June - juvenilia

Welcome to June’s Blog post, no doubt readers will have been having 30 wild days this month.

Please remember to go to the Blog page of the website - www.liddells.co.uk - to see the trail camera footage. There are a lot of videos this month, all except a couple are only 15 seconds long.

Ist June

Mel sent in the results for his May wildflower survey and had 88 flowering plants on his list. He is undertaking the Herculean task of identifying grasses and sedges (Clare bows down in respect), and has added Cocksfoot Grass, Perennial Rye Grass, Sweet Vernal Grass, Curled Dock, Glaucous Sedge, Guelder Rose and Water Figwort to his running list. His final list of the year will be added to the Surveys page of the website when his surveys are complete.

Ruth reported on her second session with Martin ringing birds in nesting boxes yesterday. She ringed one adult Blue Tit and four Great Tits. The nestlings she found were too small for ringing and some birds were still sitting on eggs.

Ruth arrived today for her nest session with the mist nets. It proved to be a quiet morning and she ringed the fewest birds so far, with several already ringed Willow Warblers and Chiffchaffs in the nets. Her particular pleasure was finding and ringing a Linnet.

Clare set about working on the Meadow, removing Creeping Thistles (fewer than 130 this year, the numbers are going down), Dock (not too good if there’s a lot in hay) and Hogweed (a thug if ever there was one). All these species are left to grow in other areas of the site.

Phil Gates’ wrote last year about umbellifers, including Hogweed, in his Country Diary in the Guardian. He says, ‘Umbellifers, members of the carrot family, offer pollinators with short tongues easy access to nectar, which is secreted in tiny drops on each of the many florets…there are Bluebottles, Greenbottles, Marmalade Hoverflies and Red Soldier Beetles. The male beetles take advantage of the females’ preoccupation with nectar, coupling with them, clinging on tenaciously while their mates feed.’ You can read the full article here.

There was plenty of Ragged Robin out, and Orange Hawkweed and Common Spotted Orchids were opening on the Meadow.

As Clare set off to walk home, she passed a large Cotoneaster outside the local farm and it was covered in bees, including a great number of honey bees. Clare was sure she recognised them.

Ragged Robin and photo-bombing Damselfly

Orange Hawkweed

Common Spotted Orchids

John and Clare had set up a trail camera on one of the nest boxes in the hope of capturing images of the nestlings fledging - this is an annual project that thus far John and Clare have failed to complete. The batteries run out, the discs are full, unknown forces intervene, etc.. Today Clare retrieved a disc only to find 429 short videos, which became shorter as the batteries ran out. When she looked in the box, the birds had fledged. Failed again. However here is footage of one of the adult birds emerging. Clare wonders if it is gauging the weather prospects before flying off. Clare moved the camera to a different box situated in the Scrub and crossed all available digits.

2nd June

More Hogweed removal - this could go on a long time.

Clare and John had a lunch break in the hide and were pleased to see 4 Tree Sparrows making frequent visits. This is double the number of this species seen recently so they may have bred although none of the birds look particularly young or are being fed. Either one Great Spotted Woodpecker made two appearances or two made one each. Another species not seen from the hide for a long time.

4th June

Clare and John are hoping to see footage of this year’s new roe kids any day now, however one of the does appeared on the Scrub camera and she still looked pregnant.

7th June

John mowed all the paths with the flail mower and recognised yet again what a time saver it is.

8th-9th June

Clare arrived to pursue her assault on the Hogweed and heard a Whitethroat singing in the Scrub. It continued to sing for most of the day. Ruth had asked only a few days ago about the presence of Whitethroats on Liddells and Clare had assumed they had given the site a miss this year as Clare had heard several while walking home but none, thus far, on Liddells.

The repositioned nest box camera has offered 849 new videos for Clare to sort through. Both birds are involved in foraging, feeding and housework (removing fecal matter) and work throughout the day and evening, often with as few as a couple of minutes between visits. As Clare labelled some of the clips, the Hokey-Cokey came to mind. A doe makes a couple of appearances and one of these clips has a delightful quality as the deer is caught in the sunlight. Maybe the doe is also keen to observe the fledging. A couple of other birds use the box as a perch - a juvenile Robin and a Chaffinch.

11th June

Ruth conducted another ringing session and sounded delighted: ‘We have babies!’ She had netted about 34 birds of which half were juveniles; the Coal tit pictured below was one she had ringed in one of the nest boxes.

