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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: autumn

274/366 Another extra brood

30 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

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Aricia agestis, British butterflies, Brown argus, butterfly, butterflying, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Lavernock Nature Reserve, second brood Brown argus

This year I saw my first Brown argus butterfly (Aricia agestis) on 11 July and thought I’d seen my last on 26 August, a short but very sweet season of sightings. Then, to my astonishment and absolute delight, I discovered two more on the same day, 16 September, one at Lavernock Nature Reserve and the other at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park.

200930 brown argus (1)

These had to be the product of the first brood of butterflies breeding and so were a second brood, not something I’d seen before with this butterfly. As the local populations of Dingy skippers have also produced a second brood and the Small coppers a third brood this year and nothing has changed in their environments, I can only assume this has been caused by the warmer climate.

200930 brown argus (2)

I haven’t managed to find the Lavernock Brown argus again but the Cosmeston butterfly was still in the same spot last week. A late summer-early Autumn treat!

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272/366 Walking with the trees

28 Monday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, trees, walks

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autumn trees, trees

‘Today I have grown taller from walking with the trees’
~ from the poem ‘Good Company’ by Karle Wilson Baker (1878-1960)

200928 trees (1)200928 trees (2)200928 trees (3)200928 trees (4)

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271/366 Tooty fruity

27 Sunday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, trees

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autumn berries, autumn colour, autumn fruit, berries, fruit, hips

‘Autumn is the mellower season, and what we lose in flowers we more than gain in fruits.’
~ Samuel Butler, The Way of All Flesh, 1912.

200927 1 cotoneaster200927 2 snowberry200927 3 spindle200927 4 hawthorn200927 5 japanese rose200927 6 sloe200927 7 guelder rose200927 8 dog rose

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264/366 Seedheads, 1

20 Sunday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, plants, wildflowers

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British wildflowers, seed head, seed quotations, seedhead, seeds, wildflower seeds

200920 seedhead (1)

‘The vegetable life does not content itself with casting from the flower or the tree a single seed, but it fills the air and earth with a prodigality of seeds, that, if thousands perish, thousands may plant themselves, that hundreds may come up, that tens may live to maturity; that, at least one may replace the parent.’
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson, Chapter 6: Nature, Essays, Second Series, 1844.

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262/366 Webs

18 Friday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects, weather

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cobwebs, fog, spiders' webs, water droplets on webs

It was early Tuesday morning and the landscape was muffled by a dense layer of fog but there was magic happening in the fields, amongst the plants, as the power of fog droplets illuminated the industrious efforts of the spider kingdom.

200918 cobwebs (1)200918 cobwebs (2)200918 cobwebs (3)200918 cobwebs (4)200918 cobwebs (5)200918 cobwebs (6)200918 cobwebs (7)

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257/366 Ragwort inspection

13 Sunday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

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British butterflies, British insects, Common ragwort, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, importance of ragwort as food plant, insects on ragwort, Ragwort

My title says ‘inspection’ but I was tempted to invent a new word and write ‘insection’, as my inspection was really a personal challenge to see how many different insects I could find on the copious number of Common ragwort plants currently in bloom at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park. All except three of these photos were taken during one 45-minute period on Wednesday – the Small copper and two flies were seen the following day. The broad diversity of species just shows how important Ragwort is as a late summer food plant for insects.

200913 bee buff-tailed bumble
200913 bee common carder
200913 bee honeybee maybe
200913 butterfly large white
200913 butterfly meadow brown
200913 butterfly small copper
200913 butterfly small white
200913 cranefly
200913 dock bug
200913 fly sp (1)
200913 fly sp (2)
200913 hoverfly eristalis nemorum
200913 hoverfly eristalis sp
200913 hoverfly helophilus pendulus
200913 hoverfly helophilus trivittatus
200913 hoverfly sp
200913 hoverfly Sphaerophoria sp
200913 hoverfly syrphus sp
200913 nettle tap moth
200913 spider
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256/366 Bespangling dew

12 Saturday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, weather

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn morning, dew, dew on feather, dew on seedhead, morning dew

‘Get up, sweet Slug-a-bed, and see
The dew bespangling herb and tree.’

200912 dew on seedhead

‘… the childhood of the day has kept,
Against you come, some orient pearls unwept.
Come, and receive them while the light
Hangs on the dew-locks of the night’

200912 dew on feather

~  lines from the poem ‘Corinna’s Going a-Maying’, Robert Herrick, Hesperides

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254/366 Seven!

10 Thursday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British butterflies, butterflies, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Small copper

I was in seventh heaven yesterday because I found seven Small coppers, my favourite butterflies, at Cosmeston, the most I’ve ever seen in one place on one day. Here they are, the little beauties.

200910 small copper (1)200910 small copper (2)200910 small copper (3)200910 small copper (4)200910 small copper (5)200910 small copper (6)200910 small copper (7)

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253/366 Stillness, part 2

09 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, birds

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autumn bird migration, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Redstart

Yesterday I wrote about being reminded twice of the value of stillness – this was the second time. With a couple of fellow birders, I’d been enjoying a feast of migrant action all in one field – a Whinchat, a Spotted flycatcher, four Stonechats and these two Redstarts – though, as usual, the birds were a little too distant for my camera to get good photos.

200908 redstart (1)

Then, the unforecast rain came down in earnest, blowing across the field in vertical waves. The two chaps headed off but I figured I’d wait out the worst of the weather in the shelter of a large Oak tree growing along the hedgerow. Once again, my partial camouflage and my stillness – I waited 30 minutes or more – was rewarded, as one of the Redstarts came very near where I was standing. I couldn’t risk the camera being out in the rain for long but I was delighted with the couple of images I took and with being able to get such close views of this lovely bird.

200908 redstart (2)

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249/366 Small creatures after rain

05 Saturday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

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beetles, British insects, Brown-tail moth caterpillars, Brown-tail moth webs, Buff-tailed bumblebee, Emperor dragonfly, Knopper gall

Actually, it rained before my walk, during my walk and after I got home, but ‘Small creatures between showers’ was a bit long for a title. Here, then, are the said creatures …

200905 beetles

First up, these beetles were cosying up in an umbellifer flower head. I couldn’t see enough to identify them and wasn’t going to disturb their comfort to find out more.

200905 brown tails

This is a web of Brown-tail moth larvae, the ones some people freak out about because their hairs can irritate the skin. The solution to that problem is, of course, easy: look, enjoy, wonder, admire, but don’t touch!

200905 buff-tail queen

There weren’t many flying critters about but bumblebees will fly whatever the weather, as shown by this gorgeous queen Buff-tailed bumble.

200905 knopper gall

Perhaps the littlest creature, though I didn’t look in to investigate, was the one that was lurking in this Knopper gall (spot the antennae!).

200905 emperor

And, the prize for the most magnificent, was this male Emperor dragonfly. I had to linger a while, waiting for him to settle, and then sneak up behind the bushes, but His Imperial Majesty was definitely worth the wait. What a handsome creature he is, despite his somewhat ragged wings.

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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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