Wednesday 29th April 2026, Langley Fields, Dawley
I was absent for this trip, a return to a brownfield site on the edge of Telford Town Park, but fortunately I have the eye-witness accounts of several of the attendees to relate the events of the day. I will therefore let them take up the story….We duly arrived at Duce Drive and, remembering that our group Scout had been shouted at last time for parking on the road, (whatever next - a car on the road!) we parked on the pavement. It is not illegal to park on the pavement apparently just to drive on the pavement so, providing your get your vehicle there by other means, you are within the law.
We were still grumping about the officialdom of non-officials including musing on whether Mr Shouty was, in fact a descendant of Mussolini, bearing in mind the name of the road, when a vehicle whizzed round the bend, failed to make the turn and mounted the pavement briefly. Perhaps the shouty one had a point.
After assembling our gear and, in some cases our person, we headed for the site but, on reaching it had to jump nimbly aside (oh alright shuffle off the path) to avoid being run over by a large young person on an electric scooter who hurtled past at a break-neck speed. Fortunately they had about their person some sort of miniature wireless or radiogram which emitted a noise at a decibel level of which Pink Floyd would have been proud in their heyday.
It is worth pointing out at this juncture that three of the group realised they only had two serviceable lower limbs between them – work that one out. Accordingly a lot of sitting down happened throughout the day. This was augmented by a younger member of the group whose warranty had only relatively recently expired finding some ooze oozing out of a tree and sitting down for an extraordinary amount of time to watch it ooze. Others within the group felt it was a lot like watching paint dry with flies but it kept him happy. Was it worth it I hear you cry – well read on.
Despite the lovely weather and close proximity to civilisation, very few other people were encountered apart from a couple of dog walkers with badly behaved dogs. We were assured by the owner of a particularly aggressive dog that, despite the snarling and baring of teeth, he was as gentle as a lamb and wouldn’t hurt a fly, In the same way, presumably, that a salt water crocodile, man eating tiger or mantis shrimp wouldn’t. And if you don’t think one of those is dangerous just spend a few minutes with one down your drainpipe trousers...
A very sunny day but a brisk wind kept temperatures down – except in sheltered areas where it was very warm.
The site was very dry but there still managed to be a few areas of thick sticky mud. Very little floral interest outside gorse that had more or less gone over and a few broom.
Some of the trees were in flower and a sap run and nearby Acer providing some entertainment late in the day. Some hawthorn was in flower (imported varieties?) but I found next to nothing in them and got spiked for my troubles.
We started in the rough grassy area close to the cars which was relatively productive. The small pool there had long gone but there was some dampness.
| photo: Neil Nash |
| photo: Keith Fowler |
We started in the rough grassy area close to the cars which was relatively productive. The small pool there had long gone but there was some dampness.
| 24-Spot Ladybird |
| Bishop's Mitre Shieldbug. Photo: Keith Fowler |
| Green Longhorn Moth, Adela reaumurella |
We moved into the main site.
| photo: Keith Fowler |
| photo: Keith Fowler |
And we found the Boy (Callitula pyrrhogaster) – not a new site as we found it here last year.
| photo: Keith Fowler |
After lunch we continued to move through the site at the far side from the cars continuing to do our thing until the sap run and maple provided the late excitement.
| Yellow-girdled Brusheye, Dasysyrphus tricinctus |
Other finds included several ladybirds – Rhyzobius litura, 7-spot, 14-spot, 16- spot, 24 spot and Harlequin. Plus some shieldbugs – Green, Forest nymph and Gorse.
And finally, we come to the sap run.
| photo: Nigel Jones |
I managed to grab some photos of the Brachyopa bicolor hoverfly (a scarce species) visiting a small sap run on Aspen.
| photo: Nigel Jones |
| photo: Nigel Jones |
We also had four species of Dasysyrphus, which these days counts as a good tally:
D. albostriatus – numbers
D. tricinctus (Jim caught this)
D. pinastri
D. venustus
Not a bad day out after a grim start with very little about.
Thank you to the site owners, Telford & Wrekin Council, for granting us permission to do what we do.
Photographs © Nigel Cane-Honeysett except as noted
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