Birds, Leps, Observations & Generalities - the images and ramblings of Mark Skevington. Sometimes.

Sunday, 7 August 2022

You're Mine, You're Mine, You're,

As part of my recovery, my walks from home have gradually turned from short shuffling ambles to longer strolls with a bit of pace. I've not really been going anywhere with intent, it's just to stretch the legs and get some life back into muscles. But of course it doesn't take long before longer walks turn to walk-stop-walk sequences whilst looking at some shrubbery or other. And so it is that I've picked up a few leafmines over the last few days - mostly expected, but good to get the eye in for some proper effort later in the month. Almost everything so far vacated.

These three all on crab apple: Leucoptera malifoliella, Callisto denticulella and Bohemannia pulverosella.


Stigmella aceris all over the place on both Field Maple as here, and also on Norway Maple.


Etainia louisella on Field Maple keys. Actually this may be tenanted but almost impossible to dissect out without destroying it.

Perhaps the only one that wasn't entirely expected, I found a load of Phyllocnistis saligna mines on White Willow growing alongside the Whetstone Brook between the local park and school. I've not walked along there for a good few years, and realised that aside from these willows there are some osiers and some healthy looking oaks that must have been planted when the park was created c30years ago.


My walks have mainly been in the early evening after the sun has started to dip, rather than in the full blown sunshine ....

Monday, 1 August 2022

Faith, Healed

Ok, so I got the final outcome from the consultants at a post-op follow up last Friday with Nichola. Bottom line - no discussions about how long I've got and no further treatment; lymph nodes clear and resection margins microscopically clear (r0) so essentially I am cancer-free and can get on with planning and living my life like anyone else. No guarantees of course, although ongoing surveillance for five years is reassuring, but it's absolutely the best outcome I could have hoped for. Just got to get on with physical recovery, though I'm feeling a bit stronger every day and from today I'm logging on to work for a while to get back on top of things.

I'm also taking on the VC55 CMR role formally from hereon in. I've been covering the role since Adrian's passing, but of course was hesitant to formalise anything too quickly and whilst I had my own health cloud. There is much to do, initially just to get a grip on a few things.

I ran the garden trap for a couple of nights before the weekend, and picked up x3 new micros in the process - one of which was completely new to me. Ironically though, the first new micro was almost overlooked.

From 28/07/2022 there were x2 Brown-line Bright-eye in the trap that I couldn't remember having here before, and x2 Caloptilia semifascia that has been turning up in gardens regularly over the last couple of years or so. It didn't remotely click that mine wasn't one of them. It was only when checking for last dates that the penny dropped, and thankfully I'd potted both to ensure a photo anyway. Turned out that after all I had recorded Brown-line Bright-eye here before - albeit way back in 2000 & 2003.

Caloptilia semifascia - garden tick

Worn but welcome Brown-line Bright-eye - not a garden tick!

The following night, another couple of micros that this time I knew were new ....

Caloptilia cuculipennella - new for me and the garden

Nephopterix angustella - seems to be having a good year locally


"All you've got to do is feel, your body's going to start to heal,
Fingertips of holy fire, everlasting sweet desire,
It don't matter what the doctors say, Healer man, sail away,
Immortality for two, miracles will come to you.
The faith healer, the faith healer"

Thursday, 21 July 2022

Hot Moth Action

I'd like to have posted this earlier, but on Tuesday my body was frazzled and yesterday I was out of action at the hospital - finally having all drains and stents removed so I really feel like a major step towards full recovery now.

Anyway, here in Whetstone Leics. the temps on Monday and Tuesday were - quite frankly - ridiculous. Both day and night. Monday topped out at around 38°C, and Tuesday was over 39°C, whilst the night time temps on both nights never dropped below 22°C with temps at dusk hovering around 30°C. Unbearable. I ran the garden trap on Monday night, the fourth consecutive night of recording, but couldn't bear another effort on Tuesday. I'll wait a few days now to catch up on some sleep and brace myself for another rise in temps later in the week (albeit not so dramatic).

The Monday night catch was an excellent 735 of 127sp. which I think is the highest species total for the garden and possibly the highest catch total, certainly from one trap. Have to be honest, I used to keep tabs on that kind of things but I've completely lost track.

Absolute highlights over the hot period were two garden macro ticks - one expected, one not. Ironically, the expected one was new to me and until recently was considered a rare migrant, but is clearly now a rapidly expanding resident.

Dewick's Plusia - a British Tick that I expected to turn up before long

Lesser-spotted Pinion - never on the garden list radar

Sunday, 17 July 2022

Obscured

I ran the garden trap around the weekend last week, before the temps dropped a little for a few nights to give a bit of respite. Reasonably busy catches, including a few beetles and bugs which are likely to start ramping up in the trap over the next month.

By far the main highlight was a new species - not just for the garden but one I've not seen anywhere previously, though it has colonised the county recently and I have tried for it at a couple of sites ....

