About Me

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No Fixed Abode, Home Counties, United Kingdom
I’m a 60-year-old Aspergic gardening CAD-Monkey. Sardonic, cynical and with the political leanings of a social reformer, I’m also a toy and model figure collector, particularly interested in the history of plastics and plastic toys. Other interests are history, current affairs, modern art, and architecture, gardening and natural history. I love plain chocolate, fireworks and trees, but I don’t hug them, I do hug kittens. I hate ignorance, when it can be avoided, so I hate the 'educational' establishment and pity the millions they’ve failed with teaching-to-test and rote 'learning' and I hate the short-sighted stupidity of the entire ruling/industrial elite, with their planet destroying fascism and added “buy-one-get-one-free”. Likewise, I also have no time for fools and little time for the false crap we're all supposed to pretend we haven't noticed, or the games we're supposed to play. I will 'bite the hand that feeds', to remind it why it feeds.
Showing posts with label Insects - Moths. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insects - Moths. Show all posts

Saturday, October 11, 2025

O is for Other Books

When I showed the new additions to the collectables' library, I mentioned a few other books I'd bought recently, half in the Alton second-hand bookshop, most of the others in Waterststones, and a couple in TKMaxx, of all places, not toy soldiery, not toy'y at all, but it gives you a better idea about who I am, or what I'm about!
 
Old Shire Albums, but specifically, the Natural History sub-set, which have more colour images than most Shire's, certainly the older ones, and looking at a small field in some detail, snails perticularly tend to get passed-by, unless they are perticularly colourfull in the shell department.
 
Same Alton shop, different day, and they had these two, even more academic works (same author on the Ants), and Hoverflies are among my favourites, there is a wide number of them, and they can differ quite a bit, even within local populations, so photographing them never gets boring . . . like is does when, for instance, you find something covered in domestic honey bees - after a few good shots, you just stop shooting them!
 
I also grabbed this, it's a truism for a lot of reference works, even military ones, the text of the old ones is better, the illustrations of the new ones is superior, and with everything in storage, I picked-up this spiral bound work, going cheap, just so I'd have something here, the best feature of it being the open/closed artwork.
 
This was the Waterstones, not that pricey, and I've since been back to get the matching volume on wild flowers, as I always get confused by all the white umbel-flowered types, some of which are deadly poisonous (hemlock), others totally safe (cow parsley).
 
This book has a good range of insects, covered in some depth, with most of the European visitors included, as assumed summer finds. Not much on the North American visitors, and I've encountered two in recent years, both beetles (longhorn and pine), blown over by storms.
 
This was a bit of fun, I think I remember it from junior-school, and nostalgia is a powerful tug on the wallet sometimes, also you can find poses, colour-ways or now debunked physical features in these early works, which you can match to specific, contemporary toys, as the sculptors or art departments used the same books!
 
I bought a batch of raffle tickets at the BMSS's annual show in Reading and won these two. Both related to post '44 France, in World War Two, you can't go wrong with Ospray, and while I tend to collect the uniform works, these will be an interesting read, and once read, can always go in another raffle!
 

The first was an impulse buy, in the Basingrad TKMaxx, only for me to find the other at Farnborough Gate's store, a week or so later. They are supposedly academic 'fan' works, looking at an aspect of the Tolkien world, comparing it to the world Tolkien lived and wrote in, and tying all the loose ends together . . . kind of things?
 
I've only briefly dipped into them, but I think they will prove interesting, and anything which simplifies or explains in a shorter-form, or in a language I can follow, all the tediousness of the post-Silmarillion books, and the 'Tolkien Universe' stuff issued by the son, is a good thing, but the fact it appears there are still five to find, has curbed my enthusiasm somewhat!
 
What triggered the impulse of the first purchase, was the feel of them, they have a sort of faux-leather, which is almost micro- or nano-flocking, so they feel soft somehow, but colder than leather, so a treated polymer foil of some kind? They also look a bit like the ancient world library I built, from Folio Society books, years ago.
 
But anyway I have them now, and with a small sub-library of Tolkien books, including a few bestiaries, and fantasy art-books, they will add to the oeuvre, and enhance the eventual auction-lot, before I leave the room permanently!

