Friday, 3 July 2026

Hummers and Clearwings

As usual the day started off doing the moths (after Isaac woke me up around 4 am of course) and then after the school run I did a bit round the garden before lunch at Potters with Holly (Selsey crab and lobster) and then did a few hours birding on East Side and Ferry HERE which was basically a ground hog day of Monday apart from a few more Dunlins and Blackwits. 

Whimbrel- two or three around
The locals
Red-tipped Clearwing in the Six-belted lure was a nice surprise- a first for garden. There was also a Tawny Sycamore Piercer, Pammene aurita and a few Double Orange-spots, Pammene aurana in the trap. Garden list on 672 (following some edits by the CMR). 
Up to four Hummingbird Hawkmoths are feeding on the garden lavender (above and below)


The only shot I managed to get more than one in
European Woolcarder Bee. A few other new pan-species for the garden today HERE. Now recorded 332 potential species in this 'group'. The lavender is absolutely buzzing mainly with White-tailed Bumbles and Honey Bees but also a few other solitary bees, flies,  Gatekeepers, Small White and the odd Small/Essex Skipper. 
Currant Pug. NFY. Now on 382 for the year. 
Beautiful Oak Knot-horn, Acrobasis repandana  (above) was a NFY. Compare to one of the Tufted Oak Knot, -horn, Acrobasis tumidana caught during the heatwave below

Vestal- not many of these this year. Others on the migrant front included 8 Small Mottled Willow, 3 Silver-Y,  2 Rush Veneer and a couple of Rusty-dots. Still a couple of Painted Lady in the garden too.
White Oak Leaf-miner, Phyllonorycter harrisella
The Ducks have got a bigger dabbling pool now- still no eggs

Thursday, 2 July 2026

Pottering about

Have spent the last couple of days getting all the week's admin done and pottering around the garden pruning the tomatoes and peppers, weeding, watering and mowing in a path for Holly's airbnb becuase Matt's van has broken down and he hasn't been for several weeks so the garden is overwild at the moment.

Temperatures are holding up to the mid 20s during the day so there's a few butterflies and insects about and there's also been up to three Hummingbird Hawkmoths on the Lavenders and Brambles.  

The moth trap has been steady but down to about 80 species of 150-200 individuals. Up to 8 Small Mottled Willows last night but migration hasn't been anything to shout about. Now on 375 for the year.

A few more pan-species additions HERE

Not much exciting happening. Looking forward to a family trip to Scotland in a few weeks time and hoping to get another summer holiday trip in too. 

A poor man's Lesser Spot- juv Great Spot
Adult female and juv Blackbird. This family, a Robin and the garden sparrows are getting braver with the moth raids while I'm processing the trap in the morning. I try and get out to the traps before 5am so the birds don't eat them and then try and transfer them into a holding container ready for release in the evening.  However I'm having increasing incoming from this lot diving into the boxes at my feet as I'm trying to process and if a Hawkmoth makes a go for freedom the sparrows and blackbirds chase them in flight. It's turning into a morning battleground ritual.  
Obsidentify says this is 100% Small Skipper but the left antennae tip looks very dark. Small or Essex, nice to see in the garden. A couple around. 
Quite a few Gatekeepers around too. Also Meadow Browns, Small Whites, Peacock, Painted Lady, Comma and Red Admiral around. Seems like our habitats are working okay especially with the 3 Hummingbird Hawkmoths darting around too
Female Ghost moth- don't get many of these 
Canary-grass Miner, Elachista maculicerusella. A lifer I think. 
Another smart Roseate Marble
Emergency path for this weekend's visitors. The back garden is almost inaccessible. Matt should be coming next week to get things back under control. 

Monday, 29 June 2026

Mega Nursery

I attempted to do a harbour count today so started off on the rising tide at East Side, then Breach Pool, then I did Mill lane and Ferry and then over to Church Norton for the falling tide. I made it 69 species of nearly 4000 birds HERE. I didn't do Pagham Lagoon, the Spit, Halseys or the beach so quite a few more birds around than this estimate. However this is a significant increase in the last estimates of individual numbers because I met Gail from the RSPB who confirmed the latest official number of breeding gulls and terns in the colony which is about 65% higher than I estimated from the limited viewing from the benches. There are an incredible 700 pairs of Sandwich Tern, 800 pairs of Black-headed Gulls and 106 pairs of Mediterranean Gulls (seem a lot less than earlier in the summer) with lots of fledged Sandwich Terns and Black-headed Gulls but I couldn't see any juvenile Med Gulls yet.

What with the Little Grebe chicks and Gadwall young on Mill Lane and all the young birds on Ferrry including over 30 young Avocets, 3 Little Ringed Plover chicks, 2 Oytercatcher chicks and 5 Shelduck chicks there are literally young birds everywhere- its been an incredibly successful breeding season. 

The moth trap was much quieter, as expected, in the more normal weather conditions but still had a few new for years. 

