It's been another action packed couple of days.
It started quietly enough yesterday, when a pre-breakfast visit to Earlswood was most notable for how neatly I avoided seeing a Little Ringed Plover which appeared on the shingle island (in front of John O of course), before flying off while I was completing an unproductive circuit of Engine Pool. Yellow-legged Gull and Egyptian Goose were two I did see.
Fortunately a detour to the farm at Morton Bagot to buy some eggs led me to add an undoubted Hobby to my year list as one flew across the road a couple of hundred yards short of the patch boundary. I took the opportunity to stroll into Bannams Wood, where a Willow Warbler was probably the pick of the species seen.
This morning I went back to Bannams, and this time was rewarded with a Spotted Flycatcher. Last year I missed the species by being too confident I would see one on autumn passage.
I then decided I should walk into the adjoining Morton Bagot recording area, although as temperatures quickly soared I began to wonder if I'd made the right decision.
It turned out I had. As I was scanning the now almost dry nearest flash, looking at nothing better than Black-headed Gull, a single Goose flew from the west and pitched down onto the furthest flash. As it did so, the combination of chocolate brown head and neck and bright orange feet and legs surely meant it could only be a Tundra Bean Goose.
Obviously its pretty unlikely to be a wild bird heading back to the arctic tundra a mere three months after all its fellows had done so. Much more likely it is the long-staying Bittell bird of extremely doubtful provenance. I texted Rob W who said he hadn't seen it since January. Nevertheless, I'm sure its their bird and only an unprincipled scoundrel would tick it for the patch list. But I am that person....tick.
It took me a while to locate it on the furthest flash due to long vegetation, distance etc, but eventually it swam into view.
I was expecting that would be that for the day, but sometime around lunchtime Whatsapp ping'd. Matt Griffiths had found a Lesser Emperor dragonfly at Earlswood.
This used to be a really rare bird, and in fact Mike Inskip gets the plaudits for finding one at Morton Bagot which I think I'm right in saying was the first in the county. That was about ten years ago, and I'm still waiting for an opportunity to pull it back. Getting one at Earlswood would be almost as good.
So I stepped back out into the blazing heat and made my way to the causeway at Earlswood. Initially I could see no dragonflies at all, but then spotted a "red" Darter species. This wasn't what I'd been expecting, but given the early date and the fact it was red, it had to be another rare southern migrant, the Red-veined Darter. Unfortunately it was extremely unco-operative, but while I was trying to relocate it, the Lesser Emperor glided past. Experience of the British Emperor species told me that I would be unlikely to see it land, and so it proved. This is my most successful flight shot.
After a while I returned to the search for the Darter, and found it landing on stems sticking out of the water quite close to the causeway. The red veins in the wing from which it gets its name are actually quite hard to see. But I did eventually get a record shot.
Shortly afterwards I saw a female type which had the requisite two-toned eye colour, brown above, bluish below, confirming it was also a Red-veined Darter. I was even quite pleased with my record shot.
I gather these are not the first for Earlswood, John Oates having found four of them in early July 2019. But there had been none since.
I'm sure the recent heatwave is responsible for the arrival of both species from the continent, even though they are both now breeding in the UK.
Finally a moth. With the bathroom window left open it was inevitable that something would come in. We actually had two micros, Diamond-back Moth and House Moss-moth ag, but rather more impressive was a single very pretty macro, with the unimaginative name Barred Yellow.
I've seen the odd one before, and the name does it no justice at all.