Thursday, August 8, 2019

PW7 is for Public Information Announcement - Notifyable Pests

No, not TJF and his sidekick; proper, serious, climate-change related, existential pests!

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
One of the weirdest things at the PW show was the obvious state of the little box-hedge (more of a shrubbery . . . Ni! Ni!) out the back of the venue, which upon closer inspection turned out to be an infestation of the previously scheduled and notifyable pest; the box tree moth (cydalima perspectalis), or - at least - its caterpillars/larvae.

You will read all sorts of horror stories about these triggering fatal allergy reactions and such like, but as far as I am aware no Toy Soldier enthusiasts were harmed in the course of the day's event, while even handling them only results in mild skin-irritation from the hairs, if you are susceptible to such things; nevertheless - caution is the better part of valour in these cases, so  . . . photograph from a safe distance and leave well-alone!

An infestation used to have be reported (which the management at the Wining Post said they'd done), but there have been so many reports in the last couple of years, and so little is known of the full life-cycle/lifestyle of the animal, the war's rather been lost for now; still, some attempt to end the infestation also needs to be carried out, which - by/to the date of the show - clearly hadn't been. One hopes 'contractors' were due on the Monday?

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
This is the little critter in close-up, looking like some of our native caterpillars (you have to have a higher degree of expertise than I have to sort some, especially all the plain-green ones!), or, specifically, the saw-fly larvae who attack roses - mercifully they've not appeared this year, probably due to all that rain at the start of the month (June)? Although the failure of any species, however seasonal, or 'one off', is bad news in the long term and it's the same rain that probably killed the old Brambly?

Those of you who suffer an attack like this at home can solve the problem before it escalates by putting on gardening gloves and squishing every caterpillar you can find, before spraying the infected plant with a strong mix of washing-up liquid and water. Check the site for the next few days to catch any survivors/stragglers!

But you should still report the incident so it can be plotted on some secret map in the RHS 'war rooms'! If you catch it in time, the plant will survive, but damage this severe can prove fatal, maybe the rains which came a couple of weeks later will have saved the plants, but had this damage occurred before the recent heat-wave (or continued into the heat-wave), the plants may have been lost - I'll try to remember to look next year!

Below are the rest of the shots I took for those of you who may be more interested in the subject . . .

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
These are rose saw-fly larvae, relatively harmless (not for the rose!) which are among those native caterpillars who could be mistaken for the box tree moth. Their head and bum colouring are reversed from the invader though, with a yellow head and much smaller area of black at the other end, while their markings are quite different; less stripy, more spotty.

They congregate gregariously in sibling groups - like the invader - but don't leave the mass of dead-material (only because rose is softer than box, so they eat it all!), nor do they produce the fine haze/shroud of 'spider-web' strands.

Arge Ochropus; Arge Ochropus Caterpillars; Arge Ochropus Larvae; Arge Pagana; Arge Pagana Caterpillars; Arge Pagana Larvae; Box Tree Moth; Box Tree Moth Caterpillars; Box Tree Moth Larvae; Buff Tipped Moth; Buff Tipped Moth Caterpillars; Buff Tipped Moth Larvae; Buff-Tip Caterpillars Larvae; Buff-Tip Larvae; Butterfly Conservation; Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis; Cydalima Perspectalis Caterpillars; Cydalima Perspectalis Larvae; Insects; Insects Photography; Large Rose Sawfly; Large Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Large Rose Sawfly Larvae; Larvae; Lesser Rose Sawfly; Lesser Rose Sawfly Caterpillars; Lesser Rose Sawfly Larvae; Phalera Bucephala; Phalera Bucephala Caterpillars; Phalera Bucephala Larvae; RHS; Sawfly Caterpillars; Sawfly Larvae; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
Another gregarious-feeding native which could be mistaken for the problem incomer is the buff-tipped moth's caterpillars, but they are much furrier, black at both ends and more checkered in the markings.



Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Countdown to Halloween - 7 - Miscellaneous Scorpion

Although - If you sat on one it couldn't be 'miscellaneous' in any sense of the word!

This PVC scorpion came-in in a mixed lot a few weeks ago, and although not necessarily a Halloween toy - per se - we will see later in the week that it belongs in the countdown.

