Friday, 17 July 2026

16th July - Titchfield Haven, Hampshire

Still hot and officially a heatwave, but it felt fresher over the last few days and a lot more amenable to do things.  After the disappointment of last night once again I decided to spend some time back at the Haven.  As I arrived a message came in that there was a Ruff on the north scrape, I was yet to see one this year so I was pleased I had opted to come here.

I checked in at the cabin and then walked around the sea wall in a fresh breeze.  The tide was out and there were terns fishing offshore.  In the bay from the roadside there was a Common Sandpiper feeding on the exposed mud.



As I walked into the reserve all the birds on the south scrape appeared to go up.  Overhead were several Sandwich Terns.  From below they look a little like the Fairy Tern with the black eyes

For once I avoided the Meon Shore hide and made my way around to the Pumfrett Hide where there would be a better view of the north scrape.  I stopped at Darter's Dip briefly to get a close up of this Common Darter.


The Ruff was still present, but feeding i the far north eastern corner, still I was able to get a record shot.

The light from this hide in the early morning is poor and with the size of the reeds a lot of the scrape is not visible.  On the south scrape there were three Dunlin, all in breeding plumage on the exposed spit.


A Common Tern fishing over the south scrape.

The talk in the hide turned to butterflies and the possibility of finding hairstreaks along the Meon Road.  So a couple of us walked around to see if we could find some.  White Letter have been seen, but it might be a little late, Purple are more than likely there while the big hope was to find Brown Hairstreak.

You walk the canal path then across the road at the bends to a patch of Wych Elm and Oak.  There were a few butterflies about, but not what we were hoping for.  We walked through the line of trees to the footpath alongside the field of wheat.


There were more butterflies along the path and we soon found a Hairstreak, but not the ones hoped for.  A pair of Purple Hairstreak were mating on the leaves of a holly bush.



On the edge of the wheat field there was a Painted Lady.



And a male Common Blue.


While on the bushes and holly a lovely Holly Blue.

Only one hairstreak species out of the three hoped for but it was a pleasant walk and nice to see the Purple Hairstreak.

Back at the reserve I went into the Meon Shore hide where the conditions looked a lot different, water had been diverted on to the scrape.

The terns were very busy moving back and forth from the sea with fish.  It was nice to be able to catch up with a few Sandwich Terns.




The Common Terns were also busy with fish.


The familiar call of a Common Sandpiper heralded the arrival of one from the far side of the scrape, flying on to the island in front of the hide.


It then made its way around the small island picking off the insects that were on the surface of the water.



A lovely reflection.

Most of the waders were on the north end of the scrape with quite a few Black-tailed Godwits and Avocet roosting in the sunshine.  One notable record was that of a tufted Duck with three ducklings, what was a surprise was the female hauling up on a island and letting the little ones swim around on their own.

I wanted to get back to the north scrape in the hope that the Ruff was showing a little better.  I had forgotten to photograph the scrape first thing, but now the light was better.  Again a lot more water and quality mud.

The Avocet were feeding in the shallow water which provided some very nice reflections.



Standing quite regally.



And some stretching.

I dismissed a small wader close to the hide as a Common Sandpiper, then it flew off and revealed the white rump of a Green Sandpiper.  Of course it flew around the left hand side and out of sight into the north west corner.

A Snipe on the edge of the south scrape was a nice find, they must be starting to return.

Then some luck the Ruff made its way across the scrape and into the east corner and then came back across the mud quite close.


Clearly in moult but showing the feathers of a male bird.


On my way back I stopped off in the Meon Shore hide once again and it proved to be a very good decision.  On the island 'C' which is at the back of the scrape there was a Roseate Tern sat alongside a Common.  A very welcome year tick.

It was very much a day of surprises in which I picked up two year ticks and some interesting discussion around the butterflies of Hampshire.  The good news is that the scrapes have been replenished and are looking a lot more conducive to the autumn wader passage which is already under way.

Thursday, 16 July 2026

14th July - RHS Wisley, Surrey

A cooler morning with some substantial cloud cover and a brisk north easterly wind was the perfect day to finally make our summer visit to the Royal Horticultural Society's flagship gardens at Wisley in Surrey.

The gardens are laid out with many formal gardens in the middle and around the outside, with the River Wey as the boundary, arboretums and pinetums and wild flower gardens.  Here the map of the gardens.


The first thing to catch the eye as we walked through the entrance was the lawn around the cafe and terrace restaurant.  Th egrass was like straw, when we had been here at the end of May it was still very green.

After coffee we set off around the old house and the formal ponds with many different types of water lilies, they were all looking splendid, but then again they were sitting in water, not yet affected by the drought.

We walked up the hill towards the clear lake and I was taken by some of the plants on either side of the path, love the rich purple and the deep green of the leaves along with the markings in this heliotropium.


And these, a mass of very small flowers creating a mist in the border.


