Saturday, 9 September 2023

Migrants at the Old Vic

The heatwave continues to produce with some nice moth migrants in the garden over the last two nights. The were an impressive 410 moths of 53 species last night. Moth year list is now on 437 and all time list is 633.

Also a noticeable uptick in the number of birds around with a Blackcap finally, 4 Chiffchaff and 1 Willow Warbler and Song Thrush for the first time in a while. Seems like more Robins and Blackbirds around which are either birds completed moults and becoming active again or migrants too. The Tawny Owls were calling last night. 

Dewick's Plusia- always pleased to see these
Two Dark Sword Grass (above and below) 

Another Delicate
Rusty-dot Pearl- only one of these
Silver- Y, up to four on both nights 
Grey Poplar Bell, Epinotia nisella, is the closest I can get for this 
Italian Tubic, Metalampra italica
Maybe Sycamore Slender, Caloptilia hemidactylella or perhaps C.honoratella
Orange Sallow- a new for year
A scenic shot of the Dewick's Plusia 
First Elephant Hawkmoth (or any hawkmoth) in weeks 
Proud that we managed to grow a Cauliflower - which we shared with the inverts 

Thursday, 7 September 2023

Beddington Farmlands Moth Night

Met up with Zach last night to do some moth trapping at Beddington Farmlands. There's been a big influx of migrant moths across the south coast in the last few days during the heatwave and arrival of Saharan sand so we put a trap up by the main Mile Road gates to target any migrants. We only had a couple of hours as Zach was heading to Spurn for the autumn early the next morning. It wasn't bad for a couple of hours with 2 Rusty-dot Pearl and 1 Silver-Y in the way of migrants and also 2 Old Lady and a few local micros. 48 species of 120 or so moths in total. 

As I'm still in exile from the farmlands due to very effective campaigning (no good deeds go unpunished) Zach shared some photos with me on how the restoration is going which by the looks of it could be worse but also could be better.

I also ran an actinic at my mum's nearby and had a few other bits there too and on the way back to Oxfordshire I stopped off at Lee and Rachel's and we ran the MV for an hour or so in their wildlife garden and got a few more micros there too. 

Closest I can get to this is a worn Crocidesmia plebejana. At first glance it looks like a Crescent Bell but there is distinct fold in the wing and the eye is dark too
Bordered Marble, Endothenia marginana (above and below) I think 

Hawthorn Moth
 Maybe Grapholita jungiella. If not then presumably a cydia sp? From my mum's garden. 100923 update, mystery solved HERE
There were plenty of conches in the trap. Looks like White-bodied Conch, Cochylis hybridella (above) and Little Conch Cochylis dubitana (below) 

Another C.hybridella
This one looks like Ox-tongue Conch, Cochylis molliculana
Maybe Round-winged Drill, although I think this is a gen dent job from Sharp-winged Drill 
Not sure what this Tortrix is. Maybe something along these lines here
Had some lovely micros at Lee and Rachel's including Copper Ermel (below) and possibly Brindled Shoot (below that) and also still trying to work out this gorgeous little tortrix (above) . 100923- mystery solved HERE


L-album Wainscot- still a mega back in Bucks
Couldn't make my mind up whether this was a Small Square spot or a Square spot Rustic? 
View over Phase 2 wetland (above and below) 

The last sludge bed on south east corner- the old habitat is slowly be phased out (there were 9 Green Sands, 2 Common Sand and Snipe on here last night according to Zach and also a juv LRP on Phase 2 so the waders are still holding out there) 
The main lake 
Common Toad on Mile Road Bridge
Jersey Tiger back at my mum's. Down from double figures to just this single. 

Wednesday, 6 September 2023

Heatwave moths

A good night last night with 350 moths of 57 species, two of which were new for the Old Vic. 200 of the total were Large Yellow Underwings. Moth year list is now on 432 and all time list is 631. Not too much in the way of migrants just 3 Silver-Ys. There's been some good moth migrants on the coast so tonight I'm heading over to Beddington Farmlands to try for migrants there before work this week. 

4 Cormorants flying over were the highlight of this morning's garden bird count. Still no Blackcaps this autumn. 

Female Carnation Tortrix- a new for garden. Managed to see the bright orange hind wing of it too. 
Possibly a Maple Midget, Phyllonorycter acerfoliella- if confirmed will be a new for garden. 090923 Update:  Can't been done from image and could equally be joannisi or geniculella (thanks Dave) 
Lilac Beauty- a new for year
Frosted Orange- NFY
An unseasonal Leopard Moth 

Tuesday, 5 September 2023

A nice couple

The heatwave produced a nice migrant (for inland here at the Old Vic) this morning with the year's first Delicate. Also nice to get a nice fresh Gold Spot too.

220 moths of 47 species last night which is up on the recent tallies so the heatwave seems to be doing it's thing. Garden year list now on 428. 

