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• #1777
Spotted yesterday on the ivy that probably fed it as a caterpillar
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• #1779
Caterpillar time today in my carpet. A mad looking sycamore moth and a cinnabar moth (of which there were 10 on one plant although I only got a close up of one).
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• #1780
That sycamore one is ace!
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• #1781
Yeah, never seen one before. It looked quite artificial tbh.
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• #1782
Shite photo as these guys haven’t chosen this spot for getting decent light it would seem, but couple of French wasps building themselves a little pied-à-terre
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• #1783
Red-legged shield bug, carefully removed from Mrs Bearlegged's jumper before being released back into the moorland flora.
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• #1784
Black Rustic (?), demonstrating the incredible camouflage capabilities of moths.
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• #1785
Thought I’d caught a little grasshopper earlier, so was astounded when this little thing crawled out of fist.
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• #1786
Had it eaten the grasshopper?
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• #1787
Also, a fairly magnificent wasp that we rescued from the swimming pool
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• #1788
Mini praying mantis?
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• #1789
Yep. About 2cm long, tops. A teeny tiny killing machine.
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• #1790
From yesterday, a tired southern white admiral
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• #1791
Not sure I’ve seen a damselfly in this pale / orange configuration before
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• #1792
That reminds me, saw what I think must have been a golden-ringed dragonfly at the weekend. Very impressive markings.
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• #1793
Awesome Mantis.
UK? Not seen one here yet.
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• #1794
I didn't realise there were so many different types of mantis (over 2000 apparently) until someone at work started getting into them.
Some of them are pretty gruesome looking!
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• #1795
No, I’m on holiday in the south of France. Lots of cool bugs around. Never seen a mantis before, has been on my ‘would love to see’ list for a long time.
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• #1796
Ha. Yes I remember catching one as a child in France on holiday. Attacked the bottle it was contained in with those amazing arms. I was reading they are expected to populate the UK if not already...
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• #1797
Violet carpenter bee - one of my favourite common sightings when in France. This fellow was large enough that I could easily follow it around a massive garden, sometimes just by listening out for the direction the outrageous buzzing was coming from.
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• #1798
Parasitic wasp mebbe?
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• #1799
I think it’s a mud dauber? Sceliphron Spirifex, maybe? Technically I think not parasitic. They just have a cool habit of sealing spiders in the egg chambers of their nests, so they are trapped in there to serve as breakfast, lunch and dinner when the little ones arrive.
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• #1800
Missed this 2 yrs ago....ah, good times. One of my.most physically uncomfortable moments was 3 (three) stings on the bridge of nose/eyebrow from a wasp stuck in my sunglasses. Proper swollen and snot filled physical reaction which really wasn't the best at a kids' theme park. Obviously recovered now, well, not psychologically
Tiger Moth seeking shelter in our kitchen...
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