Goldcrest

Treecreeper

Robin

Coal tit

Blue tit

Blackcap

Chiffchaff

12th June

After uprooting another bagful of Hogweeds - the roots are usually longer than the depth of the spit she is using, which evokes much metaphorical spitting - Clare had a wander round. She found that the half dozen Dame’s Violets that Sally had planted several years ago in the Pit Wood, have spread into a sizeable group. The plant is also known as Sweet Rocket and the RHS website records that it ‘is named in Gilbert White's History of Selborne, 1768-1793  'June 3 1792' among other plants flowering on that day.  It was also said to have been 'cultivated by dames of baronial castles' and 'called castle gillyflower'.

Clare was also amused to find an instance of plants’ resourcefulness - a Herb Robert rooted in the moss on the fallen tree that is the Dirty Dancing Bridge. ‘Herb-Robert was traditionally used as an antiseptic, as well as to treat stomach upset and nosebleeds…Its leaves are edible and used by some to make tea. They have also been used crushed and rubbed on the skin as an insect repellent…Herb-Robert was traditionally carried to bring good luck and for fertility…Herb-Robert is thought to have gained its name from an ancient association with Robin Goodfellow, a house goblin from English folklore also known as Puck. That said, some think it was named after an 11th-century monk who cured many people using the plant.’ (https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/)

Catching up with the trail camera discs Clare discovered that later this evening there had been a new arrival.

The doe then spends at least 5 minutes cleaning the kid before they move on. John thinks this kid had been born only shortly before the footage - the kid is a little unsteady on its feet and the extensive cleaning would fit with a very recent birth. The doe is on high alert all the time.

All this footage is of course a delight, however it also served to offset Clare’s disappointment that the curse of the fledglings had struck again. Clare had realised that while the trail camera would capture the fledglings leaving the box, it wouldn’t record what happened next, so she took another camera to focus on the branches near the box. After setting it up she thought it would be sensible to check that the nestlings were still there. They weren’t. ‘Ah well,’ she thought, ‘At least there will be footage of them leaving the nest.’ How wrong she was. When she put the disc in her laptop she discovered that the locking tab was in the ‘Lock’ position and nothing had been recorded at all.

13th June

Clare took out some of her frustration on the Meadow Hogweed, however she was pleased to have some respite when Sally arrived to see the Dame’s Violets and have a walk around. Sally discovered an ants’ nest under one of the corrugated iron sheets that are left as potential shelter for amphibians. The sheets are too basic to merit the name ‘hibernacula’ however they have the same function. The ants, under threat, began moving the eggs underground at great speed.

Clare and Sally watched juvenile Blue tits coming to one of the peanut feeders. You can see one being fed by a parent while another two feed themselves.

Sally sent photos from her wander around. It is always a pleasure to see Liddells through Sally’s artistic gaze.

The doe is watchful before her kid comes out from cover.

Further deer delights - what Clare and John assume is the older doe (she has had triplets the last two years), has had twins this year.

At about the time Clare and Sally were walking around the Pit Wood, the camera records two does rushing away. With the wisdom of hindsight, John and Clare assume both does have left their kids lying low in undergrowth. The kids have no scent so they are relatively safe from predators.

14th June

John had lunch in the hide after working on removing a rotten strainer post near the Roadside pond. He heard a loud knocking sound and couldn’t work out what it was and then noticed a juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker fly onto one of the feeder posts and start pecking at it. He then saw marks inside the hide on one of the posts. John had been sitting very still on squirrel watch and as juveniles haven’t always learned to be wary it is possible the bird and John had shared the space.

He photographed a pair of juvenile Tree Sparrows and a Siskin, which may be a juvenile.

Clare’s daughter Mathilda follows a bird-watching podcast, ‘Rock ‘N Roll Birder’ and sent Clare a link to a recent social media post in which the podcaster refers to juvenile Great Spotted Woodpeckers as ‘taplets’. He had called the adults coming to his feeders Tappy and Mrs Tappy and has adopted the name ‘taplets’ from ‘someone’s’ suggestion in comments on the post. Mathilda is so proud - she is that ‘someone’.

Mel carried out his June wildflower survey and added 14 plants to his original list - he is mystified as to how or why he omitted Oak and Beech from his first surveys 10 years ago.

15th June

The roe kids are proving as irresistibly charming as in previous years. The footage below shows a mini pronk, the kids discovering a pheasant - their reaction suggests this is for the first time, and learning what to forage.

16th June

The hares are less visible on Liddells with the grass now high; here is an entertaining clip showing that they are still around.