The same charity shop gave up this old Hamlyn pocket handbook on insects, I have the tree volume and a few others, there's even one on uniforms I seem to recall, indeed I may have the insect one already but the library is in storage.

They are OK for their age but North American-centric with a few lines edited in by the British publishers to cover for Europe or the UK, which doesn't matter so much for the tree or cactus volumes, but is a bit of a hamstring-injury for someone relying on the book to ID UK insects!

Also, the artwork is a bit dated and simplistic, but; having made in sound awful, I would emphasise it's still a useful work, and with the Internet as a back-up, you can find the closest-match and then do a Google image-search for the others using the taxonomic info obtained and usually find 'yours' with little difficulty. Collin's 'Gem' and the old Observer's guide books make-up the triumvirate of small, useful, reference works.

Angle Shades Moth

It helped me ID this, a couple of days after I bought it! Found in the woodpile and saved from the axe; it was mentioned a few days later in the paper as an autumn visitor - pushed-up by the warm plume which preceded Hurricane Ophelia - to feed on ivy flowers.

We ought to have Halloween moths? A bag of killer, vampire Mothma's!

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

L is for lifesize

I know we've had that title before, but i'm not feeling inventive today and I haven't posted wildlife for ages, these were shot in an hour or so on the 7th of this month, between rain showers!

This first one is a bit of a mystery, it looks a bit like a weevil, or a scarlet lily beetle and was found on a day-lily, so you might think it's a green domestic version of the red intruder, but I can only find a more weevil-like thing in the books called Byctiscus Populi which lives on Aspen...anyone recognise it?

Buff Ermine moth, he/she had a lovely orange and black tiger-striped (stripped? The one the doesn't involve the removal of clothes!) thorax, but it was difficult to photograph as you could only see it when it was fapping it's wings, which is when you can't get a decent shot in focus!

Emperor Dragonfly, sitting and in flight, our best dragonfly by a mile! Snail on the march and a Ringlet Butterfly. I also took loads of shots of various slugs - who knew we had so many species of slug! - but I've spared you those pictures.

A female Beautiful Damoiselle, our largest damoiselle, the male is bluer. Yes; it's official name is 'beautiful', how nice is that!

Monday, July 6, 2015

N is for Natures Bounty!

I spent the afternoon rewarding myself for all that mud-puddling! And the bee-stings; 5 and counting this year, only 7 in the whole of last year, mowing is pretty-much out 'till they calm down a bit!

The blackcurrants were actually growing wild between the railway and the pond, someone tipped their garden-waste into the reeds in the dark - no doubt..there are lots of little ones, so a commando-raid in the autumn may well see us with a line of canes in the new year!

Also round the pond has been this chap (or chappess?), started life about 4 weeks ago, shorter that my little finger-nail and mistakable for a little bit of dried leaf, now the size of my thumb, and always easy to find as it hangs around on top of the hazelnut leaves, clearly birds have learnt a lesson there...leave well alone. Google tells me it's a Rusty Tussock-Moth.

Meanwhile when I first found these (there's a whole bunch of them) I wondered if they had a parasitic or fungal disease, but apparently they are meant to look like bird-lime! And while caterpillar-like, they are actually 'just' larvae; of a Saw-Fly.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

S is for Spring!

Well, although it's getting colder by the minute this afternoon, and we've had two-and-a-half days of intermittent rain mist and drizzle, we did, back on Monday/Tuesday have the most glorious days of warm sunshine, bringing the Mirabelle plum out in a thick shock of ivory-cream blossom and getting the blood stirring in the wildlife...

This young Blackbird came right up to me as I weeded the rockery, looking for little bugs and things to breakfast on, bold as brass!

There were several Brimstones flying around but they didn't land long enough to catch on film, but this Tortoiseshell, was sunning itself for quite a while on the lawn and I got some nice shots.

It's funny - I think the brimstone is probably my favourite butterfly, or equal with the orange-tip, while the Tortoiseshell is usually only photograph-able at the end of the year when his/her wings look like the one that got away from  Manfred von Richthofen's flying-circus, all shattered and bitty! So there is a symmetry in not getting a shot of my favourite but getting the best shot ever of one I usually don't shoot!

Finally a moth that had the appearance of being fashioned from bits of sun-bleached bracken...as it emerged from a clump of er...sun-bleached bracken; there is the cleverness of nature in all her wonder summed-up in a little thing less than an inch across!

