In which I take a photo every day that I'm 50, and post it here on this blog, with a bit of related blurb.
Showing posts with label ants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ants. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 July 2014

Day 229 - Down the Hatch

raging torrent

We had a deluge of rainfall this afternoon across the Midlands, and as it was still raining when I got home, I thought I'd check how the new drainage system was holding up.

The old system here took both foul waste and storm water to the septic tank, but apparently this is not the usual arrangement...so the plan was that the new system would deal specifically with foul waste, whilst the old system would continue to carry off storm water.

I'd raised several concerns regarding the old system, as it seems likely that they've dug through pipes here and there; they've only vaguely connected the downpipes to it in the loosest of senses; and they've filled in one inspection chamber, thereby (presumably) blocking off the system beyond that.

Whereas the estate agents are desperately trying to see the positive side, those of us closer to the action are highly sceptical over whether the storm water system will work at all.  

As it hasn't rained for a while, we just don't know.

Yesterday the owner and the estate agent came for a look at the work that had been done, and to assess the extent of required remedial work.  

It quickly became clear that whether or not the storm water system works isn't the only thing we don't know.  It seems that nobody really knows what's been routed where, which pipes are still intact, and which ones are theoretically still in use.

The plan is for the agents to contact the contractors and get some detailed schematics for what's been put in place.  

Again, to those of us observing the work as it happened, this is a laughable notion.  They only had the vaguest of plans, which was incomplete, and which they didn't even vaguely follow.  To all intents and purposes, they were just making it up as they went along. 

So there's no way the contractor's manager is going to have any idea what his men did.  The only guy who could probably say is the eastern European guy, who seems to barely speak English, and in fact barely talks to anyone at all.  He completely blanked his manager when I saw him being given some instructions (which he took little or no notice of).

Anyway it had yacked it down ('scuse the jargon) here this afternoon, and was still raining early evening, so I pulled up the inspection hatch in the lawn to see what the flow was like, as I'd promised the agent I would. 

As you can see, there is no flow!

The pipe coming from the bottom centre leads back directly to the now filled in next chamber along, so there's no real surprise that there's only the faintest trickle from that direction. 

Slightly worrying, as it should be carrying storm water for 75% of the roofing of the 2 cottages.

The smaller pipe coming from the right covers the West facing half of our house...and is completely dry.

There must have been some storm water fed into the system from the rooftops, but where it's all gone is a mystery!

At this point, I'm pretty much expecting our house to up and float away during the next heavy rainfall season. 

Anyway, the good news is that there was a busy little ants nest in the top of the inspection chamber, teeming with activity.


free range eggs

You can barely see any ants in this photo, but the little white grains of rice are tiny eggs, attended to by an army of scurrying carers...

I'm still claiming it as another animal for my blog photo collection.

I know I've had ants before, but they were a different species.  I'm not sure what this one is, but the eggs are much paler and smaller, and of course it's a couple of months later in the year, yet they're at more or less the same stage.

Anyway, sorry to have disturbed you, little colony...at least you have a nice dry home in all this rain!

;-)

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Day 179 - Unfulfilled Potential

fish plant, plant fish

There are a lot of animals in today's photo...it's just that you can't see any of them very well.

Mind you, that possibly makes it sound more exciting than it is...it's merely six or ten goldfish, lurking in the muddy depths of the fish pond in the courtyard at work.  If you look closely, you can just about make out one or two of them...the pond is absolutely teeming with them, and some of them are quite big. 

But, erm, yep, that's about all I have to say about fish...ooh no, wait a minute, this is another animal for my collection of animal photo's...so I did have something else to say!

But now, that's all I have to say about fish...wait a sec'...no...no...yep, that's definitely all I have to say. 

Still, that's not the end of the story, fear not!

Continuing a theme of potential photo opportunities wherein I fail to get any decent photo's at all, check out this little ant:

extravag-ant accessory

He's carrying a large section of beetle carapace, which is how I came to spot him as we were walking up the lane...impressive!

Unfortunately, the light wasn't great, and I had completely the wrong lens on, of course...I had the 55-300mm zoom, which won't focus nearer than about 3ft...I couldn't hold the camera steady, crouched down uncomfortably as I was....and I certainly wasn't going to lie down on the road to get to eye level.   

The net effect of all of which is, of course, this fairly pathetic image of a cool little red ant, lugging a lump of beetle. 

Sorry 'bout that, must try harder!

:-/

Saturday, 31 May 2014

Day 168 - Wild Boar Chase

brown sheep of the family

We went looking for the boar today, with mixed success...

The day was grey and overcast for the most part, despite the optimistic forecast from the BBC...but as the afternoon waned, the sun came out and it warmed up nicely.

We wandered off down the lane, camera in tow, to see what we could see.

Almost immediately, I spied a brown or grey animal sheltering under the hedgerow, in a field full of otherwise bright white sheep. 

Fortunately I had the zoom lens with me, as they were a long way away, two fields over, and my deteriorating eyesight could only make out a blurry shape.

The photo clearly shows it was just a sheep (also, nice bokeh).

(after this photo, the camera decided it had no battery left, so I changed to my phone...when I rechecked upon arriving home, the camera battery was 94% full...doh!!)

Further down the lane and across the fields, we came across another set of tracks, coming from more or less the same place as yesterday, but heading off in a different direction.

There seemed to be two sets of tracks at some points, one set much smaller than the large.

Here are more of the larger footprints;



As you can see, compared to Anna's tanned hand, this is fairly large.



This lighter is 8cm long, and is about the same length as the fore hoof.  The spur indentations are another couple of cm to the right.

We're estimating that this print belongs to a large male.   For reference, a male boar would typically weigh somewhere between 100 and 175kg...I'm less than 90kg, and Anna's around 50kg, so it's two or three times the size of her, and maybe twice the size of me...this thing could be huge!

The track ran out when it reached the road, although we did find a potential day nest in the ditch under the hedgerow...

On the way back I stopped to grab a better snap of one of these beautiful red trees, over next door's gate.


ornamental hawthorne

The whole of the verge is riddled with ants nests and mole tunnels (must try to get a shot of a mole, we have loads in the garden and round about, at the moment), making mowing harder work than usual...and when mowing this morning, I inadvertently chopped the top off a busy ants nest...oops!

I had exposed a lot of eggs, causing quite a stir amongst the ant colony, and was still feeling guilty about it.


no eggscuse

This was the best of a poor bunch of photo's I took with the decent camera just after the offence was committed.

Using the viewfinder would have meant lying with my legs sticking out into the road and my face in uncomfortably close proximity to a seething mass of angry red ants!   So I just guessed, and took a few hopeful shots.

Checking back this afternoon, as we returned from our walk, they'd got most of the eggs back underground...phew!

As we got back into our garden, there was a hen pheasant hanging around, and I got a few poor shots on my phone.  


meep meep

I can't believe I was this close, with the decent camera around my neck, and the zoom lens on, and I used my phone to take the shots, thinking the good one was out of juice...argh!

Oh well, lesson learned!

More on the developing boar incident as we have it...

:-)