Little Ring chick
Adult Little Ring with chick Avocets that are already much bigger than it
Black-headed Gull - fresh fledgling
Sandwich Terns- plenty of juveniles flying around 
Juvenile Pied Wagtail- a family party on Ferry
Adult Little Tern- the first juveniles have fledged (via Gail) 
Black-tailed Godwits. There were pretty good numbers of non-breeding (some post breeding?) waders in the high tide roosts with 55 Grey Plover, 5 Lapwing, 3 Whimbrel, 35 Curlew, 9 Barwits, at least 40 Blackwits, 35 Redshank, 3 Knot, 9 Turnstone, 3 Dunlin, 1 Ringed Plover and also had my first Common Sandpiper for the autumn
Common Seals- apparantely Selsey means Seal Bay from the old english Sel Sey. Good to know they have persisted into modernity- there are always a few in the harbour. 
Hummingbird Hawkmoth on the garden lavender
Plum Fruit Moth, Grapholita funebrana- attracted to the MOL lure- NFY
Grey Oak Knot-horn, Acrobasis consociella- a NFY. Now on 373 for the garden year. 

Sunday, 28 June 2026

..and breathe

A return to normal conditions today with an Atlantic airflow and cooler conditions. The night temperatures held up well last night but tonight are forecasted to drop to around 16 C. 

There were still a lot but less moths in the trap this morning with 102 species of approx 250-300 moths. There seemed to be a few more migrants with the first Small Marbled for the year, 7 Small Mottled Willows, Silver-Y and a few Rusty-dots and Diamond-backs. There's also been a Hummingbird Hawkmoth feeding on the Lavenders with all the Honey Bees. A few moth year ticks so now on 366 for the year (update following some more dissection results now on 370 for the year with Tawny Marbled Minor, Common Thistle Miner, Scrobipalpa acuminatella, Thistle Case-bearer, Coleophora peribenanderi and Bryotropha terrella and domestica confirmed). 

Looks like our Blackbirds are on their second brood with several young birds around, the House Sparrows nesting in the apartment blocks appear to have fledged and there's a Grey Wagtail flying around regularly. Had a couple of Sand Martins flying around with the Barn Swallows and Swifts and there's still Chiffchaff, Blackcap and Whitethroat about but not a lot of singing going on.

Small Marbled
Male Giant Water Veneer
I put the Red-belted Clearwing lure out again in the hope of getting a Red-tipped but just had a few more Red-belteds.
Sallow Kitten
White-barred Knot-horn- quite a few of these recently, possibly migrants
Plain Wave? CMR says just a Riband Wave. Presumably worn. 
Bordered Marble, Endothenia marginana candidate- retained for microscope
Small Emerald
A few other micros from this week, some retained for Mike's microscope. Small Brindled Tortrix, Gypsonoma minuta (above) and a Larch Bud Moth candidate? (below)

Yellow-oak Case-bearer candidate
Golden-W
Dichrorampha sp. 
Good to see the House Sparrows nesting in these boxes this year

Saturday, 27 June 2026

Heatwave day six

Things are set to become a bit cooler tomorrow but the forecast has now changed to where the heat wave conditions will resume later this week - if this keeps up it will be challenging to keep everything alive here.

Anyway the great insect conditions continue and also looks like things have picked up a bit on the migrant front. Temperatures up to 25 C but back down to the low 20 mark tomorrow. There were 111 species of about 300+ moths this morning which is reduction from about 150 species from earlier on in the week. Seems like prolonged heat conditions begin to have diminishing returns? 

It's been a great week- after being a long way behind last year's moth tally for the same time, we've now more or less caught up thanks to the weather. 

Spent the day around the Lodge in between two performances of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat that Jacob was in at St Peter's. A great show. 

Marbled Grass Moth, Catoptria verellus- according to the Sussex Moth Group website only 10 previous county records. A new for garden, now on 670. Other potential migrant species included Four-spotted Footman, a few Rusty-dots, Diamond-backs, Rush Veneer and Silver Y and two Small Mottled Willow
Small Rivulet-a NFY, now on 358 for the year, so 16 new ones last night
Chamomile Straw
Oak Nycteoline- not a common moth round here and everyone is uniquely patterned
Plenty of Festoons recently- always a pleasure to see
Jacob helped out this morning processing the traps including the 5 Privet Hawkmoths
The juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker is still around
Did a bit more invert and plant recording today. Red-spotted Plant Bug (above) were feeding on the Ox-eye Daises. Now logged 308 species on the I-Nat garden project HERE
The back garden meadow is coming along well with Ox-eye daisy, Wild Carrot and Black Knapweed all beginning to become established. There were about 5-6 Meadow Browns this morning, Essex Skipper, Comma, a few Small Whites and a couple of Gatekeepers along the edges with Red Admiral about. An Emperor dragonfly was flying around and a Common Darter emerged from the pond.