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David

Mature male broad bodied chaser, Stratford

Mature male broad bodied chaser, Stratford

Along with the several damselflies by the river at Stratford, there were two dragonflies, of different species. One was large, brown, and constantly on the move. It stayed too far out over the water to get a clear view, or any sort of picture. The other was more cooperative, spending time resting on a leaf. It was a broad bodied chaser, which is indeed one of the commoner dragonflies.

It was a mature male. Immature males and all females are yellow-brown.

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David

Plums rotting, Stratford

Plums rotting, Stratford

Ripe plums fallen from a tree, their skins in various stages of decoration from the fungi which are rotting them.

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David

Comma butterfly on meadowsweet flower, Stratfrod

Comma butterfly on meadowsweet flower, Stratford

Where vegetation grows wild on the banks of the Avon it’s normally good for lots of different insect types in summer, including butterflies. On one occasion, we even saw an exotic tropical butterfly there. Sadly, that will have been an escapee from the nearby butterfly farm. This year, in the summer without butterflies, all we could spot was this single comma, feeding on the waterside meadowsweet flowers.

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David

Cardoon flowers, Bancroft Gardens, Stratford

Cardoon flowers, Bancroft Gardens, Stratford

Bancroft Gardens, by the canal basin and the river in Stratford on Avon, is a municipal showcase. Cardoons are quite a feature, including these which were coming to the end of their flowering season by the path to the Tramway Bridge.

Cardoon flowers, Bancroft Gardens, Stratford
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David

Banded demoiselles, male, sharing a leaf, Stratford

Banded demoiselles, male, sharing a leaf, Stratford

Male demoiselles, brightly coloured damselflies, spend much of their time on sunny days resting on waterside leaves, displaying themselves. Should a second male come in to land close to where one is already resting, they both take to the air. There’s a brief skirmish, ending with the intruder finding its landing place a little distance away and the other settling back into its old position.

I don’t remember ever seeing two males settled so close as these before, both on the same leaf. Occasionally, one or other of them would take off, fly around for a brief time, then land again where it had previously been.

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David

Burdocks by the river, Stratford

Burdocks by the river, Stratford

Riverbank vegetation along the Avon once the most tightly regimented section through Stratford is left behind. Lots of burdocks. By August, the flowers have been fertilised, the seeds are beginning to ripen within their multi-hooked seed cases.

Burdocks by the river, Stratford