Thursday, 11 June 2015

The source of my hayfever revealed!


Cock's-foot in flower. This is one of the commonest grasses and after walking through tons of grasses today, I can confidently say that this is the main source of my hayfever. When I wasn't walking through this grass I was virtually uneffected, but when I was amongst this species my eyes were streaming even after taking a powerful hayfever tablet!


Softbrome in flower.


Unapppreciated but for a short time beautiful, this is sheep's sorrel.


There were quite a few black-tailed skimmers on the wing today. This is a teneral (female or young male).

Wednesday, 10 June 2015

Around the patches

Lightshaw Hall Flash: two redshank, shelduck pair with two young, two oystercatchers, cormorant, six lapwing.

Dover Lock: common tern

Pennington Flash: Pintail (eclipse male) at the western end, 11 tufted ducks, Cetti's warbler from Ramsdale's Hide.

Seems very odd to have a pintail at Pennington on 10th June.


Barn Owl on the Lancashire Mosslands



I love this photo! I know it's rubbish really but it I like the blurry oil seed rape and the strange shape of the owl! It looks very ghostly!

Monday, 8 June 2015

MG5 Grassland

I came across some MG5 grassland today, one of the mesotrophic grasslands in the NVC classification. It's quite a nice community with some nice looking species. Common species in this grassland which are not shown here because they're not in flower at the moment include cowslip Primula veris, ribwort plantain Plantago lanceolata and Common knapweed Centaurea nigra.


Common bird's-foot trefoil Lotus corniculatus.


Oxeye daisy Leucanthemum vulgare.


Red campion Silene dioica.


Ragged robin Lychnis flos-cuculi.


Crested dog's-tail Cynosurus cristatus.


Red fescue Festuca rubra.


Nearby in a glade there were lots of this micro moth Nemophora degeerella.

Sunday, 7 June 2015

Hoary and Common Rockrose, Prestatyn

Prestatyn is far more than amusement arcades, candy floss and Pontins. There is a really fine selection of beautiful countryside, from beach to sand dunes to limestone hills. Today we walked from Prestatyn to Graig Fawr via Prestatyn Hillside. This is the eastern most extent of the coastal carboniferous limestone grassland in North Wales and it has many plants familiar to anybody who has visited the Great Orme, for example. In particular I was interested in seeing common rockrose Helianthemum nummularium and hoary rockrose H. canum. The latter is a very rare plant in the UK, and occurs mainly in North Wales. It's smaller than common rockrose with bent styles and narrower leaves without stipules.

Also today we had a cracking view of two peregrines which flew off the cliffs, as well as three new butterflies for me in 2015, common blue, holly blue and small heath. 


Hoary rockrose.


Hoary rockrose.


Common rockrose.


Common rockrose.


Common twayblade Listera ovata.


The grass wood mellick Mellica uniflora. Very difficult to photograph, a tall grass growing in the shade, with very loose panicles of spiklets, waving around even in the slightest breath of air as your other half disappears up the track and away into the distance!


Two peregrines. They appeared out of the blue and gave me about half a second to fire off this photo, so I was pleased to see the result. This for me is the advantage of a bridge camera over a digital SLR, I was on my knees photographing rockroses at the time using the macro setting, but was able to respond instantly and get this on 24x zoom. Plus the fact it doesn't weigh much more than my mobile phone!

Saturday, 6 June 2015

Upper Teesdale revisited

Wow what a day! It had been three years since I last visited Moor House and Upper Teesdale National Nature Reserve in the North Pennines, but I hadn't forgotton just what a great place it is and today I was finally lured back. I parked at Cow Green reservoir and walked to Cauldron Snout, then followed the Tees around Falcon Clints to Widdy Bank Farm and then back over Widdybank Fell.

Widdybank Fell, the name alone gives me goose bumps! Along with Cronkley Fell on the opposite side of the Tees, this is without doubt the most outstanding botanical area in England. From bryophytes to ferns to grasses to flowers, there are rarities and contradictions everywhere. Sea plantain grows with mountain aven, Scottish asphodel occurs here in it's only locality outside Scotland, that speciality of North Wales hoary rockrose is also here and incredibly, calcifugous lime hating species grow alongside calcicolous, lime loving species. It's all to do with the geology which is almost as interesting as the plants and of course is actually the reason for the incredible diversity. The rock here is sugar limestone which occurs nowhere else in the UK.

Widdybank fell is covered in ling, with lots Sphagnum capillifolium and common cottongrass and many more lime haters. Yet where streams have carved their way through the rock there are grassy banks with spectacular lime lovers such spring gentian and bird's-eye primrose.

Spring gentian, now there's a flower! The names Upper Teesdale and spring gentian are synonymous, this wonderful plant grows nowhere else in Britain and it was of course the reason for my visit. It needs full sunlight to open, but if you first find one as a cloud passes in front of the sun, wait a while for the cloud to pass and the transformation will take your breath away and make you wonder how any flower can be so electric blue! I had hoped to pop over to the Burren in Ireland again this year to see it in flower there, but circumstances conspired against me. Something for next year.

The birds aren't too bad here either. Lots of breeding waders, golden plover, redshank, snipe, common sandpiper, oystercatcher, curlew, lapwing.... plus short-eared owl, merlin, ring ouzel, dipper, black grouse, red grouse. I saw many of these today.


Staggering! Spring gentian.







Bird's-eye primrose.



This lovely specimen of bird's-eye primrose was growing under a mini waterfall!


Dog violet sp.


A bumblebee on a spring gentian. I think it's a northern carder bee, but I don't know enough about bees to be sure.


Near Widdy Bank farm I noticed what I thought at first were pheasants in a field, but they looked a bit dark and when I got closer I was amazed to see that they were black grouse, eight males feeding in a sheep grazed grassy field.


Common sandpiper.



Juvenile dipper.


Golden plover. The plaintive calls of golden plover are everywhere.



Short-eared owl. This photo was taken on Alston Moor which is just slighty north of Widdybank fell but part of the same area.


Sugar limestone, you can see how it gets it name. It looks like congealed sugar and it's very crumbly and falls to pieces with just a little pressure.


A stream carving its way through the rock on Widdybank fell.


Cauldron snout.

Around the patches

Pennington Flash: There was an adult little egret complete with breeding plumes from the Teal hide this morning, also around, two shelduck, two teal, several common terns, singing Cetti's warbler and a female gadwall with eight chicks.

Lightshaw Hall Flash: Two shelduck with two chicks, a pair of shoveler, 10 lapwings and a single oystercatcher. Also here, my first painted lady butterfly of the year.

Houghton Green Flash: Yellow wagtail, 2 oystercatchers, adult little grebe.




Look at the size difference between the grey heron and the little egret. Especially the bill!


Painted lady.


Tuesday, 2 June 2015

Pennington Flash

Garganey 1 drake
Turnstone 2
Redshank 4
Mute swan pair with 3 cygnets

Monday, 1 June 2015

Appleton Reservoir, Warrington

Good numbers of house martins at the reservoir today, the most I've seen anywhere this year, with at least 150 plus a handful of swifts and swallows. Also today a little grebe calling in the bay at the southern end, a mute swan on a nest, 8 tufted ducks and a great crested grebe with at least two chicks on its back.

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