September 21, 1789
Myriads of Insects sporting in the sunbeams.
Myriads of Insects sporting in the sunbeams.
No mushrooms in the pastures below Buarrant-hangers. Here & there a wasp. The furze-seed which Bro. Tho. sowed last may on the naked part of the hanger comes up well. Some raspberry-trees in the bushes on the common. Trees keep their verdure well.
Began to light fires in the parlors. Some young martins in a nest at the end of the brew-house. Small uncrested wrens, chif-chaffs, are seen in the garden.
Timothy the tortoise is very dull, & inactive, & spends his time on the border under the fruit-wall.
The hops at Kimbers grow dingy & lose their colour. T.H.W. left us, & went to Fyfield.
After a bright night, & vast dew, the sky usually becomes clouded by eleven or twelve o’clock in the forenoon; & clear again towards the decline of the day. The reason seems to be, that the dew, drawn-up by evaporation, occasions the clouds, which towards evening, being no longer rendered buoyant by the warmth of the sun, melt away, & fall down again in dews. If clouds are watched of a still, warm evening, they will be seen to melt away, & disappear. Several nests of gold-finches, with fledged young, were found among the vines of the hops: these nestlings must be second broods.
Some wheat is out. Trimming has a large field not cut. Gentiana Amarella, autumnal gentian, or fell-wort, buds for bloom on the hill. Sent 12 plants of Ophrys spiralis to Mr Curtis of Lambeth marsh.
Ophrys spiralis, ladies traces, in bloom the long Lythe, & on top of the short Lythe. Wasps seize on butter-flies, &, shearing off their wings, carry their bodies home as food for their young: they prey much on flies.
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