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S10 WRM

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  1. Firecrest has a white supercilium (eyebrow stripe). Still quite sparsely distributed in the UK - common in New Forest (mostly Bolderwood), Forest of Dean - but like all birds it can fly and could turn up anywhere. I 've seen them on Berry Head near Brixham and at Upton Warren in Worcestershire.
  2. Used to know a bloke who had a pin and ink tatoo done by his brother right across his back. When working with his shirt off people could read "Elvis Pressley was the knig". I once suggested "Sting is a wnaker" but he didn't get it.
  3. The first thing people think about is obviously "I've got a potentially fatal respiratory infection so I'll have a shit"
  4. I'd say white poplar as well because of the diamond patterns
  5. Oak apple gall wasp | The Wildlife Trusts WWW.WILDLIFETRUSTS.ORG Living up to its name, the oak apple gall wasp produces growths, or 'galls', on oak twigs that look like little apples...
  6. It doesn't look like beaver gnawing around an existing hole, looks more like rabbit or grey squirrel
  7. Marbled newts are fantastically beautiful. There are a few sites in the UK where they have been introduced (popular with pet keepers) Yellow-bellied toads display their marking to advertise their toxicity. Found in ditches and puddles in Transylvania but classed as rare throughout Europe. Spectacular species I admit to getting the 4-spotted chaser wrong I'd forgotten the broad-bodied chaser is common at this time of year
  8. First batch 1) meadow brown 2) Swallowtail species 3) bee winged hawkmoth 4) poplar hawkmoth 6) black-veined white Second batch 2) crab spider species 4) 4-spotted chaser 7) midwife, fire-bellied or yellow bellied toad (need to see the underside to id properly) I gather you live in Europe, probably France as they aren't all UK species
  9. I worked at Worcestershire Wildlife Trust and started him off with slow-worm research

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