When writing yesterday's blogpost, I completely forgot to look at the photos on my phone so here's a brief summary of the last seven days through its camera lens. 3 pallets and a floorboard repurposed as a potting bench Evening sky A wood gnat of the Genus Sylvicola which kept me company whilst washing up Some of the plants in flower in the front garden Panorama of section 3 of our bee transect - the path across the moor The weather forecast for the next few days shows the winds ramping up to 60mph gusts... oh, those poor blooms. Ah well, there will be some vases of daffodils about the place then.
Today was mainly about volunteering for Species on the Edge, carrying out March's wildlife surveys. In the morning, Megan and I went to the old Stromness Waterworks site to look for bumblebees, then in the afternoon, I went to Yesnaby on the west coast to search for Sea Plantain Leaf Beetles. The previous two days had been absolutely gorgeous, the warmest and sunniest of the year so far, leading to the appearance of two Small Tortoiseshell butterflies and a Buff-tailed Bumblebee queen in our garden. Today was cooler and cloudier, so hopes weren't high for either survey. At the old Stromness Waterworks site, some of the verges had a few Coltsfoot in flower, the reservoir dam head was liberally sprinkled with Primroses, whilst a few Daisies and a Gorse bush managed to push the nectar-providing count towards four species. Even the feral Daffodils which inhabit so many Orcadian verges weren't yet convinced of Spring's arrival. It was all meagre fare for a foraging bee, and ...