flying like the ones I saw in Italy.
Monday, 21 June 2010
Ranscombe Farm
Some are, however, tiny and difficult to find, but not as difficult as providing conditions suitable for its growth. To encourage these tiny plants, the farm manager (on behalf of the charity Plantlife) sows low-density crops to allow space between them, and of course shuns fertilisers, insecticides and herbicides. The result is a sparse crop on poor soil that would struggle to feed a family, but that allows the rare plants to flourish.
Stinking Mayweed, above, and the optimistically-named Venus' Looking Glass, below
- the latter is very small and bears little resemblance to its romantic name.
Broad-leaved Cudweed is a particular success on this site, and has spread rapidly across the field where conditions have been favourable for it - it's very rare elsewhere in the country.
Dwarf Spurge
Naturally the sensitive farming methods are attractive to bugs - I think the beetle is a female Thick-Kneed, but I'll avoid trying to identify the moth. [Thanks to Greg for correcting me - it's a Spanish Fly apparently]
A lovely place - an island in our intensively-farmed countryside, but clearly illustrative of how poor crops would be on the chalk downs without constant improvement.
Thursday, 17 June 2010
.... and a lump of limestone
Most of the area is fascinating, but one particular patch of short turf held a profusion of orchids - including this one which I first assumed was a Late Spider but was corrected by a little research. I'm now assuming that it's a Woodcock Orchid, although there are many similar species in this group. [Fortunately there are readers who know about these things, and John of Banstead Botany Blog kindly informs me that they were Bertoloni's Orchids (Ophrys bertolonii) - Ed]
Now, I understand the concept of Bee Orchids (attracting bees), Fly Orchids (pollinated by flies), Spider Orchids etc, but woodcocks? The point eludes me.
Also in the clearing were serapias - tongue orchids - one of which I believe caused consternation in the Minster chalk pit in Kent one year.
This may be a bug orchid or a scented orchid (probably the latter, considering the habitat).
Violet Limodore / Violet Bird's-nest Orchid