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Author Topic: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald  (Read 127168 times)

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #600 on: May 31, 2019, 04:29:21 PM »


Doves-foot cranes-bill, Geranium molle.



Common vetch, Vicia sativa.



Fairy flax, Linum catharticum.



Oval sedge, Carex ovalis.



Woody nightshade, Solanum dulcamara. Sometimes confused with deadly nightshade.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #601 on: May 31, 2019, 04:40:37 PM »


Yellow flag, Iris pseudacorus.



A Caddis which has camouflaged itself with grass stalks.



Long horn beetle, Agapanthia villoviridescens.



A Cardinal beetle.



Cut-leaved cranesbill, Geranium dissectum.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #602 on: May 31, 2019, 04:51:58 PM »


Short winged european chinch bug.



An Ichneumon fly.



Black ant, Lasius niger.



Scarce vapourer.



Southern Marsh Orchids, Dactylorhiza praetermissa, just beginning to flower. Some are pink others are red.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #603 on: May 31, 2019, 05:01:24 PM »
Birds etc. seen this week, cuckoo, black headed gull, shoveler, lapwing, curlew, gadwall, tufted duck, swift, kestrel, house martin, willow warbler, wren, chiff chaff, blackcap, blackbird, teal, mallard, whitethroat, robin, buzzard, marsh harrier, cettis warbler, garden warbler, shelduck, pheasant, chaffinch, great tit, blue tit, wood pigeon, hobby, yellowhammer, coot, swallow, crow, reed bunting, stonechat, cormorant, meadow pipit, grey lag geese, sedge warbler, heron and black necked grebe. Also seen were a roe deer and an american mink.

David Lyttle

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #604 on: June 02, 2019, 10:12:28 AM »
Hello Ian,

Its a rather slow Sunday afternoon here with cold southerly rain showers coming through. More or less the start of winter. I have been seeing a lot of familiar plants on your blog some of which are thriving in my own garden. Here they are considered weeds so no photos from me unless my SRGC friends want a thread on displaced wildflowers! So a partial list; Geranium molle, Geranium dissectum, Vicia sativa, Solanum dulcamara, Linum catharticum and Veronica persica. A marvellous blog with lots of interest. Your patch seems very rich in wildlife particularly birds.
David Lyttle
Otago Peninsula, Dunedin, South Island ,
New Zealand.

Maggi Young

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #605 on: June 02, 2019, 12:11:05 PM »
From Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh :
Recording Rare Plants and Lichens

RBGE is asking mountaineers, climbers and scramblers to help record rare plants and lichens that grow in some of Scotland’s  remotest  places.
"Many rare and endangered plants and lichens grow in such remote and/or exposed locations that conservationists remain unsure of exactly how many populations exist, and where monitoring and protection should be focussed. Mountaineers, climbers and scramblers are the most likely people to see these plants, and we are asking the mountaineering community to contact us with any sightings by emailing raremountainplants@rbge.org.uk and including GPS coordinates, or an OS map six figure grid reference of the location, and if possible a photograph. Details of our three target species - Alpine Blue-Sowthistle, Tufted Saxifrage and Alpine Sulphur Tresses - are included  in the  link below..... "

https://www.rbge.org.uk/science-and-conservation/recording-rare-plants-and-lichens/?fbclid=IwAR0XRXunjlxI2QJHxKCgy3cfK4QueR1glNrHhYQfQOXaGhmB5Nzg6j1cJZI
Margaret Young in Aberdeen, North East Scotland Zone 7 -ish!

Editor: International Rock Gardener e-magazine

Robert

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #606 on: June 02, 2019, 02:26:00 PM »
Hi Ian,

I enjoy your photographs immensely, especially the photographs of the insects.  8)
Robert Barnard
Sacramento & Placerville, Northern California, U.S.A.
All text and photos © Robert Barnard

If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him stepto the music which he hears, however measured or far away.
- Henry David Thoreau

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #607 on: June 02, 2019, 02:53:34 PM »
Thanks David and Robert, good to know my efforts are appreciated. Maggi, I think the BSBI recorders and members would be able to provide records for the RBGE.



Sometimes officials of wildlife organisations will not help non-members so in turn non members don,t help those organisations. A loss to natural history.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #608 on: June 02, 2019, 04:01:08 PM »
David, the "patch" is one of the best areas in the country for its variety of wildlife. This is due to the variety of habitats at the site. The Managers of the site, a government advisor on the Environment, Natural England, seem to have had their role reversed. Their overseers, the Department for the Environment, Farming and Rural Affairs, (Defra), seem to have instructed NE to diversify into tourism, business etc. which conflict with Conservation. At least, that is the impression the public now have of NE. Naturalists (citizen scientists as we are now referred to) are ignored when we suggest where management needs to be carried out to protect and preserve wildlife species. We carry out much recording on sites where a consultant would charge huge sums of money for a second rate job and we do not even get recognition from government. I  am not a "birder" but notice birds and other wildlife as I look for the plants on the site. I would encourage anyone who is interested in wildlife to look at their own area and record what is there before it is lost. Don,t be afraid to speak up for our wildlife, it needs all the help it can get.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #609 on: July 21, 2019, 05:29:10 PM »
I have been away from the local patch flower spotting. Here is some of the wildlife seen while looking for flowers.



jackdaw.



red grouse in the rain.



ring ousel, it was feeding young and singing.



buzzard on a rock.



coastguard on an exercise.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #610 on: July 21, 2019, 06:43:42 PM »


dragonfly



red throated divers.



male golden eye.



red deer conversation, they were used to people.



mountain avens.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #611 on: July 21, 2019, 06:49:33 PM »


bladder fern, Cystopteris sp.



ground beetle?



I don,t know what was in this case but it moved when I touched it.



draba incana.



wall rue.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #612 on: July 21, 2019, 06:58:11 PM »


holly fern.



yellow saxifrage.



mimulus x burnetii.



sedum anglicum.



asplenium marinum.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #613 on: July 21, 2019, 07:03:39 PM »


white flowered thyme.



common sandpiper.



raven.



sea spleenwort and black spleenwort.



hard fern.

ian mcdonald

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Re: my local patch and wildlife - Ian McDonald
« Reply #614 on: July 22, 2019, 12:54:05 PM »


A small sedge, possibly C. pauciflora.



sea anemone.



A fern growing on limestone.



Fragrant? orchid on limestone.



Gold ringed dragonfly.

 


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