








9. Still More…
30th July 2007. A much needed day off. The sun shone
intermittently this morning, so after a leisurely morning we mounted our trusty
bicycle and pedalled the short distance to the Harborne Nature Reserve. This consists
of a portion of the Chad Valley on the border of Harborne and Edgbaston. It is
steep-sided and so cannot be reclaimed for building land. This must be very
irritating for property developers, as the area is a very desirable one. The
benefit has, instead, fallen to local residents, who may take a stroll there
every so often and watch the progress of the seasons, as Dame Nature ordains
them. Here is a shot of one of the paths through the largely-wooded area.
The photo. was taken while the sun was in. The area
of herbage to the right is as good as a hedge, and it was not long after the
sun came out that we saw a few butterflies passing over it. A Small Copper (Lycaena phlaeas) settled at one time,
but out of reach of the camera. It flew off and did not return. But now that we
have become an expert at recognising the Gatekeeper butterfly - well, since
yesterday anyway! - we could see one or two of those patrolling, and eventually
one settled in a convenient place. Of course I know most of the butterflies that
are easy to identify at a distance. Imagine the thrill I got when I saw my
first Danaus plexippus, the Monarch
butterfly, on the wing. There was no
mistaking that! Perhaps I should add that this occurred in the United States and not here in England, where it an exceptional rarity!☺ But
alas, I have never sorted out our common things like the Gatekeeper, the Meadow
Brown, the Grayling, the Wall, &c. So now having firmly got the Gatekeeper
in our heads, we must mount an expedition into the countryside and look for the
others. Anyway, this Birmingham Gatekeeper had slightly different markings to
the Gloucestershire - Oxfordshire one of yesterday, so we will put the two side
by side for comparison.

The new one on the left, which is also a male, has
a small ‘eye spot’ on each hindwind. These are virtually absent from the one on
the right. Also it has two dots below & in line with the ‘eye spots’ on the
forewing, while the one on the right seems to have only one. These differences
are of course trivial. At least as far as I know, he added hastily. ☺
One other butterfly very common around here is the Speckled Wood (Parargra aegeria); indeed, they are to
be found in my back garden and one actually flew into the living room yesterday
morning. I was hoping one would turn up today, and sure enough, we were lucky!
Lastly, here is Ragonycha fulva, the
Soldier Beetle, browsing on Heracleum
sphondylium, Hogweed. First we tentatively identified the plant from our
reference book as Hogweed, then looked for the beetle. The entry for the beetle
reads in part: “…often to be found on wild flowers, especially Hogweed and
other umbellifers…” It is pleasant when two diagnostics retrospectively confirm
each other!

31st July 2007. Today we
visited the Edgbaston reservoir. It was constructed in order to help maintain
the level of water in the Birmingham canal system. We managed to shoot another Speckled Wood at rest
with its wings vertical. Going off at a tangent, Edgbaston is of course prime
Tolkein territory. That is J.R.R. Tolkein, author of ‘The Hobbit’ and ‘Lord of
the Rings’. This other shot shows at right, the tower of the Waterworks, which
is adjacent to the reservoir, and at left, ‘Perrot’s Folly’, which was built in
1758 by landowner John Perrot. It is just under 100 feet (~30m) tall, and he is
thought to have used it as an astronomical observatory. It is widely held that
these inspired Tolkein’s ‘Two Towers’, and as he definitely incorporated many
memories, impressions and characters from his life in his works of fiction,
that explanation seems highly likely. The shot is taken looking south along the
top of the dam, which is at the north-east corner of the reservoir.

Return
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Location
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2007.