Monday, 11 May 2026

Hairstreaks, Skippers and a Bad Mood

A report of a Spotted Flycatcher at Saltram on Thursday 7th May had me heading out there for a quick morning walk in cool and overcast conditions, needless to say I didn't find the Flycatcher but they can be tricky to catch up with here and it's a case of right place, right time to see one. A bonus though was actually getting to see the Willow Warbler that is still singing it's heart out by the gas pipe sign, distant views only from the opposite side of the river but it was regularly perched up right at the top of the trees as it sang.

There was some water on Blaxton Meadow again as the flowing tide trickled in through one of the sluice gates but when the tide dropped the water quickly started to drain away through the new and improved drainage pipe. There were birds roosting on the Meadow on the high tide though with a Curlew, a Whimbrel, 3 Oystercatchers, Shelduck, a Little Egret and Gulls all present.

The male Red-crested Pochard was back at the duck pond, 3 Swifts flew around overhead, a Goldcrest and a Nuthatch were having a bathe in a puddle and a Grey Wagtail was feeding on the Saltram House lawn while along the river there was a good count of 7 Mute Swans.

Red-crested Pochard

Mute Swan

Willow Warbler record shot 

Friday 8th May was warm and sunny as I headed out to Wembury on the 9am bus, it was coming up to high tide so I headed straight out to The point for the wader roost. I could see Oystercatchers roosting on the rocks so it appeared that the roost hadn't been disturbed that morning but just as I was nearing the sewage pipe a man with a telescope appeared and flushed everything as he walked along the beach. He then turned around and set up his scope to scan the now empty beach he'd just walked along! Eventually the birds returned to the rocks and I began to scan through them but then a woman with a dog walked out onto the rocks and threw her dogs ball into the water right by the roosting birds which all scattered again as the dog jumped into the water to retrieve it. 

To make matters even worse a fishing boat appeared from the direction of Plymouth, a new boat I've not seen before but one emblazoned with the name and number Azzurro and E566. It headed to the mouth of the River Yealm and began pulling up fishing nets before moving along the coast towards The Point and even pulling up nets close off the main beach. From my position at The Point it was too distant and the light too harsh for any useful photos but I managed to snap a few as it passed by me on its way back towards Plymouth and I'll send in a report yet again to the Devon and Severn Inshore Fisheries and Conservation Authority.

An easily identifiable Boat

I am really getting f*ck*d off with all this fishing activity going on at Wembury in a supposedly protected area, the staff in the Marine Centre overlooking the Bay must be aware of what's going on outside their window in the waters that they are supposed to be the guardians of but when I spoke to them about this last year they were mostly indifferent and uninterested.

Anyway, back to the wildlife and despite the wader disturbance at The Point I did find at least 6 Whimbrel, 3 Turnstone and a flighty Sanderling amongst the Oystercatchers along with 4 Shelduck, a Little Egret and 6 Mallard (5 males). The Green Hairstreaks were showing well in their usual spot at The Point and a few Painted Lady were also seen flitting about. A Red-legged Partridge was heard calling in the sheep field as I headed back to the bus stop and as I walked up the valley to the beach a noisy Peregrine flew low overhead clutching a bird in its talons and being mobbed by 2 Carrion Crow, a noisy Buzzard then appeared low overhead too and was also being mobbed by 2 Carrion Crow and all the kerfuffle set off a fledgling Tawny Owl hidden somewhere in the trees which called noisily for a while before going silent.

Sanderling and Turnstones

Green Hairstreak

On the way home I stopped off at Billacombe to look for Dingy Skippers and to add to the general feeling of crapness about the day the site at Billacombe is earmarked for housing development so this will be the last year I will get to see Dingy Skipper here. The path through the trees to the site has been cleared and widened and the felt squares dotted around the site to attract reptiles are tell tale signs of impending development as any reptiles found underneath them will be relocated elsewhere and earn the developer an environmental chufty badge in the process. Unfortunately you can't relocate Dingy Skippers and I wouldn't be surprised if the housing estate isn't sadly and ironically called something crass like Skipper Meadows which the residents will think delightfully twee while not realising that their houses have been built on Dingy Skipper corpses.

