Posted by sydney on Jul 31st, 1775
Horses at plow so teized by flies as to be quite frantic. Horses are never tormenteed in that manner ’til after midsumr: the people say it is the nose-fly that distracts them so. I can discover only such flies as haunt the heads of horses: perhaps at this season they lay their eggs in the nose & ears. I never can discern any oestrus on those days, only swarms of small muscae.
Posted by sydney on Jul 30th, 1775
By this evenings post I am informed, by a Gent. who is just come from thence that the hops all round Canterbury have failed: there are many hundred acres not worth picking.
Posted by sydney on Jul 28th, 1775
Ten nests of wasps have been destroy’d just at hand: they abound & are ploughed up every day.
Posted by sydney on Jul 24th, 1775
Hops throw out good side shoots & blow. Some few hills have perfect hops. A sea-lark shot at Newton-pond
Posted by sydney on Jul 23rd, 1775
Birds are much influenced in their choice of food by colour: for tho’ white currans are a much sweeter fruit than red; yet they seldom touch the former ’til they have devoured every bunch of the latter. The male & female ants of the little yellow & little black sorts, leaving their nests, fill the air. The females seem big with eggs. They also run about on the turf, & seem in great agitation. The females wander away, & form new colonies when pregnant.
Posted by sydney on Jul 22nd, 1775
The swifts are so fledge before they quit the nest that they are not to be distinguished from their dams on the wing; yet from the encrease of their numbers, & from their unusual manner of clinging to walls & towers one may perceive that several are now out. And no wonder that they should begin to bestir themselves, since they will probably withdraw in a fortnight.
Posted by sydney on Jul 21st, 1775
Opened the crop of a swift, & found it filled with the wing-cases & legs &c. of small coleoptera. Hence it is plain the coleoptera soar high in the air.
Posted by sydney on Jul 19th, 1775
Five wasps nests destroyed this evening: two before.
Posted by sydney on Jul 17th, 1775
Some martins are buliding against Mr Yaldens’ windows. Young martins– perchers on the battlements of the tower, where the old ones feed them.
* The young martin becomes a flyer in about sixteen days from the egg: most little birds come into their maturity, or full growth, in about a fortnight: for were they to lie a long time in the nest in a helpless state, few would escape; some mischief or other would destroy the whole breed. The more forward pulli are out some days before the underlings of the same brood.
Posted by sydney on Jul 16th, 1775
Some of the forwardest birds of some broods of martins are out, the more backward remain in the nest.