I recently read an on-line article by a guy (I couldn't work out whether he was Finnish or Irish) explaining in great detail how to be proficient in finding rare birds. It reminded me that any hopes I might have that I could be that person are entirely delusional. Getting away from all the - go birding at the right place, know your birds, keep looking up, scan every bush, check the weather stuff, the absolute killer was keep going all day, every day. Those days are gone.
Today's two hour effort comprised a mooch around Morton Bagot, and my birding highlight was a toss up between discovering that the juvenile Lapwing was still alive on the scrape field, and counting four Green Sandpipers and two Little Ringed Plovers on the nearest flash. They were shimmering in the heat of yet another hot sunny day, so the only chance I got to photograph a bird came courtesy of the pair of Stonechats still present at the dragonfly ponds.
| Female Stonechat |
However, I did find something good. Just not a bird. Back on 10 July 2022 I had added Red-eyed Damselfly to my site list, and now almost exactly four years later I spotted another. It was resting on vegetation on the surface of the Kingfisher Pool, most of the floating leaves and other detritus being occupied by Small Red-eyed Damselflies. The latter were also my first of the year, but are much the commoner Red-eyed species here since they first appeared about ten years ago.
| Red-eyed Damselfly |
| Small Red-eyed Damselfly |
For the main difference between the two species look at the back end of the abdomen.
While researching my blog for the last time I photographed Red-eyed D at Morton Bagot I was reminded that 10 July 2022 was also the day Dave and I found an adult Honey-buzzard here. So even old duffers like us occasionally get lucky and become rarity finders.
As for moths, well as you'd expect the hot nights have delivered. I brought forward my most recent GMS night by one day so that I wouldn't be semi-comatose when the football was on.
Thus on Thursday night I was witness to a deluge of at least 409 moths of 68 species, many of which were new for the year. Three species (maybe four) were new to the garden, although the first of these was not in fact a moth. While Lyn washed in the bathroom I couldn't help noticing a monstrous cricket clinging to the ceiling above her head. I potted what proved to be a Long-winged Conehead, a species I have seen at Morton Bagot, but not in our garden before.
| Long-winged Conehead |
Among the actual moths the following morning from dawn, I gained for the garden a Common Purple & Gold Pyrausta purpuralis and a Twin-spotted Wainscot.
| Common Purple and Gold (Similar to the much more common Mint Moth, this individual seems to have had its wings clipped by a bird. It still flew off before I got a second chance of a photo) |
| Twin-spotted Wainscot |
Other moths included two Least Carpets, six Tree-lichen Beauties, a remarkable 30 Broad-bordered Yellow Underwings, a Maple Pug, another four Small Mottled Willows (bringing this year's total of what was thought to be a scarce migrant to eight), another Cydia interscindana (the previous one a fortnight ago was the first for Warwickshire), a possible Cryptic Ash Bud Moth Prays ruficeps (this would be a garden first if the moth recorder considers my rather poor photos sufficient evidence), a Scarce Silver-lines (only my second, and for me the best looking moth of the night), and five migrant Rush Veneers.
| Scarce Silver-lines |
As usual the full list of moths new for the year has been updated on the appropriate page.