Tachina fera
Which sounds like an exotic alcoholic drink, but is actually the name of this very ugly fly.
It wasn't good bug weather today - it was cloudy and dark for the most part, and the wind that's currently coming our way from eastern Europe was bitter. So I decided to put my plan to go to a nature reserve on hold and stay at home: it was just as horrid out in the garden, but at least I was never more than 100m away from a fresh cup of tea.
I spent a while standing by our large viburnum, which has come into flower even though the leaves haven't yet dropped, and the scent of which is almost overpowering; surely, I thought, if there's anything about, it will be attracted to this. But I think it must be one of those meals that smells better than it tastes - a Small Tortoiseshell sampled it (though too far away for me to photograph) but then left, and a couple of hovers zoomed in and just as quickly out again.
Eventually I found a couple of Twin-Spot Centurions down in the wild garden - both female, and rather elegant, I think. No-one seems to know very much about them; the larvae grow in manure and such, but what, if anything, the adults do other than breed seems to be a mystery - they mostly appear to stand around on leaves like this, looking enigmatic.
Then, back at the viburnum I found an Eristalis tenax hoverfly, sitting on a leaf having a wash. They're about the size of a honey bee, and make a very similar noise, so it's easy to confuse them with a bee - but I blipped one a couple of weeks ago so I recognised it straight away. It wasn't very well-positioned, but I took a few shots before it flew away.
And that seemed to be it, apart from the usual range of flies - but my growing interest in insects and spiders doesn't yet extend to flies. Or so I thought.... but then I spotted this monster on a vine leaf, and was simultaneously repulsed and fascinated. I've got a nerve submitting it for Tiny Tuesday really, because it was huge - maybe 12mm long - so I'll have to hope Jen is feeling generous. Apparently they're quite common, but I've never seen one before - and from R's reaction to the photos, neither has he. The adult flies feed on nectar, but the larvae are parasitic, especially on the caterpillars of some moths. I like moths, so Tachina fera goes down as a Bad Thing in my book - but even if I'd known about its nasty habits when I was taking the photo, I doubt I'd have been able to kill it. Partly because killing anything really isn't my bag, and partly because it was too scary - and when I startled it, too quick.
As we're in "Eeeeuurgh" territory, I can't resist giving you as an extra something which is fonder of flies than I am. My Photo Scout called to me that if I was quick I might get some shots of a garden spider wrapping up a fly in the web outside his study window - but by the time I got there the wrapping had happened, and the spider was hauling its catch away to its nest, while simultaneously appearing to be breaking and reconstructing the web. Fascinating - and it looks to me as though lunch was a flesh fly, so I'm not wasting any sympathy on it.
Thanks again to jensphotos for hosting Tiny Tuesday, which I believe she's planning to do for the rest of this month, after which I will be taking over for November. Today's entries can be found here - looking at some of them I think it might be a mystery week, in which case I've failed rather spectacularly!
Comments
Sign in or get an account to comment.