Sunday, 28 June 2026

Speckled Wood and Tiger Cranefly


I was without a PC for most of the week, so this group of photos spans many days starting with a few birds, then butterflies and insects. A surprise Speckled Wood on Saturday is the highlight for me, and my "resident" Sparrowhawk has kept the birds away. One of the Keptie Pond juvenile Herons posed on a raft and a Tiger Cranefly was photographed as it sheltered in the garden.

Two short video clips in UHD below



Male Sparrowhawk in my garden, pretty sure the same one that's been around from last autumn


Also deterring the songbirds, a few Rooks, a Crow today, a Jackdaw and three cats filmed on a security camera most nights


This Heron looks brand new, I wonder if it's newly moulted or one of the two juveniles successfully fledged a week or more now, Keptie Pond, Arbroath


This photo confirms it's a juvenile


Tufted drake


Lesser black-backed Gull in what turned out to be a heavy shower


Back in my garden, a Tiger Cranefly Nephrotoma flavescens


A garden first! A Speckled Wood Butterfly


Underwing


Large White Butterfly, note the black wing edge curves around the corner, a Small White only on the top edge


Red Admiral


ObsIdentify was 100% sure this is a Willughby's Leafcutter Bee Megachile willughbiella


Migrant Hoverfly


Narcissus Bulb Fly


Buffish Mining Bee maybe...


Common Green Capsid Lygocoris pabulinus


Garden Bumblebee


Red-tailed Bumblebee


Buff-tailed Bumblebee, well worn


Speckled Wood, arty photo when compared to the ones at the start


The feathers of a young Sparrow in the garden, the following day the Sparrowhawk was plucking another on a fence post

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

East Haven Webs Survey for June

I wasn't expecting large numbers or species of wetland birds as most have gone north or into the hills to breed. Basically, 5 species of Gulls, immature or non-breeding Oystercatchers, Curlews, drake Mallards and Eiders who play no part in rearing their young.

Also some garden insects despite the windy conditions recently.


This Microlight flew low along the tideline and appeared to continue along the beach toward Westhaven. I hadn't expected a high count of birds and the flypast didn't help as it flushed all of the birds


Common Gull, one of last years young


Cormorant


Immature Herring Gull


The first "returning" Redshank I've seen this season


Early Bumblebee


Common Carder Bee


Fork-tailed Flower-bee Anthophora furcata


Foxglove in Olive's garden, great for Bumblebees, but not for photographing them


No idea what this is, part of a mixture I bought, then I lost the name list...


Lupin, currently around 28 flowers in my wildlife garden and rapidly being overgrown with nettles I've left for the butterflies

Tuesday, 9 June 2026

It's a Linnet ,init

   
Let me entertain you, or maybe not. Just a few birds seen and photographed in windy conditions last week, when I found it difficult to keep the camera stable. Insect numbers in my garden have increased, with Early Bumblebee, Tree Bumblebee, Buff-tailed Bumblebee, Carder Bee, Ashy Mining Bee, and Migrant Hoverfly. Seen but not photographed was a Hummingbird Hawk-Moth, which was at arms length but flew off before I could get my phone out. Also what looks to be a Broad-leaved Marsh Orchid in Olive's lawn, thought to have died last year when it wasn't seen, but has re-appeared in the same place as previous years. Olive has just carefully cut the lawn around it.

Seven videos at the blue links below, top billing for a male Roe Deer

Roebuck in Olive's garden         Starlings close up         Rook



Male Linnet near Hatton, East Haven


Female


Song Thrush


Lesser black-backed Gull, Danger Point, Arbroath


Oystercatcher also Danger Point



Broad-leaved Marsh Orchid (reasonably sure)

Ashy Mining Bee Andrena cineraria


Migrant Hoverfly


Small White Butterfly in my garden


Fly species


Narcissus Bulb Fly


Same one as above depositing eggs


Silver-ground Carpet Moth, not confirmed


Painted Lady Butterfly, Lurgies car park, Montrose Basin, two more in my garden

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