Reydon Waxwings, 21 January 2023

A walking day in the Southwold area but not before a stop in Reydon on the way! 

Luckliy the 4 Waxwings were present on arrival in The Drive and desoite shunning the berries in favour of ariel insect feeding I was able to get a few decent shots with a little patience and fieldcraft. The group consisted of 3 adults and 1 1w. 

Later on in the day a 1w Whooper Swan was a rather strange sight on the sea just south of Southwold pier in the company of a single Red-throated Diver. A stop at Hen Reedbeds revealed no snakes lurking under their metal sheets but a single Reed Bunting stopped for a shot and 15 Curlew flew over.



                                                                                                                                      Waxwings
                                                                                                                                        Reed Bunting
                                                                                                                                               Curlew
 

A rather macabre beetle! Earlham Cemetery, 13 January 2023

My old friend Vanna recently found a very rare beetle in Earlham Cemetery in Norwich and via her husband Jeremy I arranged a rendezvous with Vanna on Friday to try to seek them out. My expectations weren't high as a recent look by the finder when she took one back she'd taken home to study had failed to reveal any. Lifting the rotting log she'd found them under however revealed 2 straight away which were quickly joined by a 3rd. And what are they? Graveyard Beetle, Rhizophagus parallelocollis. A 2mm long beetle with a close association with graveyards and crypts where they feed on decaying organic matter. I will leave the rest to your imagination! This was the first record at the site since 1904, indeed there are very few county records of this unobtrusive tiny beetle.

When we'd photographed them we let them be and had a wander around a few spots in the cemetery checking for anything else. And very productive it was with 7 species of ladybird recorded despite it not being a very good year for them - Cream-streaked, Cream-spot, Pine, Harlequin, 7-spot, 10-spot and the tiny and very local species Red-headed Rhizobius. That wasn't all though, we (mainly Vanna!) also found the beetles Birch Catkin Bug, Orsillus depressus, Deraeocoris lutescens and Lesser Thorn-tipped Longhorn Beetle. There were 2 new harvestmen for me too with Spring Harvestman and the rare Dicranopalpus larvatus plus Spotted Snake Millipede.

Signs of botanical spring included Snowdrop, Winter Aconite, Groundsel and Primrose in flower.


                                                                                                                                Graveyard Beetle
                                                                                                                          Spotted Snake Millipede
                                                                                                                              Cream-spot Ladybird
                                                                                                                        Cream-streaked Ladybird
                                                                                                                                   Pine Ladybird
                                                                                                                             Red-headed Rhizobius
                                                                                                                                  Birch Catkin Bug
                                                                                                        Lesser Thorn-tipped Longhorn Beetle
                                                                                                                               Orsillus depressus
                                                                                                                            Dicranopalpus larvatus
                                                                                                                               Spring Harvestman
          

Thorpeness walk and a rare fungi, 8 January 2023

Red-belted Bracket is a rare fungus in the UK with most records from Scotland. It is also one I've wanted to see for some while. Fortunately Vicky Rusby had found it on the edge of North Warren about a week previously and kindly gave me a grid reference. Readers of this blog will know that Belinda and I do a lot of walking in that area and now I had the excuse for another one! 

Strangely enough we bumped into Vicky not far from the spot and she gave me some verbal directions which enabled us to find it more easily. And what a stunner it was - there being several fruiting bodies along one large rotting birch log. It wasn't the only fungi seen, on the walk we also clocked up Blushing Bracket, Netted Crust, Yellow Brain, Birch Polypore, Silverleaf Fungus, Russet Toughshank and the lovely Oakmoss Lichen

There was also some bird action of interest with a very early booming Bittern on North Warren, Great White Egrets on North Warren and Thorpeness Meare, c60 White-fronted Geese, many hundreds of Barnacle Geese and a Marsh Harrier on the main open marsh at North Warren with Bearded Tit, Bullfinch, Sparrowhawk and Green Woodpecker also recorded.


                                                                                                                          Red-belted Bracket

                                                                                                                                Silverleaf Fungus
                                                                                                                                     Yellow Brain
                                                                                                                                Blushing Bracket
                                                                                                                               Oakmoss Lichen
                                                                                                                                  Netted Crust



    

A couple of days in NW Norfolk, 1 & 2 January 2023

A very Happy New Year to everyone!

We spent the first couple of days of the year away with our motorhome staying overnight on the seafront at Hunstanton close to the lighthouse. 

On New Years Day we did a 18km walk from Hunstanton to Old Hunstanton, Holme, Ringstead, Ringstead Downs and back via Hunstatnton beach/cliffs. We were hoping for a nice sunset shining on the cliffs but it had clouded up by early afternoon. The red and white cliffs were lovely nonetheless. On the walk we encountered 4 Red Kites, a Chiffchaff in Holme village, 2 Knot from Hunstanton prom and plenty of Fulmars along the cliffs. Fungi provided the highlight of the day as I managed to find 2 specimens of Phellinus hippopaeicola (a small bracket that grows exclusively on Sea Buckthorn) at Old Hunstanton, Beechmast Candlesnuff where we stopped for lunch on Ringstead Downs plus Alexanders Rust. All 3 were new for me. Sea Spurge on Holme Beach was also good to see.


                                                                                                                            Phellinis hippopaeicola

                                                                                                                             Beechmast Candlesnuff
                                                                                                                                 Alexanders Rust




 

After a peaceful and cosy night in Hunstanton we drove the short distance to Dersingham after breakfast and parked in the village. We walked once more taking in Dersingham Fen, Dersingham Bog, Wolferton Scissors Road and Sandringham Woods. At Dersingham Fen I had an appointment with a rare fungi that was found there very recently. Armed with a 10-figure grid ref I was able to find it easily - the distinctive Xyleria cinerea growing on cut gorse, the first record for the county and only about the 5th for the UK. Nearby there was some very curious looking presumed Candlesnuff, Deceiver, Turkeytail, Silverleaf Fungus and Purple Jellydisc. Further around the walk I also found Dung Roundhead, Hoof Fungus, Bracken Map, Wrinkled Crust and Common Grey Disco. On Dersingham Bog the lovely lichen Cladonia uncialis was spotted by Belinda. Having nearly finished the walk we bumped into Steve and Gill Judd and luckily for them I was able to show them the Xyleria cinerea with Steve introducing me to possibly the most boring fungus ever - Dennisiela babingtonii which grown as a film on the upper surface of holly leaves! In Sandringham Woods a pair of Firecrests were seen. 



                                                                                                                             Xyleria cinerea
                                                                                                                weird Candlesnuff (presumably)
                                                                                                                           Dung Roundhead
                                                                       Turkeytail, Common Grey Disco and Hairy Curtain Crust
                                                                                                                                  Hoof Fungus
                                                                                                                                     Wrinkled Crust

                                                                                                                               Cladonia uncialis