The good weather has been good for moths with 2 new moths for the garden, the first being a surprise galium carpet. There were quite a few in the traps at Ford Park Cemetery last year which is not too far from my house but I was still surprised to see one in the garden. As usual for a carpet it was very feisty and I was only able to get some photos of it through a plastic container. The 2nd new moth was a nut tree tussock, a moth I have expected to see in the garden for a long time.
Galium Carpet
Nut Tree Tussock
The usual moths for the time of year have been seen in the garden with marbled green, marbled beauty, coronet, Jersey tiger, four spotted footman and large yellow underwing making appearances.
Marbled Green very well camoflagued against the pebble dash wall in the back yard
Marbled Green
Swallow Tailed Moth
? Marbled Minor Agg. ( a very green individual)
Garden Tiger Moth
Garden Tiger Moth - like fingerprints, no 2 individuals are exactly the same
Brussels Lace
Crescent Dart
Drinker (female)
Devonshire Wainscot
Yellow Tail
Meal Moth
Sharp Angled Carpet - typically neurotic and the only photo I managed to get before it flew off
With the heat and lack of rain the water levels at Maer Lake were very low with plenty of mud on show and I managed maximum counts of 1 little ringed plover, 5 green sandpipers, 5 common sandpipers, 1 whimbrel, 1 curlew, 5 redshank, 1 ringed plover, 10 dunlin and 7 black tailed godwits over the 5 days we were there. A wood sandpiper had been reported but I failed to find it but with numbers of waders fluctuating daily I guess I was just unlucky.Other highlights of our time in Bude were :- a small heath on the clifftop walk in to Bude: Manx shearwaters, fulmars and gannets from the clifftops with some nice close views of Manx shearwaters at times although most were further offshore; and best of all on my birthday a small pod of common dolphins heading North offshore towards Lundy as we walked in to Bude along the cliffs to have a cooked breakfast at Lifes a Beach. They were moving quite fast and were not particularly showy with brief views of fins but with a couple of leaps out of the water now and then. The Manx shearwaters were what initially gave them away as they followed behind them and I guess they were heading off to feed somewhere else hence their stealth mode like behaviour.
Best bird of the time away at the caravan was a corn bunting at Park Head, a National Trust owned bit of coastline near Bedruthan Steps. We had originally planned to go to Trevose Head to look for corn buntings but stopped at Park Head on the way and were lucky to hear and see a male bird which gave some lovely views before flying off, the first corn bunting I have seen for some time. Back in my youth when living in Suffolk I regularly heard and saw them not far from my house but here in the South West they are quite scarce with the North Cornwall coast around Padstow being a small stronghold for them. We never did get to Trevose Head, heading back to the caravan after having had such good views.
Corn Bunting
Corn Bunting
Other highlights of my time off were newts in a small pool at Restormel Castle; chitons, scorpion fish, shanny and cushion starfish while rock pooling with my nephew at Wembury; a harlequin ladybird in my moth trap in the back yard, a first for the garden; a holly blue at Mount Batten with a noisy juvenile Sandwich tern following behind an adult bird offshore; a clouded yellow on a walk at Wembury Point; and a whimbrel, 3 dunlin and a turnstone at Wembury on the 27th July.
Ringlet, Trerice
Newt sp., Restormel Castle
Chiton sp., Wembury
Shanny, Wembury
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