After a walk around a local lake, I thought I would practise filming a local radio-controlled sailing club where sailing their model yachts. This hobby looks to be a relaxing pastime with no noise to disturb others or the wildlife in the Park.
Author: Andy Finnegan
Thursdays walk.
Another study of Raft Spiders (Dolomedes fimbriatus) (& a post). The adult male Raft Spider is 9 -16mm & the female a larger 13-22mm. They are found in wet lowlands and heaths & upland mires. Widespread in Southern England on wet heaths & scattered colonies throughout the rest of Britain. We have found a stream in the New Forest where they seem abundant. Here they seem to favour wild mint growing on the edge of the small stream where they wait for a passing meal – dropping down to walk on the water’s surface to catch their prey.

Wild mint bed in the New Forest.







On the final Approach.
#Wordless Wednesday.


Pong in the woods.
The Stinkhorn is a fungus that can grow up to 25cm tall and resembles a phallus when they fully emerge from an egg-like structure which contains the immature fruiting body. The young cap oozes gleba a spore-bearing smelly sticky gel. The smell of rotting flesh fills the air which attracts the flies and other insects which then carry off the fungus’s spores.
It is said Victorians were so embarrassed by the look of a Stinkhorn that they would attack them with sticks to stop any impressionable young ladies from seeing such a thing.


Near a stream.
Some Dragonflies and Damselflies spotted in the New Forest today.
The “Common Darter” is a smaller Dragonfly. The male is orange-red but becomes brown with age. Females (and juvenile males) are yellowish to light brown. I believe this one is a male.


A “Golden-ringed dragonfly” is a very large,and handsome dragonfly, they are on the wing from May to September.


“Beautiful demoiselle” damselfly the metallic blue males have solid dark blue wings.


The damselfly below had landed in the stream.

They spotted me.
Fallow deer New Forest.






Black-tailed Godwits
Black-tailed Godwits at Tichfield Haven.







Siskin.
The Siskin is a small, finch it has a distinctly forked tail and a long narrow bill. The male as pictured here has a streaky yellow-green body and a black crown and bib. There are yellow patches on the wings and tail.



family update.
An update on past posts following the Great Crested Grebes family on a local lake. The chicks are growing well and all four have survived. They remain close to their parents but are fishing independently. The group comes together but a lot of the time 2 chicks stay with each parent bird.




The chicks are about the same size as the adult birds but remain in their humbug juvenile plumage.










Crossing the water.
#Wordless Wednesday




