2 Jun 2026

Marvellous Meadows

Wednesday 27th May 2026, White Grit Meadows

White Grit Meadows consist of four wildflower meadows bounded by tall, thick hedgerows, with some small stands of Alder and Goat Willow trees. Part of the White Grit SSSI, these botanically rich meadows lie close to the foot of Corndon Hill, just over the border in Montomeryshire. The meadows are home to good populations of Heath Spotted Orchid, Dyers Greenweed and Devil’s-bit Scabious.
 
There was a large turnout for this event, which produced the first excitement of the day: badly synchronised car dancing, as people jockeyed for position in the limited space available. Three late(er)comers (no-one was actually late) were eventually banished to a more remote location and made to trudge back to the main group. That will teach them!
 
Finally, with everyone assembled, the group marched in something approaching unison to the site. The meadows form a backwards ‘L’ shape in plan, our entry point being the meadow in the corner, with one farther meadow to the left and two more ahead (in the vertical bit of the ‘L’ if that makes any sort of sense at all).
photo: Keith Fowler
Some headed into the grassland itself to botanise and indeed everythingelseologise white others headed to the margins to examine those instead. Early finds in the margins included a lovely Apple Fruit Weevil
And an equally lovely Green Hairstreak
Meanwhile, in the meadow, agregations of the micro-moth Micropteryx calthella were spotted in buttercup flowers. This sparkling little moth goes by the common name of Plain Gold, which hardly seems to do it justice.
There was more eye-catching iridescence from a much larger insect, a 15mm or so click beetle which we believe to be Ctenictera pectinicornis. This one is a female; males have fancier antennae. More injustice here, the photo failing to adequately show either the size or the shininess of this impressive insect.
The display of Heath Spotted Orchids did not disappoint, they being abundant in the meadow.
photo: John Martin
Two more grassland moth species seen were Syndemis musculana
And a pristine Mother Shipton
While a stand of gorse in the middle of the field yielded several Gorse Shieldbugs.

Many more finds were made of course but eventually we moved into the second field (working our way up the vertical bit of the back-to-front ‘L’). Not long after our entry into this second field, lunch was declared, a shady spot under the fringing trees being selected. Various butterflies zoomed and fluttered past while we ate, including Painted Ladies, which seem to be about to have one of those ‘Painted Lady Years’ where they appear in big numbers. This immaculate Small Copper proved easier to photograph. 
A sure sign that Summer is approaching was the presence of grasshoppers bouncing about around our feet. These all turned out to be Common Greens and at this point in the year they are still nymphs, ranging from tiny 1st instars to larger 4th (final) instars. Here are two 3rd instars, first an uncontroversially green one
And now a more confusingly not-at-all green one. Still a Common Green Grasshopper though! 
The top field in the ‘L’ beckoned, its lower hedge affording a good view of the nearby Corndon Hill.
A number of very large flying things were circling it. A precise identification to species level eluded us but my suspicion is that they are related to kites…
Back in the meadow, it was good to see a couple of Six-spot Burnet larvae 
A Common Heath moth was another nice sight. 
And now, redemption for last week’s worst ever blog post photo. A scrubbier area in the centre of the meadow contained thistles and Hogweed, both hunting grounds for the Golden-bloomed Grey Longhorn Beetle, Agapanthia villosoviridescens. And indeed one appeared on cue, but this week it was altogether more in focus. To retain a degree of contrariness, it chose to pose for photos on a nearby fern instead.
A last photo for this field is of a Red-headed Cardinal Beetle which appeared as we were retreating from it (the field, not the beetle). 

 
And so back through the meadows, past our starting point and into the final one at the toe-end of the ‘L’. Red-and-black Froghoppers had been present all day. One finally posed for its portrait.
Another red and black insect had less choice in the matter. It was glued to the spot (and dead). A 7-spot Ladybird which had fallen victim to the parasitic wasp Dinocampus coccinellae, who’s larva lives within the hapless beetle, burrowing out when fully grown and pupating beneath it, the cocoon being attached to the still-living ladybird so that it is forced to stand over it as protection. Remarkably some ladybirds do survive all of this, but they are very much the minority and this one was certainly dead.

