Monday, 22 June 2026

A very good Dragonfly day!

Another hot sunny day with a light SE breeze

Middleton Nature Reserve - main pond
Several observers today ended up with a minimum total of
Red-veined Darter 9 male 1 female
Norfolk Hawker 1 probable
Lesser Emperor 1 male

Pete and Jean started first with up to 8 male and a female (briefly in tandem) Red-Veined Darters flying over the eastern half of the pond. As seen from the bottom car park
Jean saw the Norfolk hawker and it was unlikely to be anything else, but she couldn't see eye colour in flight at that range. (There were at least 20 Norfolk Hawkers at Marton mere yesterday and at least four at Barrow lodge Clitheroe today)
Later Stan Parrot saw the Lesser Emperor and a probable Norfolk Hawker. Other observers reported a probable Norfolk Hawker and male Red-Veined Darters up to 9 
Janet managed some shots

Male Red-veined Darter

Male Black-Tailed Skimmer

Pair of Black-Tailed Skimmers


House Martin
Two Painted Lady were on the spit

South shore
Pete checked from Ocean Edge at 12:15.
Five 2cy, two 3cy Mediterranean gulls plus common tern seaward end heysham outfalls 

I had a couple of walks along the sea wall (Malcolm). I was hoping to see some of the migratory Dragonflies coming in. But although there were plenty of butterflies, I didn't see any dragonflies.
09:15 - 10:30 quite early for any insects to be arriving, but there were hundreds of small orange flies coming in at a rate of 3 per minute 
They turned out to be Turnip Sawflies

Red Admiral 3
Painted Lady 8
Small White 1

14:30 - 16:00
The Turnip Sawfly invasion had stopped, but there were plenty of butterflies
Red Admiral 4
Painted Lady 32
Small White 21
Large White 2
Small Tortoiseshell 19
Painted Lady

Small White

Also this morning 
Osprey 1 was on the post at the end of No.2 outfall as I set off. Later it caught a fish and flew off with it towards the Lune Estuary 
Osprey with a blue ring on the right leg

It caught this fish quite close to the waterline. I think it is a Grey Mullet.
More on this later

Shag 1 2nd calendar year on the wooden jetty
2cy Shag (right) with 2cy Cormorant 

Rock Pipit 1 near waterfall
Linnet 5 between lighthouse and waterfall 

Other stuff this afternoon 
The tide was coming in by this time. This Heron can see Grey Mullet in the shallows. They come in close on hot summer days. As the tide covers the mud they graze on the algae that has formed on the mud between tides. This is one of the reasons that I suspect the fish the Osprey caught close in earlier was probably a Mullet (the other reason being its body shape was more like that of a Mullet than a Bass).
The Heron fails on this occasion and resorts to catching passing flies! You can't see the fish but you can see the disturbance they cause as they swim.

Look how flat the sea was!

On the way back I caught the only shower of the day, heavy, but not unpleasant in the heat. But I had to stash my camera. When I got to No.2 outfall there were 100+ gulls resting. Most were Black-Headed gulls, but I saw three Mediterranean gulls together and one had a red ring. By the time I got my camera out I just managed one shot, before two Peregrines dived down screaming and lifted all the gulls! They are being a nuisance, I didn't see any small gulls this morning, but a couple of other walkers reported that the Peregrines had been chasing the gulls.
Two 3cy and a 2cy Mediterranean gulls. The 2cy has a red ring but unfortunately 
on the back leg. Normally, I would just have moved to one side to provide a better
angle. But no time today, so the red ring remained unread!

These are the gulls just after the above shot

They settled on the shore, much further out and didn't move to Red Nab 
as the tide came in

Common Sandpiper 1 flew west from the shingles on the saltmarsh 

 A couple of moths on the sea wall
Six-spot Burnet

Satin Grass-moth

Spotted Orchid in the Nature Park