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A Suffolk Lane

~ A diary of my life in rural north Suffolk.

A Suffolk Lane

Tag Archives: Suffolk

A Suffolk Garden in July – Insects Part 2

17 Sun Aug 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Insects, Rural Diary

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

Black-tailed Skimmer, Broad-bodied Chaser, comma, common blue damselfly, common darter, emperor dragonfly, Four-spotted Chaser, gatekeeper, greenbottle, House Spider, insects, Large Skipper, large white butterfly, leopard slug, meadow brown, micro moth, red admiral, robber fly, Roesel's bush-cricket, ruddy darter, small white butterfly, Suffolk

At last, I am now ready to finish showing you all the insects I saw last month.  As with Part 1 of this post, all the insects shown here were photographed in my garden unless otherwise stated.

For most of the month the garden was full of these dragonflies –

047Ruddy Darter (640x427)

Ruddy Darter

003Ruddy darter (640x427)

Ruddy Darter

Female Meadow Brown butterflies are brighter than the males which often have no orange on them at all.  There were plenty of Meadow Brown butterflies but I never managed to get a clear photo of one with its wings open.  This photo will have to do.

048Meadow Brown (640x427)

Meadow Brown

With its wings closed, the Gatekeeper butterfly can be confused with the Meadow Brown.

056Gatekeeper on scabious (640x427)

Male Gatekeeper on Scabious flower

The main difference between the two butterflies is the Gatekeeper has two white spots in the eye on the fore-wing but the Meadow Brown has only one.  The underside of the Gatekeeper’s hind-wing is slightly more patterned.

057Gatekeeper on scabious (640x427)

Gatekeeper on Scabious flower

The Gatekeeper is more orange than the Meadow Brown.  The male Gatekeeper has a central patch of dark scent scales that is lacking in the female.  Gatekeepers are very territorial and patrol their home patch, a gateway or stretch of hedgerow, seeing off any rivals.

006Gatekeeper (640x427)

Male Gatekeeper on Common Nettle

A Red Admiral butterfly is, like the Meadow Brown, difficult to photograph with its wings open.

014Red Admiral (640x427)

Red Admiral on Buddleia

021Red Admiral (640x427)

Red Admiral on Buddleia

018Red admiral (640x427)

Red Admiral on Buddleia

At this time of year the garden is always full of Small and Large White butterflies.   Fortunately for us, we don’t often grow brassicas and my lovely blue Chicory, which the caterpillars of both white butterflies found tasty, died a while ago.

008MSmall White (640x427)

I think this is a Male Small White butterfly

008White butterfly on buddleja (640x427)

I think this is a male Large White butterfly

I often have difficulty telling the difference between the two whites.  The black patch on the Large White extends from the wing-tip to at least halfway along the outer edge of the wing but on the Small White it is less dense and doesn’t extend as far.  The female Large White has two black spots on the upper and underside of the forewing.  The male Large White has two black spots on the underside of the forewing only and none on the upperside.  The female Small White has two black spots on the upperside only of the forewing but the male only has one spot which is often faint or even missing.  This is what confuses me!  I’m glad that they  aren’t confused.

There were still plenty of Skipper butterflies during the second half of the month.

038f Large Skipper (640x427)

Large Skipper on Buddleia

I think this may be a photo of a female as I don’t think I can see any scent glands.

037Comma (640x427)

A Comma butterfly

These are so named because of a white comma-shaped mark on the underside of its wing.

Dragonflies continued to fly around the garden.

032Broad-bodied chaser (640x427)

Broad-bodied Chaser

036Possibly immature m. Black-tailed skimmer (640x427)

This may be an immature male Black-tailed Skimmer

003Damselfly (640x434)

A female Common Blue Damselfly

Not a very good photo, but I haven’t been able to get any other pictures of females.

007Four spotted chaser (640x440)

A Four-spotted Chaser

011Male emperor dragonfly (640x426)

A male Emperor Dragonfly

As you can see from the poor photo, I had great difficulty in getting a picture of this dragonfly.  The male is very large and powerful and this was the only time I saw it at rest.  I had to lean far out over the edge of the pond and I was frightened I would over-balance and fall in the water.  It hardly ever left the pond unlike other dragonflies that search for prey along the hedge and up into the trees.

014Female emperor dragonfly (640x445)

Female Emperor Dragonfly laying eggs

015Female emperor dragonfly (640x460)

Female Emperor Dragonfly laying eggs

016Female emperor dragonfly (640x498)

Female Emperor Dragonfly laying eggs

The female is larger than the male and is mainly green and brown.  The male has a glorious bright blue abdomen.

017Common darter (640x462)

A male Common Darter

These dragonflies are a paler red than the Ruddy Darter and the abdomen isn’t as constricted near the front.  The females are a yellowish brown.  In both sexes the legs are brown or black with a yellow stripe down the outside.

I have not been able to take many photos of moths this year.

003Micro moth (640x480)

Unidentified micro moth

006Robber Fly with victim (640x411)

A Robber Fly (not sure which one) with a victim in its grasp

009Greenbottle on unripe blackberry (640x431)

Greenbottle on unripe blackberry

030Cricket (640x480)

A female Roesel’s Bush-Cricket

I saw this climbing up the side of the conservatory.

And I saw this inside the garage one evening….