There was a definite sense of the day beginning to wind down by this time, as the warmth sapped the strength and will of the participants. There was just time for a Dock Bug to appear in the trays…
Before a second and final burst of sitting in the shade broke out.
photo: Keith Fowler

 
And so we returned to our vehicles. But a couple of intrepid souls were not yet done. An adjacent piece of access land, just sneaking back over the border into Shropshire, was rumoured to house a population of Petty Whin, rare in, if not actually absent from, Shropshire. And here it is!
photo: John Martin

Finally, a postscript. The subsequent microscope work done on the day’s catch of flies produced the following finds of particular note. As usual, I’ll let Nigel take up the tale…
 
The Empid fly Rhamphomyia albitarsis
photo: Nigel Jones
and the Sepsid fly (found by Jim) Sepsis duplicata.
photo: Nigel Jones

The Empid is Nationally Scarce and the Sepsid is very infrequently found by JoW, being a very local species. It is easily identified by the abundant long hairs on its mid and hind femora.
I also found three Empis bicuspidata which may be new to Montgomeryshire and has not been recorded in Shropshire.
 
A thoroughly enjoyable day. Many thanks to the owners for allowing access to this botanically rich and widely interesting site.
  
 
Photographs © the author except as noted.

26 May 2026

Almost Like the Good Old Days

 Wednesday 20th May 2026, The Isle, Bicton

Our venue this week was return visit to a large, mainly arable farm within a meander of the River Severn, close to Bicton. The farm's practice is to reduce reliance on bagged fertiliser, improve soil health naturally and benefit the natural environment. The hot weather which we are experiencing as I type this had not yet arrived, but the day was nevertheless characterised by very pleasant sunshine and temperatures. What a day! Reader, it was almost like a May day from times past, with constant interest, abundant (by modern standards, anyway) life and hardly a dull moment. One result of this is a bumper crop of photos which, even after some fairly savage culling, has left considerably more than I would usually feature.
 
The narrative begins in the car park, a venue which often provides interest. Almost the first thing that was spotted was this fine Common Clubtail, fresh from the encircling Severn.
Several other dragons and damsels were also present, perhaps the nicest being a Red-eyed Damselfly,  which will have come from the Isle Pool rather than the river.
The car park produced a variety of other finds, giving a hint of what was to come. This hoverfly has been christened the Snouted Duck Fly by someone with a vivid imagination. Its face can’t be seen in the below photo, but it does have quite the schnoz. More scientifically, it is Eurimyia (Anasimyia) lineata.
Another portent of what was to come were these mating 14-spot ladybirds. There was a lot of this sort of thing going on. Perhaps this report should have an Advisory: Parental Guidance warning attached to it…
And indeed the results of similar endeavours were also to be seen. This is a 24-spot Ladybird larva.
Many Lepidoptera larvae were also seen over the day. This was the first, a Clouded Drab larva, preparing to shed its skin (note the bulging head).
On arrival in the car park I had barely got out of the car when something hit me in the chest. It was a longhorn beetle of some sort, possibly Rhagium bifasciatum (Two-banded Longhorn). It zoomed off again before I could focus on it and was never seen again. But over the course of the day we saw a further seven longhorn beetle species, which feels like a record for us. This was the first, a Tobacco-coloured Longhorn, Alosterna tabacicolor. 

We finally managed to extricate ourselves from the car park and set off along a lane leading down to the river and thence to several large meadows. Barely had we started along the lane when this splendid creature appeared.