Kid's go back to school today so should free up some time to get out in the field more. As the heatwave theme is better for leps than birds will brew something up along those lines. 

Delicate (above) and Gold Spot (below) 

Monday, 4 September 2023

Not much to sing and dance about

Expectations are high in September and like all high expectations they mainly lead to disappointment, with nothing that exciting over the last week.  I've only got a couple of months left at the Old Vic and the garden bird list is stuck on 96 for all time HERE. Would have been good to get to 100 species so will pull all the plugs over the next few weeks (get the noc-mig out etc).  Recent ebird checklist HERE . There's been Yellow Wagtails going over nearly daily recently and the village hirundine flock is over 50 strong now. Still a few Chiffs and the odd Willow Warbler too. 

Also quiet on the moth front which has really slowed down now. There's a heat wave this week so fingers crossed that stirs things up. Year list has crept up to 426 and all time list is stuck on 629. 

Fortunately there's a couple of things coming up to look forward to including two weeks at the Bulgaria project for the last two weeks of this month and I'm hopefully going to try to get to Corvo for a week too in October (if the house moving allows). 

Feathered Gothics are always nice to see
The odd Silver-Y has all there has been in the moth migrant department 
Birch Marble- a new for year
Not sure what this is, the closest I can get is a dark morph Winter Groundling . 050923 update- yep confirmed by Stephen Palmer. 
Presumably a plain form of Flounced Rustic 
Obsidentify has this as a Slender Ground-hopper- a new for the garden
This creature appeared in the reef tank, presumably a stowaway pest but not even sure what broad taxa it is
The garden sweetcorn have been very good this year

Friday, 1 September 2023

Little Oak Group

Not really much to report on the wildlife sightings front over the last few days as been busy with the paid kind of work. So might as well do a rare post on the paid work we do which is where our funding comes from to gawk at micro moths and birds.  Paid work for most of us mortals is the worst kind of work, by it's nature of needing to compete profitably in the open market it needs to be something that is specialised, fine tuned and repetitive and has to scale to market conditions. There's some room to be creative and passionate but the market will generally clip the wings of that unless in top positions in top end exclusive markets.  

The best kind of work is work where creativity and passion can fly anywhere it wants and in my experience, especially in the space of natural history/ecology which is undervalued by the market, that often means subsidy and funding is required. Labours of love are often costly rather than profitable. 

I think to a large degree that nature of the GDP paradigm has set the global market on a crunch course as for the most part the market does not incentivise creativity and passion but rather repetition and over-specialisation.  That repetition, which is dehumanising,  then creates lots of societal problems and those problems create new markets in areas such therapists, psychologists, drug companies, think-tanks, NGOs etc which is arguably unsustainable or more importantly non-optimal.  

That's all common knowledge and common sense and it's also common knowledge that alternative models such as centralised Socialism and Communism don't work any better and are arguably worse too. 

Therefore when we set up Little Oak Group the idea was to create the best of both worlds with a commercial 'cash cow' department to our business that then funded creative birding and nature projects. In essence a repetitive and specialised department that funded experiments and adventure.  Those birding and nature projects could then be developed to wipe their own faces (cover their own costs) or even make small profits and even losses if needed for the sake of creativity. I always thought that trying to make an actual living out of birding alone was like trying to milk a man boob and a two lane system seemed better, one highly profitable and the other highly fun.  

I've never really understood why the model we have is not more popular but I presume it could be because we have a fortunate structure (trusted family and friends) and a comfortable profit margin and green space management is not over competitive (because its hard work, in fact the secret to profitable work is often unpopularity) so it means we can make enough profit in a short enough time to be able to do other things. Obviously personal spending and life style choices, i.e. not being over materialistic, enables bespoke resource allocation but I guess in a lot of cases there is social pressure to attain a certain materialistic status which could limit spending on creativity etc. 

Effectively instead of appealing to 'leaders' for better standards or to change the system we just changed the system ourselves that we were in and live in our little world. We've also taken leadership roles to try and change things from other directions. In many ways, top down change could be quite elusive as for the most part the people at the top don't want change too much as they are the top doing well. I guess it comes from the top, middle and bottom and anyone at any level can 'change the system'. Seems like there are some enormous systemic pressures out there building up with likely global recession, cost of living crisis and the climate and ecological emergency- basically it's a great time for anybody to re-design the system around them. Equally so it's a great time for exploiters to make people feel hopeless and fearful and keep them locked in to the old system and squeeze them until their pips squeak.  

After the global credit crunch in 2008, myself and many other people were very disappointed that the GDP paradigm was propped up by quantitative easing. Market forces weren't able to correct the market so ironically Global Capitalism was bailed out by state money- capitalism for the poor but socialism for the rich. The bubble wasn't allowed to burst and many feared that it would just blow up again into something even more ridiculous, risky and dangerous. It's possible that is what is going on now, in fact it is very likely that is what is going on and if that's true this is no time for business as usual, this is time for unusual business.       

LITTLE OAK GROUP