Tag Archives: bat

Settling In

Gadwall – a duck with natural camouflage. Its main distinctive feature is that it has no distinctive features.

I’m far from out of the (metaphorical) woods yet, but things are looking a lot brighter. We have furniture. We have a little more idea of what is happening and we managed to tempt a builder into action, even if only for half a day.

We tested the local chip shop, which serves large portions of high quality fish, chips and peas and found it to be as good or better than our current local shop.

This afternoon I visited the annual exhibition of the Peterborough Military History Group. The car parking will be suitable for me and several of the people at the exhibition were still recognisable from the distant past (it’s around 35 years since I last attended a meeting). That takes care of my social life – the second Wednesday of the month will henceforth find me in the company of old men in the meeting room at the museum. The fourth Tuesday of the month will be the coin club, though this might be more elusive, as I’m told they are down to about half a dozen members. They still post meeting notices in Coin News, so I hope they still exist.

Wheatear

The cafe at Peterborough Museum has been done up since I last visited and I enjoyed a lemon and poppy seed muffin with a cup of tea and proper china teapot for one. Yes, I’m a simple man, but sitting there in what had once been a fine Georgian house (still with flame mahogany doors) I confess to feeling a sense of history. I’m looking forward to my next visit.

Finally, as we chatted in the kitchen and looked out at the darkening sky, a bat flew past. Then another. Or possibly the same one going back. Hard to tell with bats. That’s more bats in an evening than I normally see in a year in Nottingham.

There were no senior moments tonight.

Today’s theme is birds.I have some good photos of medallions but I’m sure that most people would prefer birds.

Heron

The Butterfly Safari

We’re now travelling back in time. It’s back to Monday morning this time, to a time before the Sheringham Fish and Chips. I put the the postcode for Strumpshaw Fen into the sat-nav and was once again mesmerised by its capacity for random navigation and time travel.

It started off by leading me in what I thought was the wrong direction and then took a turn for the worse as we took in a selection of narrow roads with grass growing down the centre. It was like taking a trip into a time of more relaxed transport and I’m sure I saw a Hay Wain in the distance.

The main butterfly at the reserve is the Swallowtail. There were, according to reports, several still to be seen on the reserve. We also had hopes of seeing White Admirals and Silver-washed Fritillaries.

From the lack of Swallowtail picture in the header you may be able to deduce that things did not exactly go to plan. You may also search in vain…well, you’ll find out in good time. For now I will keep the tension building.

The first thing we saw as we crossed the railway line to the reserve was a bat, which fluttered down into a bush. They have Pipistrelles in the roof of one of their buildings, though they don’t usually fly in daylight. It might, we agreed, be suffering from the heat.

Pipistrelle Bat, Strumpshaw

Pipistrelle Bat, Strumpshaw

We took a walk through the woods, looked at the wire contraptions that used to shelter orchids, saw a few surviving orchids, pointed a camera at several butterflies and muttered bad words at my lack of success in actually photographing them. Ditto for dragonflies.

We did see a Marsh Harrier, but, to be fair, they are hard to miss. The Canadian lady who was in the hide at the time was ecstatic at seeing one, and the conversation moved on to her difficulties in seeing Polar Bears in Northern Canada. It was nice to think of a cold place while burning up in the middle of a Norfolk reed bed.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Marsh Harrier over Strumpshaw Fen

Whilst listening to tales of the frozen north I noticed that a Comma had settled next to the path. As soon as I pointed the camera at it, it flew away. It’s a common butterfly and I have lots of shots of it, but it was still vexing to miss yet another shot.

I also missed a White Admiral – twice. We had good views of them, but they didn’t settle long enough for a photograph.

I was able to get some damselflies, some blurred dragonflies and, after returning to my primeval origins, hunt down a darter.

This is a Ruddy Darter. Probably.

These are Damselflies – possibly a Common Blue and a Blue-tailed.

Finally, as we sat under an ivy-covered tree, drinking tea and (in my case) restocking my calories with a big chunk of flapjack, I noticed a butterfly. It was the tomato soup red colour of a Comma, which was a poor second prize for a day of butterfly spotting in Norfolk.

However, as I zoomed in I noticed it was a completely different shape to a Comma.

And that was how we managed to take a photograph of a Silver-washed Fritillary.

That evening, after chips, we took a ride out into the marshes, where I enjoyed myself taking blurred photos of larks and pipits, missing a shot of a female Marsh Harrier and, eventually, getting some shots of sitting people and moored boats. They move slowly so I can manage them.

I’ll post them later as I have to go out now.