It is a snakefly. We see them only very infrequently  so they are always a subject of much ogling when one appears. This one is a male Phaeostigma notata. A second one (same species) appeared later in the day, amounting to about 5 years’ worth of snakefly sightings at normal rates!
Back to longhorn beetles and here’s more of that PG-rated behaviour again, this time from a pair of Wasp Beetles. We saw a lot of these, all over the areas we visited.
Also very common were (appropriately enough) Common Grammoptera (Grammoptera ruficornis).
And the remaining longhorn beetle species, beginning with an excellent sight: Lime Longhorn, Stenostola  dubia, a local species, not often encountered.
Stenostola dubia

Variable Longhorn, Stenocorus meridianus

Rufous-shouldered Longhorn, Anaglyptus mysticus
And finally the worst photo ever to appear in a blog post. But it was all I could manage before it did a Geronimo into the undergrowth, never to be seen again. 
Golden-bloomed Grey Longhorn, Agapanthia villosoviridescens

This view looks back at the point where we had entered the meadows from the lane. The river is on the left of picture, hidden behind young willows. The wooden building made an excellent base, and lunch spot!
Another Odonata river specialist was much in evidence here - Banded Demoiselle. 
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
At this point in proceedings, observations started coming in so thick and fast that any sort of coherent narrative becomes almost impossible, so I am mostly going to resort to compiling the images by species  group, starting with some beetles.
10-spot Ladybird

Red-headed Cardinal Beetles
 
Black-headed Cardinal Beetle. photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

soldier beetle, Cantharis rustica. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Some weevils:
Curculio venosus. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Phyllobius pomaceus. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
a spider weevil, Exomias aranaeiformis. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Britain has two species of leaf beetles in the Gastrophysa genus. We saw both. This is G. polygoni  
While this is the more familiar G. viridula, aka the Green Dock Beetle. 
And these are Green Dock Beetle eggs (on dock, naturally). 
But you will note that some are smaller and whiter than the rest. That’s because they belong to someone else, a species of hoverfly in fact. The florid naming committee has been at work again and christened it the Black-footed Bristleside, otherwise known as Parasyrphus nigritarsus. This hoverfly predates the eggs and larvae of various leaf beetles. As an adult it is not often seen and is in any case not easy to separate from other related species. The best way to identify it is by doing just this - finding its eggs, laid in among those of its unfortunate prey species. Green Dock Beetles are a particularly easy target, both for fly and entomologist. We were fortunate enough to find not only eggs but  also a couple of  larvae, already well through devouring their clutch of beetle eggs.
Staying with Diptera, here is one of the day’s most notable finds. A county second in fact: the picture-winged fly Oxyna parientina. 
photo: Keith Fowler
This next fly was also notable - our Dipterist thinks it is the first time it has been collected on a Joy of Wildlife outing. And yet it was, as he says “ubiquitous in my youth”. It is a Lesser Housefly! 
Fannia  canicularis. Photo: Nigel Jones
Finally, for the flies,  another good spot: Antheris ibis, the Yellow-legged Water Snipefly.
Time for another scenic view into the main meadow area including, in the foreground, a huge patch of Silverweed... 
photo: Keith Fowler
…before we move to Lepidoptera, including several larvae:
Glyphipterix simpliciella. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
 
Nemophora degeereella

Plum Tortrix, Hedya pruiniana. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Small Yellow Underwing

Timothy Tortrix larva

Small Quaker larva

Dun-bar larva

Satellite larva

Purple Hairstreak larva
And an egg 
Small Copper egg
Next, Orthoptera. All tiny nymphs at this stage.
Field Grasshopper

Roesel's  Bush-cricket
Oak Bush-cricket
Now Hemiptera, beginning with, as our Hemipterist puts it “My first cuckoo of the year”. That is, cuckoo-spit, produced by the nymph of a species of froghopper. 
photo: Keith Fowler
Dock Bugs

Forest Bug nymph. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Rhabdomiris striatellus
A few Hymenoptera…. 
mason bee. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Nomada fabriciana. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

sawfly larva, Periclista pubescens
A mayfly 
Green Drake, Ephemera danica. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
And a caddisfly 
Welshman's Button, Sericostoma personatum. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Before we (almost) conclude with a selection of spiders.
a cucumber green spider. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Tetragnatha extensa. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Gibberania gibbosa. Photo:  Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Nursery Web Spider. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

By the time some of us had completed a circuit of the largest field, the temperature had risen to the point where an unspoken agreement was reached to begin the return to our vehicles.
As we retreated, a pair of Mute Swans whistled overhead. Another lovely sight in a day filled with them.
Many thanks to the owners for allowing access to this exceptional site.
   
 
Photographs © the author except as noted.