Dorset Walks

Thursday June 15th
Maiden Newton Watermeadows

Trip Report

A hot summer afternoon full of buzzing insects!
From the car park we started out along the road and onto the disused railway line - past a line of World War II tank traps. Walking through glades of Hazel and Dogwood we came across dozens of Beautiful Demoiselles settled up in the branches. What appeared to be a bee turned out to be a bee-mimic hoverfly called Volucella bombylans. This insect appears in 2 colour forms, 1 mimicing the Buff-tailed Bumblebee and 1 mimicing the Red-tailed Bumblebee - we saw both!
The rest of the walk produced many more insects including Scorpion Flies, Alder Flies and several species of butterfly and moth. Brown Trout were numerous in the river, which had some relics of the old water meadow machinery. Birds were limited to a pair of Bullfinches, a Buzzard and a trio of singing warblers - Blackcap, Willow Warbler and Chiffchaff.

Plants were extremely diverse, with Hemlock dominant on the plant edges and Water Crowfoot in the river. Grasses were all too common for a hay-fever sufferer and included all the usual meadow species.
Plants

Beech
Holm Oak
Pedunculate Oak
Charlock
Hemlock
Hogweed
Water Dropwort
Water Crowfoot
Black Knapweed
Marsh Thistle
Sorrel
Dogwood
Hart's Tongue Fern
Wall Rue
Meadow Cranesbill
Barren Brome
Couch Grass
Crested Dogstail
Oat-grass
Reed
Rough Meadow Grass
Rye Grass
Couch Grass
Tall Fescue
Yorkshire Fog
Hazel
Elder
Honeysuckle
Ivy
Field Horsetail
Yellow Flag Iris
Field Maple
Sycamore
Stinging Nettle
Ash
Red Campion
Field Poppy
Blackthorn
Bramble
Hawthorn
Meadowsweet
Common Valerian

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