"For now we are young let us lay in the sun and count every beautiful thing we can see" Neutral Milk Hotel.

Friday, 20 April 2018

Off Patch: four beetles and two bugs on Heacham South Beach

Hairy Rove Beetle, Creophilus maxillosus, from a dead Curlew, Heacham South Beach, 19th April 2018


Thanatophilus rugosus from dead Curlew, Heacham South Beach 19th April 2018


Phaleria cadaverina, from a dead Curlew, Heacham South Beach, 19th April 2018


Silpha laevigata, Heacham South Beach 19th April 2018


Turtle Bug, Podops inuncta, Heacham South Beach, 19th April 2018


Stilt Bug, Berytinus signoreti, Heacham South Beach, 19th April 2018




Three early-season bugs and a spider

Sloe Shieldbug Ringstead Downs, 19th APril 2018


Corizus hyoscyami, Ringstead Downs, 19th April 2018


Dock Shieldbug, Coreus marginatus, Ringstead Downs, 19th APril 2018


Nurseryweb Spider Pisaura mirabilis, Ringstead Downs, 19th April 2018


Monday, 9 April 2018

The South Beach Parallel Lines

The Parallel Line of South Beach in their glory


Discovered as recently as today, 9th April 2018, these remarkable features on the South Beach at Heacham, Norfolk, have evidently gone quietly unnoticed for millennia. Today's discovery came moments into a visit by the modestly unassuming but acute observer, famous ethno-geometrician Phil Amies.

As idling coleopterists stood in thrall, Professor Amies announced that he could discern a series of astonishingly well-preserved, precision lines, each running parallel to the others but directly across the sands and - most amazingly, perpendicular to the strand- and shore-line.

Comparisons with the Nazca lines of the Chilean Atacama are immediately obvious and one can only wonder at the ingenuity which will have been required to produce these ancient artefacts. Whereas the South American lines can only really be appreciated from space, the South Beach lines have the advantage that they can also clearly be seen from the the top of the taller sand dunes which guard the entrance to the great embayment of The Wash.

Noting that the find adds to the recent discoveries of the Snettisham torc, Holme's sea-henge and wasp-henge and of early 'Hunstanton' Man and further cements the area's outstanding cultural significance, Professor Amies remarked that he "really should stand around on the dunes more often".

Two-spot Ladybird

Two-spot Ladybird, Adalia bipinctata, Holme NWT, 7th April 2018


Gorse Weevil....on gorse

Gorse Weevil, Exapion ulicis, Holme NWT, 7th April 2018


A friendly-looking spider

Nuctea umbratica, Holme village, 7th April 2018


Three early-season plants in flower in the dunes

Spring Vetch, Holme NWT, 7th April 2018


Field Wood-rush, Holme NWT, 7th April 2018


Hairy Bittercress, Holme NWT, 7th April 2018


Off Patch: Some early-season beetles and bugs

Tawny Cockroach, Ectobius pallidus, Wangford Warren, 31st March 2018


Minotaur Beetle, Dersingham Bog, 30th March 2018



Platynaspis luteorubra, Cranwich Camp, 31st March 2018



Heath Shieldbug, Legnotus picipes, Heacham South Beach, 9th April 2018


Cassida prasina, Cranwich Camp, 30th March 2018



Chrysolina haemoptera, Heacham South Beach, 9th April 2018


A Black Redstart in Hunstanton

Black Redstart, Hunstanton, 2nd April 2018