I can spend hours here in the hides looking out at The Scrape, The Levels up in the Tree Canopy or Bittern Hide or just walking on the seashore, we have to be so lucky to have this in our county. On the numerous visits I have made to here I have never been disappointed.
You can sometimes see and here the very rare Bittern, watch Marsh Harriers either soaring or finding their prey, the Avocets with their upturned bills and graceful lines and among these beds The Bearded Tit family plus so much more
No.1 Agapanthia Villosoviridescens, a quite rare beetle in Britian. No.2 Lily Beetle, quite a pest No.3 Cardinal beetle, very fond of eating each other when food is short. No.4 Lesser Stag Beetle.
Some more wild things for you, wildflowers this time.
No.1 A field of Poppies on the way down to Levington Marina. No.2 A lonely Cornflower at Levington No.3 The common Bird Cherry. No.4 Black Bryony. No.5 Brooklime No.6 Hawks Bit or as some people call it Fox & Cubs.
No.1 C0ckchafers showing an interest in each other. They are also known as the June Bug. No.2 It worked, C0ckchafers mating. No.3 Deraeocoris Ruber No.4 Leptura Rubra (Female) No.5 Leptura Rubra (Male) No.6 Sexton Beetle