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A Suffolk Lane

~ A diary of my life in rural north Suffolk.

A Suffolk Lane

Tag Archives: harvestman

Seaside at Sunset

29 Fri Jul 2016

Posted by Clare Pooley in music, plants, Rural Diary, seashore

≈ 55 Comments

Tags

Black-headed Seagull, common ragwort, Common Sea Lavender, gorse, hare's-foot clover, harvestman, mudflats, oil, Perennial Glasswort, plants, sand dunes, sea, sea campion, Sea Sandwort, Sea-holly, seashore, Suffolk, sunset, thrift, Walberswick

After a busy day last Friday and a hot, sunny day too, we thought it might be nice to go to the coast for a little while.  We knew that it would be extremely crowded for most of the day so we left it until after we had eaten our evening meal and set off just before 8.00 pm.

We decided that we’d visit Walberswick as we hadn’t been there for some time and parked the car in the car-park there at about 8.30 pm.

P1000941Walberswick

Walberswick. With its creeks, mudflats, sand-dunes and varied flora it is a favourite place of mine to visit.

The mass of mauve flowers you can see in the photo above are Sea Lavender.

P1000940Common Sea-lavender

Common Sea-lavender (Limonium vulgare)

I couldn’t get a clear picture of these flowers – mainly because I couldn’t get down low enough!  Sea-lavender (no relation of true Lavender) is related to the cultivated Statices – everlasting flowers.  Many people pick these flowers illegally to make dried flower arrangements.  Strangely, the drier the ground in which it grows, the taller it gets.  This plant grows in great masses on the North Norfolk coast and I would love to see it there again.

P1000944Thrift

There wasn’t much Thrift or Sea Pink (Armeria maritima) left – mainly seedheads. Thrift is a relative of Common Sea-lavender.

P1000942Hare's-foot Clover

There was a lot of rather scrappy Hare’s-foot Clover (Trifolium arvense)…

P1000943Sea Campion

…and a small amount of Sea Campion (Silene uniflora)

I cropped the photo I took.

P1000943Sea Campion-002

The calyx (the area behind the petals) is swollen, like Bladder Campion is and is similarly patterned with red veins. The petals are larger and thicker than other types of Campion and usually overlap each other.

P1000947Sea Sandwort

Sea Sandwort (Honckenya peploides).  I like the way this plant grows. It reminds me of children’s building toys.

In Richard Mabey’s ‘Flora Britannica’ he says ‘… (Sea Sandwort) is one of the earliest colonisers of sand-dunes and shingle, and remarkable for its sprawling concertinas of geometrically stacked leaves’.  It is able to keep growing upwards so if ever it is inundated with sand or mud it can survive.  As with many seashore plants it is succulent and edible.

P1000945Harvestman and Sea Sandwort

More Sea Sandwort, this time with a Harvestman or Harvest Spider. Can you see it? They are not true spiders but are related to them. They have one-piece bodies and no silk-glands so can’t spin webs.

P1000948Common Ragwort

Common Ragwort (Senecio jacobaea) in flower and Gorse bushes (Ulex europaeus)

P1000949Dunes

The dunes and my shadow!

P1000950Dunes

Richard and Elinor beat me to the sea. The cool northerly breeze was so refreshing.

P1000951Walberswick

The sea and sky were beautiful

P1000952Sunset

The sun was just setting behind us

Lumps of oil
Lumps of oil
More oil
More oil

I was sorry to see this oil on the beach.  This is evidence that tankers have been flushing out their tanks illegally in N W European waters .

P1000955Sunset

The sunset progressed.

P1000957Sea

The view out to sea still looked good.

P1000958Seagulls

Seagulls were making their way out to wherever it is they go for the night…

P1000959Black-headed Seagulls

…except these two Black-headed Gulls (Larus ridibundus) who seemed to be doing some synchronised beach-combing.

