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~ a celebration of nature

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Author Archives: sconzani

Twinkle toes

02 Tuesday Aug 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Moorhen, Moorhen chick, Moorhen chick's toes, Moorhen feet, Moorhen toes

Can you even begin to imagine what it would be like to have toes as long as this Moorhen chick? It would be like having toes as long as our bodies. We’d be falling over ourselves trying to move about. But not the Moorhen. Although this little one was still young enough not to have full control over its lengthy extremities, one of its parents put on a display that showed exactly what they’re good for, spreading its weight as it sprinted across the leaves of water lilies, almost as if it was walking on water.

220802 moorhen chick

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Stenodema laevigata

01 Monday Aug 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects

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British bugs, mirid bugs, Miridae, plant bugs, Stenodema laevigata

I cannot tell a lie – I didn’t find this bug, it found me. As I was wandering around a local field, I glimpsed something flit up from the flowers and looked down to find it sitting on my t-shirt. Very obligingly, it waited until I got my camera out of my pocket and was then persuaded to climb on to my hand for some photos. Meet Stenodema laevigata, another of the Miridae family of plant bugs. This species is much more common and widespread, with over 3000 records currently showing on the NBN Atlas webpage, or perhaps it’s more often recorded because its slim shape and singular markings make it easier to identify.

220801 Stenodema laevigata

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Feeling the heat

31 Sunday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in flowers, wildflowers

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British wildflowers, summer wildflowers, yellow wildflowers

Yellow is summer, sunshine, heat. Even before the record temperatures of the recent heat wave, walking through fields of these bright yellow (and orange) wildflowers was making me feel hot.

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Adelphocoris lineolatus

30 Saturday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Adelphocoris lineolatus, British bugs, Miridae, plant bug

At last a bug with a common name – Adelphocoris lineolatus is also known as the Lucerne bug, though it actually favours quite a wide variety of food plants and, as you can see, I found it sitting on Common fleabane (Pulicaria dysenterica). This species is a little trickier to identify but its combination of paired lines and double spots helped me nail it down. As with yesterday’s mirid bug, records for this species are scattered and mostly to be found in southern Britain, though some adventurous individuals have been recorded in Scotland. (I have not identified the smaller bug in this picture – my photo didn’t show enough details and I suspect it might have fallen into the ‘too hard’ basket anyway.)

220730 Adelphocoris lineolatus

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Oncotylus viridiflavus

29 Friday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects, wildflowers

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Tags

British bugs, insects on knapweed, knapweed, Miridae, Oncotylus viridiflavus, plant bugs

High summer is prime time for spotting plant bugs. By keeping an eye out for insects on wildflowers, I’ve managed to spot three new (to me) species in the past week alone. This is one of them: a mirid bug with a mouthful of a name, Oncotylus viridiflavus. A lot of these bugs have very similar markings and can be tricky to tell apart but, luckily, this little guy has quite distinct colouration and patterning and, very helpfully, was sitting right where it should be, on top of its food plant, Knapweed. The records for this species are scattered throughout the southern half of Britain but there are a lot of gaps in the map – perhaps you can be the first to find one in your area.

220729 oncotylus viridiflavus

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The Gadwall that thinks she’s a Mallard

28 Thursday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Cardiff Bay Wetlands Reserve, comparison between Gadwall and Mallard, Gadwall, Mallard

It’s quite unusual for Gadwall to spend time at Cardiff Bay Wetlands Reserve and for them to be so confiding and so consistently in the company of Mallards rather than their own kind, so this little beauty may well be the same bird that visited the reserve back in March 2021.

220728 gadwall

Yesterday, she was puddling about right next to the boardwalk, which gave me the perfect opportunity to take some comparison shots with a female Mallard: Gadwall images on the left, Mallard on the right. Female ducks can be tricky to tell apart but you can see here that the differences in their body shapes are quite distinctive.

220728 gadwall mallard

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A side of Speckled wood

27 Wednesday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

British butterflies, butterfly, patterns on butterfly wings, Speckled wood, unique patterns

Before I became completely enamoured with butterflies, I mistakenly believed they – that is to say, each species – looked the same. I hadn’t appreciated that the patterns on their wings are like fingerprints, each one different, each unique.

220727 speckled wood side

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Passed on

26 Tuesday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in mammal

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Tags

British mammals, dead shrew, shrew

This was one of three dead shrews I saw on Sunday’s walk around a local meadow. These tiny creatures live a fast and furious life so their death may have been from natural causes though I’ve never seen three on one day in one field before. I wonder if last week’s heat wave got them (for non-British readers, Britain recorded temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius last week for the first time ever). I found it intriguing, if gory, to see the ants clustered around the snout and claws.

220726 dead shrew

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Blackberries, yum!

25 Monday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects, plants

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blackberries, Bramble berries, Dock bug, Dock bug nymph, insects on blackberries

Yesterday’s first tasting of this season’s blackberries nearly ended in disaster – not for me, but for this teeny weeny Dock bug nymph that was hiding on the far side of a berry but managed to scurry quickly on to my hand before I ate it. The berry was still a bit sour but at least it wasn’t crunchy!
*Note to self: always inspect the berries before eating them.

220725 blackberry and dock bug nymph

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An opulence of orchids

24 Sunday Jul 2022

Posted by sconzani in flowers, plants, wildflowers

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British orchids, British wildflowers, Broad-leaved helleborine, Epipactis helleborine, native orchids, orchid

I took these photos of Broad-leaved helleborine (Epipactis helleborine) ten days ago, on 13 July, and even then I had expected them to have shrivelled in the sweltering heat. Now, after the heatwave, I imagine they will have wilted, drooped, possibly died off completely but I will go back soon to check on them as they have such lovely flowers.

220724 broad-leaved helleborine

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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Recent blog posts

  • In flower now April 12, 2026
  • A surprise Slow-worm April 11, 2026
  • My first Holly blue April 10, 2026
  • Alder flies April 9, 2026
  • Lily beetle April 8, 2026

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Unless otherwise acknowledged, the text and photographs on this blog are my own and are subject to international copyright. Nothing may be downloaded or copied without my permission.

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