 This little mouse looks a bit damp as I had to rescue him from the mouth of Frodo, who was having a wail of a time not killing him for sport! I then had to engage in a great deception with Frodo, helping look all round the wheelbarrow for the 'escaped' mouse, so that he didn't blame me for loosing it.

As I was doing so, I saw the mouse had not gone far before stopping to groom cat-slobber off it's whiskers, so I then had to distract Frodo further, in the hope he wouldn't spot it. In the end the mouse disappeared down the back of the privet hedge, Frodo got to kill my bootlace and everyone was happy!

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

H is for Hampshire Wildlife - August 2012

One or two of you may have noticed I have now imported all the old posts from the gardening and moaning blogs, so from time to time you'll have to put up with the odd bit of wildlife or plant life on this blog from now on. I will try to finish re-tagging the 'Index' (preferably before the final imposition of the 'New Style' blog layout - as it's much easier in the old version) and bring over the last of the links in the next few weeks.

I also have about 30 articles in preparation, some of which I've already mentioned, but there's a lot going on in 'real life' at the moment so they are not going on-line as quickly as I'd like. For now here's some of the visitors to my flat in Enham (Nr. Andover - an old stomping ground from my Army days!) and my mothers garden in North Hampshire.

This little chap - or chap'ess - came calling just after midnight on Thursday and I would have given it some milk but the caterers here had given us yoghurt disguised as milk (for our self-catered breakfast) which I figured would not go down well with a house guest, so I just took some pictures for the visitors book and saw it on it's snail-hunting way.

Creepy-crawlies are always a favourite of mine and these are all from the last 30 days, the slug was even longer, but he started to shorten as I focused, a phenomena I have noticed before with slugs and snails and I suspect they somehow detect the beam from the camera, as you can always approach them (with care) but the moment you press first pressure on the shutter button they freeze up/shrink.

I don't know what the ants were finding so interesting, I inspected the stick after I took the shot and it was a stick...just a stick! The snail was so small yet so beautifully constructed it would drive a simpler mind to religion!

Flyers - after a couple of really good years for butterflies, we have now had two bad ones and this year they have been so thin on the ground (and the Buddleia!) that I try to shoot them whenever I see one. While I continue to fall for moths, who are so much-more pretty than a quick glance ever betrays, their buffs and grays, browns and fawns being actually patterns and designs as complex as any butterfly.

These three little voles came out of a bank on Saturday afternoon and sat around on the grass together, so tame we could stroke them, although they did tend to rush back into their hole after a couple of touches!

It is one of life's undeniable pleasures to encounter wildlife close-up, commune with it (on any level) and let it carry-on with it's day. I'm not sure if a 'Greenie' wouldn't cry "foul" at the stroking of voles, but they were gentle little one-finger passes (these things are about 45mm nose-to-tail-base, and the animals were back out in minutes - so obviously weren't that bothered, I guess you'd be nervous if a 600 foot giant came and patted you gently on the head!

Monday, August 23, 2010

Humming-bird Hawk Moth

Clearly I need a camera with a narrower focusing 'beam' and a faster shutter-speed! This is a Humming-bird Hawk Moth, going 99-to-the-dozen on our Lavender bushes, a rare visitor to these parts - I'm told, but the second year in the last three that it's put in an appearance, pity I couldn't get a better picture, but it would not stop!

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Still More Wildlife

Mike Beale over at the Norfolk Wildlife blog, link to right, writes in answer to my query about the white moth bottom right "That's a White Plume Moth you have there, Its wings are deeply divided into several 'fingers', each of which is finely feathered, or plumed."

Sunday, June 20, 2010

More Wildlife

More wildlife encountered out and about in West Berkshire in the last couple of weeks;

Top left is a busy Bumble Bee, to the right is a caterpillar covered in parasitic beetles of some sort, I have to say I killed the beetles, which was probably not the right thing to do, but I felt I'd rather have another butterfly in the garden!

Bottom left is a moth of unknown name and an 'instar' of immature grasshopper shedding his skin by literally wriggling out of it!

Large White Butterfly who wouldn't open for me, but like the Orange Tip the other day is almost nicer to look at closed!