Middle Street 01-04-2021
It was noticeably cooler and cloudier this morning and we’d also had a spell of rain showers. I shouldn’t have been surprised as after all today is when the schools break up across England for possibly the most frustrating school holiday. Luckily we finished on a half day and by the time I was driving home the sun had started to sneak through the clouds and it looked like it might be an okayish afternoon. Another lucky feature of today was that I’d had a couple of frees first things and so I’d already eaten my lunch early and the final lucky thing was that it was a non-uniform day so I dropped my bags in the door and headed straight back out towards Middle Street.
From the entrance to the first corner the cloud just covered the sun so I knew why it was still quiet and as I approached the first corner and made across the grass to the little nook a Small Tort was basking and as the first rays peered round the cloud he took off and started doing ‘circuits and bumps’; taking off, flying round in a wide circle and then touching down for a fraction of a second in a very similar place before repeating the process ad infinitum. I found a Wasp and a Peacock and got a few shots of the later before the Small Tort did a wider circuit and put the Peacock up along with a second Small Tort that I’d not noticed. A second Peacock joined the fray and all four went spiralling up, locked in a battle to the death.


While I was almost at the Quagmire path (giggity) I spot a Peacock down on the rushes from where it practically jumps out it’s so obvious, just to the other side of it there’s a Small Tort but this one isn’t playing ball and so I continue round to the Hotspot. It seems that the small field is used as a basking pint and everything had warmed up nicely as it’s now quiet but down in the dry pond a Peacock and a Comma are taking advantage of the peace afforded by this piece of sheltered accommodation as they’re sitting close enough to get them both within view. After clambering down and then back out without disturbing them a Small Tort goes hurtling skywards upon my final step out- so my perfect record became tarnished!



From here I moved straight over to the Dips the first of which only holds a Peacock which is surprising as this is normally the busiest spot of the three and I couldn’t work out whether this was because things had yet to come out into the sun or had already done so and would be zooming about elsewhere? I carried on along the bank path towards Dip 2 while a Small Tort and Peacock keep buzzing each other from the side of the bank and a couple more Small Torts disappear away from me towards the end of the site. Down in Dip 2 itself there is an old, battered Peacock which I wondered whether it still possessed the ability to fly but I recall a few years back encountering Stumpy the Small Tort who possessed even less wing surface and he did okay. A fresher Peacock joins the old timer and I move onto Dip 3. Looking down I can see both a Peacock and a really obvious Small Tort. I went for the Small Tort first as it probably felt a little conspicuous sitting on the reed pile and then photos taken I stalked down the Peacock which hadn’t moved from its spot. It was using a patch of bare soil as a sun bed, absorbing as much warmth from it as it could.



By the time that I reach the end of the site the wind has picked up, just it make it a little trickier still along with the constantly changing light levels and temperature! While I let it blow itself I add up the tally; I’m confident about the accuracy of the 8 Small Torts but the Peacocks at 10 seem a little high as they seem to have been more active today and I reckon the same Peacock turned up in Dip 1, 2 and 3…Oh well I decide to see if I can count the same number on the second half of the outing and as the wind has dropped down to a slight breeze I start the return journey. Mainly this time sticking to the Banked path and looking down into the Dips. As I’m making my way Small tort flies past me, over my shoulder so that’s one to be careful not to double count. Another does the same thing for a way but then drops down so I can strike a mark on the tally. The old Peacock is still down in Dip 2 and I catch up with the grounded second Small Tort with one more further along the Bank – the first one possibly? There’s also a Dotted Bee-fly – a female, the line of white spots making it identifiable even when in flight.

At the end of the Bank level with Dip 1 but on the opposite side the path slopes down into the Footy field and there was a flurry of activity which started with two Small Torts one of which goes down whilst the other flies down into Dip 1. I spy another Peacock and then watch as two Small Torts fly out of Dip1, over the path and seemingly away over the field leaving a single, solitary Small Tort looking a little alone down in Dip1. I walk to the other side of the path and look down into the corner where it slopes down and both Peacock and Small Tort are in view but they seem a little twitchy. I go for it and pull off a few shots of each anyway and then backing up I reverse up the slope and away along the banked path before they’ve even realised. Checking back the photos there are at least 4 Small Torts in this little area, I say ‘at least’ as I didn’t manage to get shots of every one and it was a bit of a blur.




As I’m making my way along the path I happen to look down into and spot a Peacock but even better than that- a Comma. I look closely at it through the viewfinder and my hunch that it’s a different individual from the one in the dried up pond proves correct as on the back edge of the fore wings are a pair of silver studs. Chuffed I carry on and the/a Peacock is down on the rushes. It sits nicely right up until the pint when an Ashy mining Bee bombs it, sending it packing. As it flies away I actually ignore it as I’ve spotted all manner of other macro subjects – 2 Bumble Bees, and interesting Drone fly, tiny mining bees, ladybirds, Bee-flies and disappearing as soon as you set eyes on them a myriad of tiny black spiders.


Back at the dried up pond the Peacock (I’m guessing it was the same one) and the Comma (yep this one was definitely) had been joined by a Brimstone. As I’d already gotten shots of the other two I concentrated on the incomer and after what felt like a thousand shots I slowly backed up and out of the pond and realised that it was time to go so I turned my camera off, underlined the final entry in my notebook and head down set a course for home…well I did note the two Peacocks near the boundary fence. A pretty great start to the break!
Oh surprise, surprise
With the break comes the cold cloud
Get out while I can!
Have a goodun and stay safe
Wurzel