010Spider (640x480)

This House Spider was as big as my hand

The last creature in this post, like the spider, isn’t an insect and isn’t at all attractive.  In fact it looks quite horrific but, before you rush off for your gun or other means of disposing of nasty things, stop!!  This isn’t a garden foe it is a friend.  Here it is –

002Leopard slug (640x480)

A Leopard Slug

These slugs when fully grown are about 7″ long.  They don’t damage healthy living plants but eat fungi, rotting plants and other slugs, especially those ones that do so much damage.   They have to stay damp to breathe so live in dark, damp places especially piles of rotting logs.  They can live for several years.  Like other slugs and snails they are hermaphrodites but need to mate with another individual.  To mate they climb a tree or other structure and then hang entwined from a branch on a thick strand of mucus.  Both slugs then lay eggs in damp places.  A dark horse among slugs, then.  Who would have thought it!

 

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Gallery

Storm Clouds

12 Tue Aug 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Rural Diary, Uncategorized, weather

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Bertha, clouds, storm, Suffolk

This gallery contains 16 photos.

A Suffolk Garden in July – Insects Part 1

08 Fri Aug 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Insects, plants, Rural Diary

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

azure damselfly, blackfly aphid, blue-tailed damselfly, brown hawker, burnet moth, buttercup, comma butterfly, Essex skipper, feverfew, greenbottle, helicopter, ichneumon wasp, insects, July, meadow brown butterfly, migrant hawker, oedemea nobilis, peacock butterfly, Red Lily Beetle grub, rhagonycha fulva, Ringlet butterfly, robber fly' bindweed, ruddy darter, sawfly, small skipper, Small Tortoiseshell, small wolf spider, speckled wood butterfly, spotted crane fly, Suffolk, white butterfly

006Speckled Wood butterfly

A Speckled Wood butterfly

I realise that we are now a week into August but better late than never.  There were so many different insects about last month that I will have to make more than one post to cover them.  I have also included some photos of insects that I saw during June most of which were still about in July.  I will list the insects in the order in which I saw them or was able to photograph them.  I am not including the dragonfly, damselfly and butterfly photos that I have already posted but I may include different photos of the same type of insect.

The Speckled Wood shown above had a little bit of its wing missing but was quite a bright, new-looking insect.  The next photo is of something none of us want in our gardens.

014Red Lily beetle grub

A Red Lily Beetle grub – yeuch!

These nasties chomp their way through lilies and fritillaries and do it very quickly too.  They cover themselves in their own excrement.

021Male oedemea nobilis

A male Oedemera nobilis – only the males have the swollen hind-legs. They feed on pollen and this one is eyeing up his next meal

The next two photos are of the same unidentified insect and the photos aren’t that clear either.   Ichneumon wasp or sawfly?002Ichneumon wasp probably

003Ichneumon wasp probably

Note the extremely long ovipositor!

005Small wolf spider

A Small Wolf Spider carrying its eggs in a silk ball

I realise that spiders aren’t insects but I’m still including this one here nevertheless.  Because these spiders do not make webs and live a nomadic life, the female has to carry her eggs around with her.  Some wolf spiders even carry their spiderlings about with them too.  When the spiderlings are due to hatch, the female spins a large ‘nursery web’ in the vegetation and puts the egg sac there.  Wolf spiders run down their prey like their namesakes.

006Greenbottle

Greenbottle

027Azure damselfly

Azure Damselfly

028Azure damselfly

Azure Damselfly

Here are some more little insects that gardeners could do without.  This photo also shows how good feverfew is at attracting them.

022Feverfew with blackfly

Blackfly aphids on Feverfew

048Spotted cranefly

Spotted Cranefly

058Buttercup with beetle

Unidentified insect (sawfly?) on a buttercup

067Small tortoiseshell sipping nectar

Tortoiseshell butterfly sipping nectar

015Meadow brown butterfly

A Meadow Brown butterfly on a very windy day

005Ringlet

A Ringlet butterfly on another windy day

009Ruddy darter

A Ruddy Darter dragonfly

001Rhagonycha fulva

Rhagonycha fulva I thought at first that this was a Cardinal Beetle but they have different antennae and are much redder.

002Burnet moth caught in web

A Burnet Moth caught in a spider’s web

006Blue-tailed damselfly

A Blue-tailed Damselfly

009Bindweed flower with unidentified fly and pollen beetle

An unidentified fly (robber fly?) on a bindweed flower

020Helicopter

A military helicopter It looks like an insect!

033Ruddy darter

Another photo of a Ruddy darter

058Migrant hawker

A Migrant Hawker dragonfly

 

011Peacock butterfly on lobelia

Peacock butterfly on lobelia

028Small or Essex Skipper on Common Bird's Foot Trefoil

Small or Essex Skipper on Common Bird’s-foot-trefoil

The Small and the Essex Skipper butterflies are very similar.  The difference is that the Essex Skipper is greyer underneath and its antennal tip is black underneath.  I don’t think I will ever be able to tell the difference.

034Comma on bramble

Comma butterfly

033Comma on bramble

Comma butterfly

042Dragonfly

Spot the dragonfly! I think this is a Brown Hawker

045White butterfly on bramble

An unidentified white Butterfly. I am having a lot of trouble identifying the white buttterflies

There will be more insects in the next post.

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Gallery

Vintage Tractor Rally 1st June 2014 – Slideshow

05 Thu Jun 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Rural Diary, Uncategorized

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Suffolk, The Saints, tractor rally, vintage tractors, Waveney Valley

This gallery contains 12 photos.

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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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