18th and 20th March
A couple of trips to the Botanics; partly hoping to meet up with the two great tits and reshoot them coming to my hand in better quality than the mobile footage I'd already shot. Weather a little bit dull, but that's March.

Ken was looking at this nuthatch sat on the top of a high tree near the Willow Pond. Now my photo is fairly disgraceful, but it was significant so I am putting it here. I don't often see nuthatches in the Botanics (or anywhere locally) and it stirred up thoughts of going along to Cammo on teh West side of Edinburgh, where they are widespread. I tend to only really visit Cammo in the Winter when I enjoy photographing nuthatches and jays. However the walled garden can be good for butterflies in early Spring. All it took was a nuthatch to remind me of the place and the idea became reality the following day, when the weather disregarded the forecast and was unexpectedly sunny.

Ken and I went up towards the rhododendron copse and pulminaria. Ken pointed out the small holes in the rhodie flowers where bees or birds have been nectar robbing. This is when some creatures cut a small hole into the base of the flower to access nectar rather than by crawling into the flower. This avoids contact with the plants reproduction apparatus and so the mutually beneficial bond is broken. This floral larceny (I kid you not) is performed by bees, small birds and even bats. Ken was hoping to identify if it was insects or blue tits doing this.
obsidentify says this is false morel (100%)
some are harmless, some fatal
(I was not tempted, delicious as it looks 😄 )
some are harmless, some fatal
(I was not tempted, delicious as it looks 😄 )
Hepatica transsilvanica
common wasp - Vespula vulgaris
hairy-footed flower bee (m) females are diff colour
Drone fly - Eristalis tenax

We were wandering about the area near the Campbells magnolia and towards the rhodie copse looking for butterflies. I think a comma flew by but didn't stop for a photo. Various people stopped for a chat. It was warm and really quite pleasant if a bit short on butterflies to be really great. But then I managed to bump into the great tits again. Not sure if I found them or if they found me. They seem to spend time on the road from the Reg Butler pond to the Camp Mag. And just behind the rhodies there. They were as obliging as the day before and I think it might have been the female leading the charge again while the male held back. In no time both were taking turns and seemed to prefer the peanuts over the sunflower hearts but would take both. And possibly the bread as well.

I had initially put on the macro lens (OM 90mm) when I saw a robin nearby who looked like a decent candidate. (A handidate?) However I had trouble holding the G9 far enough away from my left hand to get all the bird in when it sat there. So after the initial clip (see video below) I changed lens to the street lens - the wide angle 12~60 (24~120 ff equiv.) This gave more elbow room. I shot all the clips in 120fps slo-mo. It slows things down (by a factor of 4.8) to about the rate these small birds must operate. In real time you can't see what they are up to as they are far too fast.
So fast I found it hard to anticipate when they were about to fly to my hand from nearby perches. As a result most of the clips start with the bird already on my hand. The final robin clip is sitting on Ken's hand and the final gt tit clips are featuring Mary's hand. It is far easier to film them on someone else than on one's own hand, as it is easier to make sure the clip is in focus and you don't have a bird sat on one of your hands impeding use of it to operate the camera.
However the joy of having a wee bird sat on your hand voluntarily is off the scale. Mary came along on the Friday trip there. Again no red admirals (got the first small tort of the year) but the birds landing on her hand put a smile on her face for the rest of the day. I had wondered if it was just a one-off miracle that I'd never be able to repeat however it actually wasn't hard to find the great tit pair again, although it meant a bit of standing around before they showed up. I wonder if they will be as friendly into the Summer? I suspect they might disappear when nesting and rearing young.
So fast I found it hard to anticipate when they were about to fly to my hand from nearby perches. As a result most of the clips start with the bird already on my hand. The final robin clip is sitting on Ken's hand and the final gt tit clips are featuring Mary's hand. It is far easier to film them on someone else than on one's own hand, as it is easier to make sure the clip is in focus and you don't have a bird sat on one of your hands impeding use of it to operate the camera.
However the joy of having a wee bird sat on your hand voluntarily is off the scale. Mary came along on the Friday trip there. Again no red admirals (got the first small tort of the year) but the birds landing on her hand put a smile on her face for the rest of the day. I had wondered if it was just a one-off miracle that I'd never be able to repeat however it actually wasn't hard to find the great tit pair again, although it meant a bit of standing around before they showed up. I wonder if they will be as friendly into the Summer? I suspect they might disappear when nesting and rearing young.
spawn in the rock garden pond
no sign of frogs/toads
love these weird looking flowers
camp mag!

On Friday we were in the small quiet space next to Campbell's magnolia when Mary gave me a nudge in the ribs. The woman on the bench opposite was eating pre-packaged hard-boiled eggs. (I struggled to take the above shot from the hip and to not draw attention to me doing this.) These convenience foods had recently been flagged up in a facebook comment by pal Stuart H; that they possibly represented the lowpoint of humanity along with flavoured hot cross buns, Trump, Gogglebox, Coldplay and Crocs. (Discuss!)
Myself I am fairly unmoved by those items but have many other (partly irrational) items, subjects and scenarios that I would definitely start a fight on facebook about. I did consider creating a Love/Hate blog where such items are held up for scrutiny. However I think it benefits one's health not to focus on those irritants but instead to aim for the "serenity to accept the things I cannot change". I'm not saying I always manage that, I'm just saying that's what I aim for.
taken before 12.30 😕
Japanese quince
following the progress of this Viburnum latana
best butterfly of the 20th - first small tort of the year
thanks to Colin R who noticed the butterflies on this Pachysandra terminalis
comma on barkchips - never going to be a top notch photo sat here!
peacock
comma

Just the day before the best of the butterflies seemed to be on the South side of the rock garden. (Info from Ken.) Not sure if it was the change of wind direction but today they seemed to have shifted West towards the Wild Orchard. Growing in numbers too with a couple of peacocks and commas out.
An unexpected delight today was this Birch (obsidentify) shieldbug. Mary spotted it on the rhodies which we were frisking for admirals. Due to the white petals my camera jumped to 1/6400 of a second, which was fast enough to freeze the action as it decided to fly off. I hadn't anticipated it taking off and just got lucky. This wasn't even the macro lens but the 400mm. The white petals reflected the light nicely to get a near perfect exposure on the underside and the wings rising for that first downbeat to power it into the air. Luck more than good judgement, but I'll take it!
Equally this out-of-focus shot of a Syrphus hoverfly is fairly awful but it was the only one I photographed today so it made the grade.
short clip of a hairy-footed flower bee
I experimented with the macro 90mm lens as technically that should be better for capturing small insects like the flower bees. However you have to get so much closer to them which is tricky where they are in the Botanics. (They discourage trampling across flowerbeds!) And the hairy-footers buzz about so quickly it makes keeping them in the frame really tricky. The above footage was shot with the 400mm and again quite fortunate to get a short clip agreeably in focus, showing it nectaring.
so this is the second attempt to video the great tits
using the proper camera rather than mobile phone
Thanks to Ken and Mary for lending a hand!


























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