P1000960Sea

One last look at the sea…

We made our way back to the dunes where I found a couple more plants to photograph.

P1000961Sea-holly

Sea-holly (Eryngium maritimum)

P1000962Sea-holly

A most beautiful plant!

P1000965Bug

A cute little bug hoping I leave him alone!

P1000966Vetch & Hare's-foot Clover

Vetch and Hare’s-foot Clover

P1000967Perennial Glasswort

Perennial Glasswort (Sarcocornia perennis)

Another name for Glasswort is Samphire and like Common Glasswort (an annual plant which is also called Samphire) it can be eaten lightly boiled or pickled in spiced vinegar.

For many hundreds of years Glasswort was used in the manufacture of glass.  The succulent stems were gathered at low tide, dried and burned in heaps.  The crude ash which is high in soda was then fused with sand to make a poor quality glass.  Saltworts were also used for this purpose.

View inland with the R. Blyth on the right

View inland with the R. Blyth on the right

We had enjoyed our hour on the beach and went home cool and relaxed.

Thanks for visiting!

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More Garden Visitors

19 Thu Feb 2015

Posted by Clare Pooley in Insects, Rural Diary, Uncategorized

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

crane fly, digger wasp, Dragonfly, Flesh Fly, garden, Grove snail, harvestman, hawthorn shield bug, ichneumen wasp, insects, moth, ruddy darter, Suffolk, The Suspected

Another collection of photos I took last year in my garden.

027Snail on a cherry leaf (640x427)

A Grove Snail (Cepaea nemoralis) also known as Dark-lipped Banded Snail. I saw this one on the leaves of a cherry tree sapling.

002Wasp on fennel (640x413)

This is a digger wasp, probably (Ectemnius continuus) or one of several similar species! This insect nests in rotten wood and stocks its burrow with flies.

004Wasps on fennel (640x452)

The Digger Wasp on the right and another unidentified wasp on the left

001Ichneumon wasp on fennel (640x480)

Another image of the large ichneumon wasp that visited the fennel flowers regularly

005The Suspected Parastichtis suspecta (640x480)

This moth came into the house one evening and landed on my notebook. I think it is called The Suspected (Parastichtis suspecta)

007The Suspected (640x480)

Looking at it from another angle

022Flesh fly (640x425)

Flesh Fly (Sarcopharga carnaria)

001Harvestman (640x480)

Harvestman (Leiobunum rotundum)

These creatures are closely related to spiders.  The second pair of legs, which are longer than the others, are used to feel its way about.  Unlike spiders, the harvestman has the head and thorax attached to the abdomen without a dividing waist.  There are about 26 species of harvestmen in Britain and their food ranges from small insects to decaying plant material and even bird droppings. They don’t use webs to trap their food but a few of the species use sticky hairs on their mouthparts to ensnare prey.

004Hawthorn Shield Bug (640x480)

Another insect that came indoors was the Hawthorn Shield Bug (Acanthosoma haemorrhoidale)

This shield bug feeds on the fruits and leaves of the hawthorn and many other trees and shrubs.  It is a ‘stinkbug’ too, because of the stinky fluid it exudes when it is alarmed.

008Hawthorn Shield Bug (640x480)

Here it is again.

009Crane fly (640x480)

A Crane Fly – may be Tipula oleracea the Common Cranefly.  This is a male.

015Ruddy Darter (640x427)

Ruddy Darter (Sympetrum sanguineum)

018Ruddy Darter (640x413)

Ruddy darter again.

019Dragonfly (640x474)

I believe this may be a female Common Darter (Sympetrum striolatum)

020Shield Bug (640x458)

Hawthorn Shield bug nymph – 5th instar (Acanthosoma haemorrhoidale) 

That’s it for now.  I have enough photos for just one more  post.

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I talk about what it's like living in a quiet part of Suffolk. I am a wife, mother and daughter, a practising Christian and love the natural world that surrounds me. I enjoy my life - most of the time!

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