Butterflies were abundant, Meadow Brown, Gatekeeper all three whites and this fine Painted Lady.


We were heading for Oudolf's Landscape, a winding path that leads to a mound that is covered all the way around with lavender.  Opened in May 2024, the landscape replace linear borders with a sinuous path.  Created by Piet Oudolf, a Dutch gardener who specialises in matrix planting which features grids of natural planting combinations.  The gardens contain 36,000 perennials and features islands that allow visitors to spend time to enjoy the plants and flowers.

This is the view looking down from the lavender mound towards the Glasshouse showing the winding path.


Before walking down the path we spent some time around the lavender on the mound.


At first look it seems to be just lavender, but looking closer there are many insects.  Meadow Brown and Gatekeeper butterflies and several bumble bees, but the bee that caught out eye was this Green-eyed Flower Bee.

They nest in self dug cavities and like sandy soils such as those found at Wisley.  That plus the abundance of nectar from the lavender.


There were many stunning flowers as we walked through the landscape, but the one that really caught my eye were these 'Blue Globe' thistles.


This one complete with its own Ladybird.


We had lunch at the Glasshouse cafe and then walked along the river walk, something we haven't done before.  There were many dragonflies on the river Wey including Emperor Dragonfly and a Brown Hawker.

The sun had broken through the cloud and conditions had returned to those of the previous few days, hot!  The beauty of having the RHS membership is that you can dip in and out of Wisley enjoying the chance to compare the seasons.  We decided it was now enough and headed home.

Saturday, 11 July 2026

11th July - Browndown South and Titchfield Haven, Hampshire

The heatwave continues although today was to be a little cooler with a north east breeze.  However if you are on the south coast the chances are the breeze isn't getting through so it was another hot one.  I met Ian just outside Browndown South.  It has been open through July so far so we decided to start earl in our search for what I consider to be the county's strangest butterfly.

Walking along the main path it was already hot, as I parked the car said twenty five degrees, but with the conditions there were few butterflies about.  Mostly whites there was also a few Small Copper.

We headed for the stunted oaks in the middle of the reserve, which entailed walking through shingle which seemed to make it hotter.  It didn't take long to find our quarry, the Grayling.


Widespread on the coast of Britain and Ireland and on heathland in southern Britain, the Grayling’s cryptic colouring provides it with excellent camouflage, making it difficult to see when at rest on bare ground, tree trunks, or stones. The wings are kept closed when not in flight and the forewings are usually tucked behind the hind wings, concealing the eyespots and making the butterfly appear smaller. 


In flight this is a distinctive, large butterfly has a looping and gliding flight, during which the paler bands on the upper wings are visible.


While at rest the 'eye' is hidden, but watching them today I noticed the the 'eye' is exposed just before it springs into the air.


The stunted oaks on Browndown are usually a good place to find Purple Hairstreak at eye level.  We shook several branches as we walked around them today and flushed a couple, but were not able to find them.  Ironically as we walked the main path I saw one settle in one of the 'normal' oaks by the side of the path.



Birdlife around the rserve was limited, a juvenile Whitethroat, smart looking Linnet but in the sun and a family group of Green Woodpeckers that avoided the camera very well.

From Browndown we went to Titchfield Haven.  The breeze was much more prevalent here and in the Meon Shore hide it was wonderfully cool with the window blowing into the hide through the windows.  Unfortunately the birds were not so good.  The Common Tern still sits on the eggs, but the island is now part of the shore as a lot more of the scrape is just dried mud.  If we don't get some substantial rain any autumn waders are going to be so far away from the hide.

Very good numbers of Black-tailed Godwits around the scrape and a single Common Sandpiper.  Avocet numbers were well down and of course there were plenty of Black-headed Gulls and Common Terns.


Plenty of Black-tailed Skimmers at the new pond along with a couple of Four-spot chasers.  At Darter's Dip there were now four Small Red-eyed Damselflies.  Their positioning on the pond weed no different to the last two visits.  Close by was this Blue-tailed Damselfly.


From the Pumfrett Hide the north scrape was looking even drier and with the height of the reeds it is not possible to see all the scrape, so you wonder what is tucked away out of sight.

This sandpiper posed some questions, we initially thought it might be Green due to the lack of white reaching under the shoulder.


But a closer look revealed it was hiding the white and was in fact a Common Sandpiper.

Both scrapes were disturbed twice, one by a Spitfire and one by a Sparrowhawk.  A single Mediterranean Gull was on the sand bar on the south scrape and there were two Sandwich Terns amongst the Common.

After an early lunch we walked around to the east side and down to the Knight's Bank hide.  There had been a report of a Cattle Egret, but it must have been hiding in the long grass.  The Kestrel family were present along the fence and around the telegraph wires.

It was now far to hot for both nature and me so it was an early end to the day.  Must be the least photographs I have ever taken for a Saturday out.