The encroaching house building at Billacombe Quarry

Anyway, it was feeling very hot when I arrived to look for the Skippers and I figured it would be too hot for them to be active and so it proved to be as after 2 hours of searching I failed to find any. There were other things to keep me occupied though and I saw flowering Early Purple Orchids (although they were beginning to go over), at least 2 very smart looking male Common Blues, a noisy flyover Ring-necked Parakeet and a surprise Clouded Yellow which regularly flew a lap of the site before disappearing, only to return a few minutes later to do it all again. Even more of a surprise were a pair of Tawny Owl that called from the depths of the nearby trees before going silent. At least the felt squares dotted around the site gave me the opportunity to see some Slow Worms with 5 found hiding underneath them, it's been a while now since I last saw one.

Early Purple Orchid

Common Blue

Clouded Yellow on a very brief nectar stop

Slow Worms

After 2 hours of searching I was just about to give up and head home when a Dingy Skipper flew past me and after a quick look about I relocated it sunning itself on the ground where I could see one of its wings was damaged before it flew off and disappeared. I then thought I had refound it again sunning itself nearby but it turned out to be a different individual with intact wings.

Dingy Skipper with a damaged wing

Dingy Skipper with intact wings

Dave the Butterfly Guy then arrived and we had a good catch up as we haven't seen each other since August last year and we managed to refind the intact Dingy Skipper  before it just disappeared from sight again and that was my cue to head home.

Dingy Skipper

So all in all a successful day was had but one tinged with sadness and frustration. I'm all for the countryside being accessible to everybody and I love people getting to see wildlife but the public really do need educating about how to behave in it as the increasing disturbance and the increasing dog shit and litter at Wembury attest too. And also what is the point of designating areas of the countryside conservation zones if they are not going to be monitored and protected? We all have to eat but I wonder how many people know where the fish on their plate at a Barbican restaurant has actually come from? And as to Billacombe, we all need somewhere to live but why can't housing developments be more usefully sympathetic to the wildlife it's being built on top of? Add in the impending loss of the Chelson Meadow site and the drying out of Blaxton Meadow at Saltram and no wonder I'm fed up at the moment with this incessant onslaught on local wildlife - or maybe I'm just a grumpy old man in a bad mood.

To cap things off I found my first Tick of the year that evening busily biting away at the back of my calf, presumably picked up on my Dartmoor day out with Mavis a few days earlier and probably the first of many to come as usual.

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Coast, Estuary and Moor Days

The wind had died down again on Friday 1st May but it was overcast and cool as I caught the 7am bus out to Wembury for a walk. The breeze did gently pick up along my walk though but the clouds did eventually clear and it became a pleasantly warm and sunny day.

The high tide was ebbing when I arrived off the bus and so I headed straight down to The Point to look for waders before the dog walkers arrived and I was in luck with Oystercatchers, 10 Turnstone, 7 summer plumaged Dunlin, at least 16 Whimbrel and 23 variously plumaged Bar-tailed Godwit all present along with 7 Little Egret and 3 Shelduck.

Whimbrel - at least 16 present and mobile, flighty and delightfully vocal

Bar-tailed Godwits - just a gorgeous colour

Bar-tailed Godwits - with 23 present my highest count at Wembury

I watched the Bar-tailed Godwits feeding away on the sea weed mass or roosting on the nearby rocks for over an hour with the summer plumaged males looking just stunning but as the tide dropped the birds began to disperse and it was time to move on.

Bar-tailed Godwits

Bar-tailed Godwits

Bar-tailed Godwits

Bar-tailed Godwits

I wasn't expecting to find any butterflies on my walk but once the sky cleared they began to appear with 5 Green Hairstreaks, a male Brimstone, a Small Copper, 2 Speckled Wood, 3 Large White, Peacock and male Orange-tip all seen. There had obviously been an arrival of Painted Lady too with at least 7 seen dashing about at The Point and feeding on Red Valerian flowers, they looked a little faded but were all in good condition.

Green Hairstreak - just a gorgeous colour too

Green Hairstreak

Green Hairstreak

Painted Lady

Painted Lady

Other highlights on my walk were 3 Red-legged Partridge in the wheatfield, a Sparrowhawk soaring overhead being bravely mobbed by a Swallow, a Pied Wagtail and 2 Linnet, the usual Cirl Buntings, Stonechats and Whitethroats, a flock of 8 Gannets offshore heading west and the usual Fulmars around The Mewstone.

