What's buzzing or flying near you 2023 ?

Discussion in 'Wildlife Corner' started by JWK, Jan 1, 2023.

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  1. hydrogardener

    hydrogardener Total Gardener

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    Thanks Sheal, I know nothing about insects. There were a lot of honey bees at the coneflowers so I decided to photograph a few. Then, I saw what I think was a very tiny bee, a little more than 1/4" long. It had so much pollen I am amazed it could fly. It is a bee, but I don't think a honeybee, bottom image.

    Bee8GC.jpg
    Tiny 1GC.jpg
     
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    • Drahcir

      Drahcir Gardener

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      That looks like some sort of fly, not a bee. Female (since it appears to have an ovipositer).
       
    • hydrogardener

      hydrogardener Total Gardener

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      I will have to take your word for it, I know nothing about bugs.
       
    • hydrogardener

      hydrogardener Total Gardener

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      Another visitor to the coneflowers, a black swallowtail.

      Black Swallowtail GC.jpg
       
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      • Michael Hewett

        Michael Hewett Total Gardener

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        I've never seen so many flies as there are this year :frown: There's always some coming into the house, big fat bluebottles as well as smaller flies, all buzzing around getting on my nerves. They come in all the time, and after I get rid of them more keep coming in.

        I've always got the windows open so you can expect an insect or two to fly in but this year there's a procession of them one after the other.
        I flip a cloth or something at them and they go quiet for a while but then start buzing again.
        And since the windows are open you'd think they'd fly out again, but they don't.

        I don't like using a fly spray killer but this year I have used one, and it makes them go away, but in a short while more come in.

        They are also outside, I've never seen so many flies in the garden, they're everywhere you look. I don't see lots of other insects, so why so many flies ...
         
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        • redstar

          redstar Total Gardener

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          Hummingbird on the left. HummerHydragea.jpg
           
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          • Sheal

            Sheal Total Gardener

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            Blackbird

            IMG_7690.JPG
             
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            • Drahcir

              Drahcir Gardener

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              Ahem! That's not flying or buzzing, it's swimming!

              Joking aside, it's nice to see someone putting out water for birds.They do enjoy a splash (and a dust bath too, fine unless it's in a seed bed). That looks like rather a new bird.
               
            • Sheal

              Sheal Total Gardener

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              Quite right, but there isn't a thread for birds bathing Drahcir, so this was the best place to post. :biggrin:

              Many people feed birds but don't think to supply water for them. I clean the bath every day throughout the year if possible. There is a lochan about 4-500 yards away in the valley that backs onto my garden but I like to see the birds drinking or taking a dip. :)
               
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              • strongylodon

                strongylodon Old Member

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                Red Kite over the Vyne NT gardens near Basingstoke, distant but always nice to see particularly as they are virtually absent from Dorset.
                Kite.JPG
                 
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                • redstar

                  redstar Total Gardener

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                  I have a lovely fresh water creek at the back end of our garden. Birds love it.

                  What majorly bothers me, when I was in Arizona, visiting relatives. and in the desert. they all have "treated" swimming pools. that draws birds, those birds do not need to drink that water. Sad
                   
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                  • shiney

                    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                    We're lucky that we now have a resident one. He regularly perches for hours at a time in one of our trees. That may be because we feed him our scraps :whistle:

                    We put them out when we see him around and the other day we broke up a chicken carcass from our roast and put it out. We whistle to him and he swoops down for it. We give him a few parts of it at a time. He doesn't take it to his tree to eat it so I don't know where he goes to.

                    He looks magnificent as he swoops down with hardly any sound at all.
                     
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                    • burnie

                      burnie Total Gardener

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                      Having lunch in the garden and had a Merlin being mobbed by House Martins fly overhead.
                       
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                      • strongylodon

                        strongylodon Old Member

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                        Male Sanderling with some Summer plumage colour, already on it's way south from the Arctic.
                        Sanderling 6.JPG

                        Dunlin also in Summer plumage.
                        Dunlin 1.JPG

                        The two together.
                        Sanderings and Dunlin 2.JPG

                        Ringed Plover.
                        Ringed Plover 1.JPG
                         
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                        • redstar

                          redstar Total Gardener

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                          Imperial moth. first noticed it from my deck on the grass, flopping, fluttering, trying to move forward. Got a small stick and it climbed on it, then I put it on the tree. If it did not move would have thought it just another yellow leaf. So pretty. Imperial moth.jpg
                           
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