Forgot to check calendar so, arriving for 9a.m. for moth trapping, found no-one present. Then it dawned on me; half an hour early so plenty of time for a coffee!!
Ed and Zoe went through the two traps for myself and seven other visitors. Plenty of moths and good variety with at least one lifer.
Awaiting moth list.
(Knot Grass, Plumed Fanfoot, Buff-tip Pebble Hooktip, Small Marbled, Privet Hawkmoth, Small Ranunculus, Poplar Hawkmoth on Ed's Finger!)
Elsewhere on east side just Great White Egret, Little Egret and Grey Heron within yards of each other but little else.
On the scrapes two Spotted Redshanks, one black, but sleepy and too distant without a scope. Also two Green and one Common Sandpipers. Avocets were approaching 100 but with predation from Lesser Black-backed Gulls and an intruding Fox there was little chance of breeding success. The Black-headed Gulls must have been badly hit with only one or two juveniles.
Large numbers of failed/non-breeding Med Gulls are now a feature of late June.
Plenty of noisy Common Terns and three or four Sandwich Terns. No sign of the earlier Roseate but I'm certain I couldn't have found it without a scope.
At Darters Dip MF pointed out a Norfolk Hawker perched up and in the scope. I couldn't find any Willow Emeralds but a brief Water Vole was the first for ages.
A few hovers sent to FB for recording. (Dasisyrphus albiostratus, Chrysotoxum verralli).
The start of 'bonking beetle' season and the first flurry of Gatekeepers.
A Paracorymbia fulva was irecorded.

































