Wednesday 13th May 2026, St. John the Baptist Churchyard, Bishop’s Castle and St. George’s Churchyard, Clun
A double-header this week, the morning being spent in Bishop’s Castle and the afternoon in Clun. The weather could best be described as ‘changeable’ with good spells of sunshine interspersed with sharp showers and, at the end of the day, a brief but stupendous hailstorm which left some of us soaked and steaming on the way home. Then there was the temperature: perishing cold! The day nevertheless produced a number of significant finds to compensate for the unfriendly weather…We started at St. John the Baptist in Bishop’s Castle, discovering on arrival that none of us had anticipated just how chilly it would be. Nevertheless, the weather looks lovely in this shot!
| photo: Keith Fowler |
| photo: Nigel Jones |
“I’ve spent hours trying to ID the fly using various keys, not realising that this recently discovered species (described in 2003) was not in my keys. Eventually I twigged that there was an item in a Dipterological journal about a new species for the UK found in 2022 in Norfolk, and it is exactly the same as the Bishop’s Castle fly. This fly is rarely encountered anywhere in the world and is only known from several European countries – always in very low numbers. A very notable Shropshire first.”
In contrast, something more immediately cheerful: a ladybird with a smiley face on its back! It is a 14-spot.
Adjacent to the churchyard was what seemed to be the world’s smallest rookery, containing just a single nest. It was still managing to emit a tremendous racket though!
Not long after the above photo was taken, the Heavens opened. Invertebrates hid from the rain and the cold. This rather torpid hoverfly, Epistrophe elegans, was tapped from a Yew tree where it was sheltering.
The Yews also produced several Pine Ladybirds, who are not as host-specific as their name would suggest.
The sun returned and another smart black and red beetle was found.
This was another of the day’s notable finds: Anthocomus fasciatus, a beetle related to the malachite beetles. Nationally Scarce, there are around a dozen records in Shropshire this century, most from the north of the county. Here is another shot of it, toying briefly with the idea of attempting escape in an upwards direction.
We progressed further into the rather extensive burial ground, the sun continuing, for the time being, to look kindly upon us.
Whilst an Orange-tip, still moribund from the cold, was inadvertently swept from the long grass.
And a Dock Bug.
A smart hoverfly, Chrysotoxum arcuatum, played a game of hide and seek with me around a Box bush before I finally managed a shot of it.
And now more notable but not necessarily photogenic organisms. A Yew tree had been eyeballed with the tips of the shoots browned and withered.
This is caused by a Needle Blight called Cryptocline taxicola and appears to be the first time it has been reported in Shropshire. Fortunately its effects on the plant seem to be mild.
A smart hoverfly, Chrysotoxum arcuatum, played a game of hide and seek with me around a Box bush before I finally managed a shot of it.
And now more notable but not necessarily photogenic organisms. A Yew tree had been eyeballed with the tips of the shoots browned and withered.
| photo: John Lyden |
And finally (for Bishop’s Castle), this:
No, not a newly discovered planet. It is a microscope shot of a Ground Elder leaf, suffering the effects of another pathogenic invader. But this is not a fungus. Nor a plant. Nor an animal. It is Plasmopara nivea and it is an Oomycete, which is Kingdom Chromista. So there! This is the third Shropshire record of it.
Lunch was taken, then we moved onwards and southwards to Clun, and St. George’s Church.
The playwright John Osborne once lived nearby and is buried here, along with his 5th and final wife.
Moving on to the finds, we start with another third Shropshire record, this time the Oak Leaf Blister, Taphrina caerulescens (fungal) on Red Oak.
An interesting larva, which proved to be that of the Green-brindled Crescent moth, was extracted from a Cotoneaster.
Ladybirds included 16-spot
And Cream-spot.
Several tiny Speckled Bush-cricket nymphs were extracted from a less kempt area. At this age they are really very speckled indeed.
And we end on perhaps the most photogenic thing to be found all day (though Anthocomus might argue with that assessment). A jumping spider, specifically a male Euophrys frontalis. Common, but what a looker!
Soon after he was discovered, we retreated from the cold into the church where we were royally refreshed with very much appreciated tea, coffee, cake and warmth. A fine end to a challenging but ultimately very productive day. As our Dipterist said “A pretty good day out then! Just goes to show that whatever the weather, there is always the prospect of previously undiscovered delights. Top work everyone!” Many thanks to our hosts for allowing us to survey and for their generous hospitality.
Photographs © the author except as noted.
| photo: John Lyden |
Lunch was taken, then we moved onwards and southwards to Clun, and St. George’s Church.
The playwright John Osborne once lived nearby and is buried here, along with his 5th and final wife.
Moving on to the finds, we start with another third Shropshire record, this time the Oak Leaf Blister, Taphrina caerulescens (fungal) on Red Oak.
| photo: John Lyden |
Ladybirds included 16-spot
And Cream-spot.
Several tiny Speckled Bush-cricket nymphs were extracted from a less kempt area. At this age they are really very speckled indeed.
And we end on perhaps the most photogenic thing to be found all day (though Anthocomus might argue with that assessment). A jumping spider, specifically a male Euophrys frontalis. Common, but what a looker!
Soon after he was discovered, we retreated from the cold into the church where we were royally refreshed with very much appreciated tea, coffee, cake and warmth. A fine end to a challenging but ultimately very productive day. As our Dipterist said “A pretty good day out then! Just goes to show that whatever the weather, there is always the prospect of previously undiscovered delights. Top work everyone!” Many thanks to our hosts for allowing us to survey and for their generous hospitality.
Photographs © the author except as noted.