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Diary: April 2004

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Nature's bounty

27th April 2004 in the garden diary...
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After a bringing us a good many showers, April has finally been showing its other face over the past week or so with some very fine spring weather.
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ChrysalisThe mystery chrysalis. Last Wednesday I found this large chrysalis on the path outside my house, adjacent to one of the flower borders. I've no idea how it got there or exactly what it is, but it looks large enough to be a very big moth. I've put it into an old fish tank with some newspaper. Hopefully it is undamaged and will emerge to solve the mystery!

WaspUnidentified wasp: its facial pattern has characteristics of both common and german wasps. Ideas anyone? Out on the local moors the animals have been returning in force. Morning walks have yielded swallows (Hirundo rustica), wheatears (Oenanthe oenanthe), nest-building stonechats (Saxicola torquata), red grouse (Lagopus lagopus) & curlew (Numenius arquata) calling, lapwings (Vanellus vanellus) tumbling and grasshopper warbler (Locustella naevia) singing. Back in the garden, the warm weather brought out the first butterflies, orange tip (Anthocharis cardamines) and peacock (Inachis io), as well as the first queen wasps (those that I could identify were Vespula vulgaris). I've now seen queens of four species of bumble bee searching for nest sites in the garden (white-tailed [Bombus lucorum], buff-tailed [B. terrestris], red-tailed [B. lapidarius] & common carder bee [B. pascuorum]) and, possibly, a field cuckoo bee (B. campestris) too. Though most bees appear to be queens in search of nest sites, I'm now beginning to see more pollen collecting too.

ChrysalisDamselfly nymph. Life in the pond is more in evidence than ever. The water is thick with Daphnia this year - much more so than last year. This may be part of the natural process of maturation of the pond, but I have a hunch (no more than that) that it might have something to do with the brushwood liner screening that I put around the sides of the pond last year. The tadpoles are growing at an astonishing rate and last week I saw the early hatchers furiously eating away at a newer batch of, as yet, un-hatched spawn. I have a fresh attack of blanket weed in the pond which, so far, I've been regularly 'cropping' it by hand; but my barley straw is due for renewing - I must do that sooner rather than later. Whilst cleaning out the blanket weed I came across lots of invertebrates including several damselfly nymphs, but also many others which I could only guess at: exciting times indeed!

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