Monday, 29 June 2009

Bee Boxes and Wood Peckers

I have been slightly inactive for the past week mainly due to Wimbledon and Glastonbury however when schedules allowed I have been in the garden enjoying some very close encounters courtesy of the destructive behavior of a young Great Spotted Woodpecker.

It all started when I caught this young pecker systematically taking every grub out of the bee box which  had been diligently laid and sealed up over the past month by either mining bees or leaf cutter bees (I'm not sure which).  Every chamber had been used but in the space of minutes each one had been broken into and the grub taken so in an attempt to divert the bird away from the box and give the bees a second chance I filled up all the peanut feeders.  The feeders are only about six foot away from my garden bench and have been quickly found by a family of nine Great Tits and the young Wood Pecker.  They don't seem to mind me sitting so close and I have had the most marvellous views with the young Great Tits even joining me on the bench.  A near disaster though this evening when one of the young Great Tits flew into the patio window, we picked it up stunned and it took it a good ten minutes to come round and fly off.

You can see just one chamber complete but a bee is back sealing up second from the right top row!

Friday, 19 June 2009

More from the Alps

We have been back nearly a week now and I'm still thinking about the flowers, the scenery and the bakers!  Three more shots below of Mont Blanc all taken under different light conditions, the image changed throughout the day.  The rodents are Marmots which played hide and seek in their burrow system and whistled to each other and I couldn't resist another Elder Flower Orchid shot.  You may have noticed that I haven't posted any bird photos and to be honest that's because we didn't take many!   The main group of birds seen were raptors namely Common Buzzards, Honey Buzzards, Black Kites, Hobby, Peregrine and the Lammergeiers all fairly distant so no photos.  In the chalet garden were a family of Black Redstarts, White Wagtails, brief visits of Serin and Common Redstart all of which were impossible to get near so no photos but one bird which was only too happy to be pictured sharing our picnics were A....... C....... wait and see if you can guess!





 Alpine Choughs - did you guess right? NB the bottom one is colour ringed  

Monday, 15 June 2009

The French Alps - Haute Savoie

Well were back from a lovely relaxing week in the Haute Savoie area of France where we stayed in a glorious chalet in Combloux with the most magnificent views of Mont Blanc.  The alpine flowers stole the show with raptors coming a close second particularly the Lammergeiers at Col de Columbiere.  I have tried to identify and label the flowers but  please any experts out there let me know where I have gone wrong!  More photos to follow.

Views from the chalet


One-flowered wintergreen - my favourite little flower only about 3cms tall and only found one very small group
Spring Gentian?
Creeping BellFlower?
Solomans Seal


Mountain Sainfoin

Purple Gentian - the only one we found

Pale Pasque Flower
Orchid sp.
Bilberry

Mountain Pansy
Mont Blanc
We couldn't believe our luck with  this hire car - it was a brand new Mercedes model which had only been launched two weeks ago in Switzerland, it had every gadget known to mankind however the sat nav made some very dodgy decisions!
Meadow Cranesbill
Ecological swimming pool in Combloux

May Lilly
Orchid sp.
Marsh Gentian?

Lammergeier site
Kidney Vetch
French MeadowRue
Herb Paris
Heart-leaved globe daisy
Broad bordered Bee Hawkmoth
Spiked Rampion
Globe Flower
Mer de Glace - Chamoniz

Fritillary Sp?
False Helleborine
Elder Flower Orchid
Alpine Columbine
Chequered Skipper
The Chalet
Bugle and Bettony
Bistort
Birdseye Primrose
A typical meadow
Cows which need liberating from their neck bells!