Friday, 29 May 2026

A few from Titchfield on the coolest day for a while.

Food pass between Male and female Marsh Harriers

Plenty of Painted Ladies, part of the ongoing invasion, and outnumbering all other butterflies totalled.

Along the path side twenty or so Southern Marsh Orchids (probably 200+ in meadow) and a single Common Spotted. Lots of Ragged Robin.

First Black-headed Gull chicks.

Some NfY insects:- 

Wasp Beetle x 2 on Hemlock Water Dropwort, Meadow Brown, Cantharis pallida, Cantharis fusca, Cheilosia illustrata, Chrysogaster solstitialis, Roesel's Bush-cricket


























Thursday, 28 May 2026

Brief local

No change bird-wise although a Swallow hawking low over the field is presumably a local breeder in the Burrfields area.

This Broad-bodied Chaser sat up for a photo but too far for the macro lens. Later, two male Emperors chased each other skyward. Its that time of year when, despite warm conditions, there is a big butterfly 'gap' being still too early for Essex Skipper, Meadow Brown and Gatekeeper etc and nothing other than a couple of Holly Blues.

This Phania funesta was the only other thing of note.

As the Yellow Flag goes over the first few spikes of Purple Loosestrife are appearing.

And a bunch of hawking gulls midday included some calling Mediterraneans.




Wednesday, 27 May 2026

First trap of the spring... and summer only four days away,

I wasn't sure whether to put the trap out with a resident family of six foxes; the novelty has very definitely worn off now what with noise, smell and general chaos and damage. Awake by 04:30 and not long after that all hell broke loose, with an adult arriving with food and four youngsters going 'bat-crap crazy'. So it seemed wise to deal with the trap and unplug the electrics.

The totals came to 40/17, not great but about par for the course.  A Portland Ribbon Wave (below) was the fourth here, one per year since 2023 although this is the earliest and the Setaceous Hebrew Character (below) was the only thing I could be bothered to photograph out of a pot. Two common moths, Cinnabar and Yellow-banded Longhorn (a female), were both new for the garden and trap.

All were added to the usual Sheets spreadsheet.

A few screaming Swifts overhead.

The heatwave continues and wasn't conducive to much else. Later, a lingering coffee in the airconditioned Costa was very pleasant.

At the pond the lone Reed Warbler seems to have started mimicking alarm-calling blackbirds. Another four Swifts overhead.




Tuesday, 26 May 2026

SHP early

(Eristalis nemorum, Tachina fera/magnicornis x2, Ectophasia crassipennis - Twist-winged Parasite Fly - Cheilosia impressa, Speckled Yellow, Dactylorhiza spp , probably Common Spotted Orchid)


























Despite an early(ish) start to avoid the heat of the day, it was tough finding anything. Speckled Yellow was the commonest Lepidoptera by far. Bird song is already dieing off for the spring and I'm guessing the heat is not helping - the best were two Bullfinches in the conservation area and a distant heard-only Yellowhammer. Three Swallows and a tatty kite were about it otherwise.
The two hovers were recorded via FB and both NfY.

Friday, 22 May 2026

Here comes summer..

After such a long run of mostly poor weather this year the first heatwave has arrived with temperatures looking to hit 30c in two days and no obvious relief in the following week. Sundays walk has been brought forward half an hour which might make it impractical for me.

Today was a catch up over coffee with K at SHP so no wildlife watching per se.

So three singing Firecrest, one Goldcrest, a few singing Blackcaps, two House Martins and a Red Kite overhead. A male Orange-tip in the Well Head was my first for a while and, with June around the corner, could possibly be my last of the year. A female Ectophasia crassipennis (Twist-winged Parasite Flywas NfY and my first here so I popped it on irecord.

No time for photos nor a walk to the conservation area.

Thursday, 21 May 2026

First duty day yesterday... and short local walk today

Breezy and mostly a bit birdless at Pulborough after reinstating volunteer role.

A pair of Garganey were nice and it was good see surviving Avocet and Lapwing chicks. 

Near 'close of play' a White Stork was way out on the riverbank.

Still a little song from four or five Nightingales but no Lesser Whitethroat, Garden Warbler nor Cuckoo - and two close and very audible Treecreepers refused to be seen!

On the heathland a male Great Spotted Woodpecker was feeding some very noisy young and a second very scruffy adult was on a dead branch poking out of Black Pond. At the latter not much water and just one Four-spotted Chaser.

Today just two very new Coot chicks, five young Mallard almost full grown bar flight feathers and only one singing Reed Warbler. With June just around the corner  other singing males are unlikely. Only noticeable change insect wise, with the arrival of warm weather, was Amblyteles armatorius and a good number of Broad Centurions.

Below, Scorpion Fly and a Drinker moth caterpillar from SHP a couple of days ago.

Still holding off on putting the Moth trap out with so much fox activity; yesterday a rucksack turned up in the garden  (!!) - I wonder where that was stolen from?