Sunday, 29 July 2018

Ballachurry Reserve, 26th July 2018.

A warm summer's day at the reserve
Hemp Agrimony in the foreground - attracts many insects.

Thursday was a very warm day. I'd already walked from the Chasms to the Sound in the morning so the prospect of some heavy gardening in the afternoon did not really appeal. A leisurely stroll round Ballachurry Reserve seemed altogether more inviting and the light breeze made the location very pleasant indeed. The wildlife began at the gate with the sound of summer - Grasshoppers! Here is the full report:

Birds:

SC209693 Willow Warbler heard but not seen
SC208694 Swallow flying over
SC209695 male Pheasant
SC209694 male Pheasant
SC209694 2 x juvenile Moorhen on pond.

Butterflies & Moths:

SC209693 Speckled Wood; Wall Brown; Common Blue; Unidentified white flying; Small Copper.
SC208694 Six-Spotted Burnet Moth ( hitherto rare on Reserve); Peacock; Small Copper; Speckled Wood; .Common Blue x 4; unidentified White flying
SC209695 Red Admiral
SC209694 Common Blue;
SC210694  Holly Blue; Red Admiral

Other:

SC210694 Common Green Grasshoppers heard
SC209693 Eupeodes Hoverfly, possibly latisfasciatus
SC208694 Wolf spiders on boardwalk; Common Green Grasshoppers heard
SC210694 7-spot Ladybird
SC209693 7-spot Ladybird
SC209693 Common Green Shieldbug nymphs on Rowan berries.
SC208694 Common Earwig
SC208694 larvae of Cassida family Tortoise Beetle on thistle
SC208694 Tachina Grossa fly on Hemp Agrimony & on Hawthorn
SC208694  Eristalis species Hoverfly
SC208694 very small Cross Spider on gorse
SC209693 /4 and throughout reserve - thistledown starting to disperse.

6-spotted Burnet moth on Hemp Agrimony

quite a surprise

rarely seen on the Reserve

several Common Blue butterflies
over the damp meadow and elsewhere - here on Greater Birdsfoot Trefoil

Peacock butterflies look almost black with their wings closed

but dazzle with their colours when they open their wings

Small Copper in the damp meadow


here on Sneezewort


and here on Cushag ( Ragwort), one of its favourite nectar plants

7-spot Ladybird

and another elsewhere

Earwig keeping cool in the shade

this is the nymph of a Tortoise Beetle

they disguise  themselves as droppings by covering themselves
with frass ( poo!) 


Tachina grossa fly looks like an oversized bee

they are parasitic on moth caterpillars

these are the nymphs of Common Green Shieldbugs
on Rowan berries

Female Eupeodes ( posibly latisfasciatus)

and another larger one ( Eristalis species), again on Hemp Agrimony
This native plant loves damp conditions and provides
lots of nectar for insects.

a tiny Cross Spider in the gorse

our juvenile Moorhens are growing up

Hogweed already gone to seed - food for the birds.

Thistles also seeding - Goldfinches love the thistledown

light as thistledown!
blowing away in the breeze

Altogether a lovely afternoon.