Notes and Changes since last report
- It was 75°F, cloudy, breezy, and fairly humid at 2:00 PM on July 26, 2017.
- This week's trail report covers the Wappinger Creek Trail side of the trail system.
- Although it was a gray day, it was a warm day and butterflies were out, if a little slow.
- Special guest appearances were made by a juniper hairstreak and a visitor for whom this was a happy addition to their life list.
The Trails
- Right at Gifford trail head things were happening.
- Here common milkweed was done blooming and was forming seed pods.
- Taking over the role as most favored nectar source was wild bergamot.
- Next to it, pokeweed was flowering and wasting no time making berries.
- It's never a real popular nectar source, but what yarrow does attract is often very intersting, such as the juniper hairstreak. Our area's subspecies is the 'olive' juniper hairstreak.
- Great spangled fritillaries like the bergamot.
- A pearl crescent was on invasive spotted knapweed.
- This one displayed the little mark on the hindwing margin below that gives it its name.
- Many moths were flitting and hiding in the grasses including a Large Lace-border.
- Along the Sedge Meadow Trail, a red admiral was perched to check out passersby.
- In the Sedge Meadow proper, blue vervain was standing in the distance.
- Spotted touch-me-not, or jewelweed was within reach.
- In the back Old Hayfield, snowberry clearwing, a dayflying sphinx moth, was on the bergamot. Note the black stripe through the eye going back and down to the legs.
- Several times the Appalachian brown had eluded me this day.
- A very well worn northern broken-dash seemed to not have a scale left on it.
- A grape leaf was being chewed up by a pack of Japanese beetles.
- Along the back edge of the field, ironwood or hophornbeam was forming its hop-like fruit.
- Next to it, musclewood or American hornbeam was forming its peculiar fruit.
- A fresh looking female dun skipper was warming up. Spots are much smaller than those of the broken-dash.
- Then a hummingbird clearwing came through. Compare with the snowberry and note the red vs. black appointments and lack of eye stripe.
- Goldenrod bunch galls were obvious once they were noticed.
- The meadow fritillary is like a miniature great spangled fritillary - at least from above.
- On another yarrow, an ambush bug may have been waiting for that little bee to get closer.
- A fresher female northern broken-dash posed perfectly.
- In the Old Pasture, meadowsweet was blooming.
- Many small beetles were in there.
- The Wappinger creek trail was pretty dark today, but a red mushroom was hard to miss.
- So was a noisy young ovenbird.
- Next week: the Cary Pines Trail side of the trail system.
Mammals | Birds | Butterflies | Moth | Insects | Caterpillars | Arthropods | Fungus | Herp | Plants | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Turkey Vulture | 1 Spicebush Swallowtail | 4 Hummingbird Clearwing | 1 Meadowsweet | |||||||
4 Chimney Swift | 4 Cabbage White | 1 Large Lace-border | 1 Wild bergamot | |||||||
1 Ruby-throated Hummingbird | 1 Clouded Sulphur | 13 Snowberry Clearwing | ||||||||
2 Red-eyed Vireo | 1 'Olive' Juniper Hairstreak | |||||||||
1 Blue Jay | 1 Spring Azure | |||||||||
2 American Crow | 5 Great Spangled Fritillary | |||||||||
1 Tree Swallow | 1 Meadow Fritillary | |||||||||
1 Black-capped Chickadee | 6 Pearl Crescent | |||||||||
1 Wood Thrush | 1 Red Admiral | |||||||||
3 American Robin | 2 Northern Pearly-eye | |||||||||
3 Gray Catbird | 4 Appalachian Brown | |||||||||
1 Cedar Waxwing | 7 Common Wood-Nymph | |||||||||
3 Ovenbird | 7 Monarch | |||||||||
1 Common Yellowthroat | 9 Silver-spotted Skipper | |||||||||
1 Eastern Towhee | 7 Northern Broken-Dash | |||||||||
1 Song Sparrow | 10 Dun Skipper | |||||||||
1 American Goldfinch |