Stonechat


Mallards on the Main Beach - partners in crime begging scraps from beach goers

Bank Holiday Monday May the 4th (Star Wars day) was mostly sunny and so I headed out to The Plym for a walk. The high tide was ebbing when I arrived and I was pleasantly surprised to find a decent amount of water present on Blaxton Meadow where the usual Shelduck were present along with Herring Gulls and Carrion Crows and a Whimbrel.

Blaxton Meadow with Water - the rarest sighting of the day!

Whimbrel on Blaxton Meadow

The park was very busy with people and dogs with it being a sunny Bank Holiday but on my walk I managed sightings of a pair of Stonechat, a male Whitethroat, a Green Woodpecker, a Grey Wagtail, a Common Sandpiper, 2 Jay, a Swift and 4 Mute Swans. The pair of Canada Geese with 2 goslings had been joined by another pair with 7 smaller goslings and a recently fledged Robin was seen in the Wet Wood. A look for Dingy Skippers drew a blank but I did see my first Small Heath of the year and the Willow Warbler was still present and singing away near the gas pipe but remained unseen.

Canada Geese with Goslings

Ischnomera cyanea - False Blister Beetle, Saltram

It was off to Dartmoor on Tuesday 5th May to meet up with my mate Mavis for a birdy day out. It was overcast and cool in the breeze but it did get a little warmer and brighter as the day wore on and we enjoyed a relaxed and slow-paced day of birding due to various circumstances currently in play behind the scenes. We started off with a short walk at Bennets Cross near the Warren House Inn, I took my Emperor Moth lure with me but didn't expect too much due to the weather conditions and the age of the lure but within less than a minute an Emperor Moth had arrived and it was very quickly joined by another 4!

Emperor Moth

Emperor Moth

Emperor Moth - very  weirdly it was quite happy laying on its back 

Emperor Moth

Emperor Moth

It was very quiet on the bird front though with a male Stonechat, Meadow Pipits, Skylarks, a singing Willow Warbler heard only and 2 flyover Stock Doves noted before we headed onwards to nearby Challacombe Farm for a lookabout.

It was quiet at Challacombe Farm too but as we took a gentle walk around the area we had some good sightings. 2 Redstarts were heard singing but we didn't manage to see them as they sang high up in the trees, Willow Warblers, Blackcap and Chiffchaff were also heard with a nice view of a Willow Warbler had as it sang in a Willow tree. There were also 2 Mistle Thrush hassling a Jay, presumably they are nesting somewhere nearby and aren't keen on the Jays presecence, while Swallows and House Martins were swirling around overhead and a Grey Wagtail was feeding along the stream.

Pheasant, Challacombe Farm

Bogbean, Monkeyflower and Cotton Grass were all in flower and a single Green-veined White was seen feeding on Cuckoo Flower. On the moorland above the farm a herd of 14 female Red Deer were a surprise find, I think my first sighting of them on Dartmoor. They were distant but their large size and buffy coloured bottoms were obvious and when they all sat down in the vegetation they were very easily overlooked.

Bogbean

Monkeyflower

Red Deer - a lovely sight but a crap photo

Red Deer by Mavis - a much better shot!

It was time for a late lunch at the Warren House Inn (Rabbit pie!) and as we drove there we stopped off in various laybys to scan the Moor for birds. We found Stonechats, Linnets, Wheatears, Meadow Pipits and a single Magpie and eventually we heard 2 distant Cuckoos on the hillsides which were starting to turn blue with flowering Bluebells. Our final stop was near Grimspound where 2 birders were scanning around with a scope, as we got out of the car 2 Cuckoos flew over calling, they were having a bit of an aerial spat before landing briefly on top of a rocky Tor and then flying off out of sight. 

Challacombe Farm looking down the valley from Grimspound

The birders with the scope then pointed out a pair of Whinchat feeding amongst the Bracken, they were distant and very easily overlooked but eventually we had some decentish views as they perched up on a nearby barbed wire fence and were easier to see.

To end a very enjoyable day out I had a quick look around the toilet block at Yelverton while waiting for the bus home and around the outside lights were 5 moths - a Brimstone Moth, a Waved Umber, a Clay Triple-lines, a Dark-barred twin-spot Carpet and a Nut Tree Tussock.

Brimstone Moth

Waved Umber, Clay Triple-lines and Dark-barred twin-spot Carpet