Obscure Wainscot

Best of the beetles was this longhorn, albeit an agg. only ....

Leiopus nebulosus agg.

And amongst the bugs were these ....

Stenotus binotatus

Miridius quadrivirgatus

With the ridiculous forecast temps heading this way in the 'red zone', the trap is back out again for the next few nights. It'll probably be easier to watch it rather than trying to get some sleep with the night temps predcited!

Saturday, 9 July 2022

Up/Down

Well, I'm here and alive enough to post - always a good thing I reckon. My surgery did go ahead on Weds 15th June, though I knew nothing of it until being brought out of sedation and off of a ventilator on 16th morning which probably helped with managing the pain a bit. I spent the first day in intensive care, just about getting over the anaesthetic whilst developing a morphine addiction. On Friday I got moved to a general ward, and spent the next three days gradually becoming more self-dependent and mobile. Much to my surprise and relief, on Monday 20th they muted that perhaps I could go home early (fully expected a 10 - 14day stay) as long as I came back in for a couple of check ups on the Weds and Friday - I didn't hesitate in imploring them to make it happen. I hate hospitals at the best of times, but being in there once you are actually mobile and looking after yourself is absolutely the most soul-destroying and mind-numbing thing imaginable. So on Monday night I was home and happy.

Tuesday 21st June was a nice warm sunny day so I was pleased to be able to intersperse sleeping, relaxing and generally lounging about with forays into the garden for fresh air and to watch a few insects on the border flowers. It dawned on me that with the sun shining, and with it requiring virtually zero effort, I could dangle a couple of lures. So I tried both VES and FOR with success, one Orange-tailed Clearwing to the VES lure and x3 Red-tipped Clearwings to the FOR lure. I wasn't up to fannying about with a camera though so only managed a couple of crappy phone shots ....

Orange-tailed Clearwing

Red-tipped Clearwing

I think the adrenaline of seeing clearwing and the euphoria at being home overtook common sense, and I put the moth trap on for the night. Surgery and being in hospital screws up your sleep pattern for ages so getting up early to empty it wasn't a problem, though it was a bit more physical effort than was perhaps good for me. Nothing exciting in there, but it was looking sunny again so out went the LUN lure despite it being perhaps a bit early for the target. By 08:30 there were x2 Lunar Hornet Moths in the trap. All the more excellent as with the pre-surgery records of Currant and Red-belted, all x5 clearwing species that I recorded here last year have come again - no flash in the pan luck involved, all clearly present within close enough proximity to come to the lures reasonably soon after deployment.

Lunar Hornet Moth

Again, the moth trap went out and again with some effort I got it done early in the morning. This time though there was excitement, a new for garden macro and a decent migrant that warranted a quick snap with the camera ....

Scarlet Tiger
An expected addition to the garden list with recent expansion in VC55 range, shame it was a bit tatty.

Bordered Straw - second garden record after one in 2006

The moth trap went out again on Thursday 23rd June, back to standard fare and by now I was thinking that I'd perhaps overdone it, so the trap got put away as the weather faded a bit anyway.

A week or so after surgery, things can go two ways. You either feel like you're getting somewhere and feeling a bit stronger each day, or you start to slide and feel a bit crapper. Over the weekend I felt a bit lethargic and lacking energy, and on Monday I was in incredible pain in my left kidney. Back to the hospital to be checked, and I ended up being re-admitted with bloods showing infection markers. A subsequent CT scan showed a build up of likely infected fluid stuck in a pocket somewhere in my pelvis, which would require draining under a radiologically guided procedure. By then I'd had a couple of doses of IV antibiotics and was feeling fine again, but the NHS system conspired against me and despite my protestations and moaning I ended up being stuck back in there until the Friday evening whilst they tried to work out if/how/when this would be done. I was absolutely exasperated; every day I was nil by mouth from midnight to c4pm just in-case they managed to fit me into someone's schedule, whilst being sedentary and having bugger all to do. On the Friday I made it clear I'd had enough and I was seriously on the page of walking out and self-discharging, luckily they'd already come to the conclusion and seen sense that they were better off bending their own rules and essentially discharged me without discharging me, so that I could go back for the procedure at an appointed time as a day case.

Back home for another week, gradually building myself up again after going backwards in hospital. Yesterday I went in for a CT Guided Drain procedure - and by christ it was the most painful experience of my life, local anaesthetic only works so deep, and to avoid any remaining organs or major blood vessels they went in the most direct route - basically they skewered my backside and it fucking hurt! Anyway, it's done now and I can get back on with recovering (although the drain will of course have to some back out, which will also be uncomfortable but a lot quicker!). I'm actually feeling a lot perkier now and I'm okay with basic pain relief. I've got a long way to go with recovery but feel like I'm on the right path now.