The singleton kid follows its mother out of the undergrowth. Both does and their kids often use this route into undergrowth in the Pit Wood and Clare saw a lot of couches there when she investigated.

In the third clip below you can hear the doe making a high pitched squeak - John says it can be called a ‘feep’ - which does make to communicate with their young.

17th June

A rarity - a sunny morning. Clare noticed huge amounts of activity round the hives, as if every foraging bee had taken the opportunity to get out and find food. There were many damselflies at both the Roadside and Big ponds and much mating of Common Blues and Large Reds. Two Broad-bodied Chasers were engaging in dogfights while a female oviposited in the Roadside pond.

The doe with twins had left them on the Meadow and they were disturbed when Tim went round on his butterfly survey. They seemed to settle down and Clare carried on with her Hogweed battle.

Tim has seen very few butterflies this season so was relieved to spot a Large Skipper near the Alphabet Bridge.

John had bought a double set of harrows in the local farm sale and he and Clare spent a merry time untangling them and working out which way they attached to the tow bar. John sensibly hung them up before they could knit themselves together again.

John and Clare both worked on the remains of the strainer post, however thus far it is resisting all attempts towards its removal although the hole around it is getting bigger.

The trail camera in the Pit Wood captured a badger going through - not seen on the cameras for a while.

A young buck follows a doe out of the undergrowth, however the rut doesn’t begin until mid-July. The old buck is still around and John is interested that the old buck seems to tolerate the youngster in the same territory.

18th June

Followers of this Blog will have read several references to roe deer barking. Today’s camera footage from the Scrub reveals all. John will no doubt use this in one of his talks on roe deer.

19th June

Hares are maintaining their presence in the Scrub as well as in the Pit Wood.

The singleton roe kid is subject to substantial grooming and then starts grooming the doe.

20th June

Ruth conducted her next ringing session (she does this every 6-10 days in the breeding season). She recorded 34 birds in total, including a baby Great tit she had ringed in the box, seven juvenile Robins and the first juvenile Garden Warbler, however the highlights were discovering breeding Redstarts this year (they are included on the Amber List of species with unfavourable conservation status in Europe where they are declining), and a Tawny Owl. Ruth saw two Tawnies as she set up her nets so there may well be owlets. Ruth said that owls go sleepy and limp during the bagging and ringing process, though this one woke up to fly off.

Adult male Redstart

Juvenile Redstart - the bird is in the Robin family and the juveniles look quite similar

Tawny owl in sleep mode

While they were in the hide, John and Clare saw two adult and a juvenile Goldfinch. The adults were feeding avidly on the nyjer seeds and seeming to ignore the young bird which remained tucked into the Hawthorn. Eventually it darted out onto the feeder though didn’t stay for long. Presumably the adult birds were leading by example. Neither John nor Clare had seen a juvenile here before - there is no red mask on the face - and of course this was a day when the camera was at home. Clare’s phone camera at least shows the absence of the red mask.

The singleton kid dashes to and fro. It is hard to think other than that it is running about out of sheer exuberance.

22nd June

With apologies for the old jokes - it is less usual though nonetheless welcome, to see a stoat in the Pit Wood.

24th June

Tim and Jane are away so Clare carried out the butterfly transect. Several Speckled Woods put in an appearance however there were precious few butterflies around. There have been several reports of what a disastrous year it is for insects. A Common Blue brightened up the Wetland and there were a couple of Meadow Browns and Ringlets on the Meadow.

25th June

After assaulting some of the Hogweed and the embedded fence strainer, John collected the camera discs. What a surprise - the Scrub camera shows a doe with triplets! It is probable that the oldest doe has had the triplets, as she did the last two years, with the singleton and the twins being born to younger does.

29th June

An end of the month camera disc round up. One video (not included) shows the older buck might be less tolerant of the presence of one of the younger bucks, and chases him. There seems to be a new doe on site; she might have been drawn in with the rut coming up. It is hard accurately to identify the animals, however the following three clips show distinctly different anal tushes. (When Clare retired she never thought that she would be writing things like this!)

30th June

Ruth had a really quiet ringing session this morning, only 17 birds, and very few warblers. She wondered whether some might have already started their journeys south.

John finished setting the new fence post in and he and Clare continued their assault on the Meadow Hogweed. Clare reckons there are only about 30 plants left. She did muse on the 30 Days Wild challenge and thought about 30 things that drove her wild. Hogweed would be one. Readers are invited to make their own lists…