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Monday 29 May 2017

La Brenne -Sixième et dernier jour

The last day and the hot spell had broken, just a mild 26C expected today. In fact everything felt much fresher.

How can time fly past so quickly it seemed that we had only just arrived - just shows that we must have been enjoying ourselves

Mothing at Tony's


A big thanks to Tony Williams who set up a moth trap at his own house, filled it with moths and then allowed us to check the contents. There were hundreds of specimens of an unknown number of species, I just photographed those that were more amenable whilst the others did the correct thing and created a list.

Privet Hawk Moth, Sphinx ligustri



Coxcomb Prominent


Garden Tiger Moth

 
Large Elephant Hawk Moth

Fox Moth

 

Privet Hawk Moth, Sphinx ligustri


Swallow Prominent

Finally - a beetle

Stag Beetle

La Boudiniere



As soon as we parked I could see plenty of Common Privet, Ligustrum vulgare in flower and I was optimistic that we would find Black Hairstreak. We did - the most worn out specimen that I have ever come across - I immediately thought "Too late"


A bit tatty

Out in the meadow a nice find - Migrant Spreadwing or Southern Emerald Damselfly, Lestes barbarous


 



Pearly Heaths were everywhere as were Adonis Blues


 



 
 
 
A nice stand of Pyramidal Orchids - well worth recording.
 
 






Meadow Clary, Salvia pratensis





A nice Brown Argus

 

 
So I returned to the mini bus to further investigate the Privet and I was rewarded by a fresh Black Hairstreak dropping in - result!

 
 


 


 
 

Lurais


Lunch by the river at Lurais proved very rewarding,  two life tick dragonflies and a damselfly. First up was a Small Pincertail, Onychogomphus forcipatus sometimes known as the Green-eyed Hook-tailed Dragonfly. Second, a Yellow Clubtail, Gomphus simillimus



Small Pincertail - living up to its name


Small Pincertail

Yellow Clubtail

Finally, in the long grass on the banks of a quieter back stream, lots of Blue-eye Damselflies. Very smart, sometimes known as the Goblet-marked Damselfly.







Le  Breuil

This site was a path adjacent to a limestone quarry and a great habitat for Orchids. I managed to record Violet Limadore, Fly Orchid, Burnt Tip, Pyramidal, Bee and Monkey Orchids. Oddly enough as we started to walk along the path it rained.

Violet Limadore

Violet Limadore

 
Violet Limadore

 

Fly Orchid - nearly over - just in time!


Burnt-tip Orchid - bit of a small specimen but nice to see.

Monkey Orchid
 
Monkey Orchid


Monkey Orchid

  
Bee Orchid

Martizay

Back to the hotel via the Bee Eaters at Martizay, unfortunately a long way off and then through the fields of Prung where we had previously recorded Montagu's Harrier, Stone Curlew and Blue-headed Yellow Wagtail.

That was it - it was all over, we had recorded 100 plus birds seen and heard, including Golden Oriole and Black Woodpecker. Thirty species of dragonfly and damselfly were in the log - some really good life ticks included,  nineteen species of orchid and just twenty eight species of butterfly rounded it off.



Bouquets

Naturetrek - everything spot on as normal.

Jason Mitchell our tour leader,  excellent - great knowledge and a talent for educating us simple ones. Great sense of humour too.

Tony Williams for allowing us to use his garden - really great experience with the moths.

Brickbats - I was going to say French toggers but I did learn the art of keeping a hide window to yourself - so no complaints


 


 

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