Having major surgery, losing body parts and being in pain or uncomfortable etc is of course worth it if it means I'm still here for the foreseeable, watching the kids grow up (metaphorically, they've already grown up physically), being here for and with Nichola and contributing to society. The surgeon told me last week that the histology on the stuff they removed has clear margins - that should mean I am cancer-free and there will be no further treatment. I'd really like to hear that again with Nichola by my side at a formal post-surgery consultation in due course.

The trap will be back out tonight, I've missed some of the best mothing weather for ages and feel like I need to get back on track. I'm also able to sit at the desktop PC for a while now - hence posting. 

I realise that a lot of this post is a bit self-centered and unlikely to be of any interest to anyone, but as I'm sure I've said before I write this blog for me first and foremost.

In other news, apparently a large number of MPs in the lying bastard party with no integrity and morals have realised that their leader really is a lying bastard with the integrity and morals of a pile of bat guano. Who knew!

I really like this new track from Simple Minds ....

Monday, 13 June 2022

Mini-pond +

Wow, time flies and all that. I've been keeping myself busy, though it doesn't feel like I've ever got near to being ahead on work, chores and tasks. So having not posted for a couple of weeks or so, and seeing as I'll be heading back on Wednesday to see if that surgery gets done this time, here's a mix of stuff.

First up, although these photos are from back on 29/05/2022, you may recall I mentioned making a mini-pond using a raised planter. It's a c64x54mm rectangular box, and I've got the water at c20mm deep. It is far from an ideal pond, and of course I have no intention of it being anything other than (hopefully) a habitat for small inverts. I washed some stones and laid them on the bottom, filled it up and left it for a couple of days before adding some oxygenating weeds and then another couple of days or so before adding some potted marginal plants. Other than these plants, I'll not be deliberating adding anything .... but it was inevitable that the plants would have brought something.


The plants are a Water Forget-me-not, Water Mint with a bonus Monkeyflower that has appeared in the same pot, and a couple of irises. As expected, it seemed to develop a load of algae quite quickly, and then almost as quickly it cleared and I started to notice things. I was certain that the first things to turn up would be fly larvae, and sure enough a load appeared. So whilst it felt completely wrong, I decided to take the plunge as it were and shove the TG-6 below the surface. It survived .... despite me forgetting that I was supposed to remove the light guide.


Lots of mosquito and chironomid larvae making light work of the algae. Whilst these probably arrived naturally, I also noted that there were actually loads of snails that certainly arrived with the plants. I also noted some water boatmen nymphs which again I assume arrived with the plants ....


Whilst I was messing about trying to get shots of these, I noticed a completely unexpected 'newtpole'. In fact I've since seen at least five at the same time. I will have to ensure they get out once they're ready, but the whole point of this being raised was to ensure it doesn't attract frogs or newts!


So the scene is set, and I'll enjoy staring into the nooks and crannies etc waiting for the odd beetle that will hopefully turn up in due course.

Talking of beetles, I saw this one scuttling about in the garden on 07/06/2022 and luckily had a pot to hand. I could see that it was a small Carabid, but that was it until I got a couple of shots and then it was quite simple to sort out ....

It keys through to Asaphidion curtum, a new one for me.

Over the completely ridiculous nonsense that was the Jubilee bank holiday and weekend, we nipped down to Devon. The weather wasn't great, but I'd decided to take a light trap and was intent on using it regardless. I managed to set it up under the overhang of the garden summerhouse, so the trap stayed dry despite a bit of heavy rain in the early hours. The catch wasn't massive, but there was a good mix and a couple of new moths plus a couple I've only seen away from Leics. before. The two ticks were ....

Toadflax Pug

Double Line - sadly a bit knackered!

And a couple of nice species I don't see here ....

Small Seraphim

Sharp-angled Peacock

There were few micros, but there was this Grapholita sp. that I've retained for gen det ...


It may well be Grapholita funebrana, and this one from the garden on 02/06/2022 probably is too ....


Whilst I'm posting tortrixes, here a couple more from the garden ....

Grapholita janthinana - one of five flying about in the garden today

Gypsonoma oppressana from the trap last night

Clearwing lures in the garden have so far brought both Currant and Red-belted - so good to confirm that last years purple patch with the garden lures was not a fluke. I've also managed to see a few new species whilst out and about including Solomon's Seal Sawfly, Broad-leaved Helleborine and Stigmella floslactella.

Otherwise, here's some larval life from Watermead CP North on Saturday ....

Mullein

Willow Ermine

We went to see The Wonder Stuff on Saturday night, and they were absolutely brilliant - it was just like stepping back 31 years to when we last saw them. We were also meant to see Manic Street Preachers at Peterborough but that got cancelled at the last minute due to James Dean Bradfield having Covid!

For a musical interlude though, I've been listening to loads of the ridiculously massive works of Klaus Schulze. c50years of electronic ambient stuff. Another one that is gone this year along with Vangelis.