Thursday, 11 June 2026

A Biological Multitool in the Strawberry Patch

A recent study has described the Migrant Hover Fly Eupeodes corollae (Fr. Syrphe des corolles) as a flying 'multitool', which offers pollination, can act as a vector for beneficial microbes, and is a biological control for grey mould disease in strawberries. Wow! Plus their larvae eat aphids!

 

 Female Migrant Hover Fly.

Female Migrant Hover Fly Eupeodes corollae, France.

Scientists in Sweden used the hover flies to carry the yeast Metschnikowia fruiticola between strawberry flowers in greenhouses so it would attack the grey mould Botrytis cinerea. At the same time the hover flies pollinated the strawberry flowers. The flowers pollinated by the hover flies produce better quality fruit that is bigger and a more symmetrical consumer pleasing shape. Their results showed that the hover fly activity on the flowers significantly reduced grey mould on the strawberry fruit once harvested and in cold storage. This occured even without the yeast biological control, but was even more pronounced when the yeast was present.

This species is native to Europe, North Africa and Asia, and quite abundant. With the presence of active adults and larvae you can practice interated pest control in your own garden, and enjoy these little natural gems. 

 

 Mating Migrant Hover Flies in our garden.

Mating Migrant Hover flies Eupeodes corollae, France.

The Migrant Hover Fly is, as the English name suggests, a migratory species and one of the two most abundant species of hover fly in Europe. Some years there will be massive numbers crossing the Channel from France to Britain. The adults are about 11 mm long, with yellow comma shaped marks on their abdomens.


Further reading: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10340-025-01971-6


2026 Holiday Day 8

Yesterday we took ourselves in to Hamburg by train and then caught a couple of ferries. We didn't walk far, Susan's leg is still a problem.





Wednesday, 10 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 7

Fritzlar to Hamburg

Yesterday was a day of travel. Not many pictures because we got confused in Hamelin, and just as well. We spent an extra hour in traffic at 15 kmh on the Autobahn.

I'm not sure he needed that trailer for that load

Distance covered 410km
Cumulative total 1591km@ 55km/h

Tuesday, 9 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 6

Fritzlar.

We're in Fritzlar because it's where my paternal grandmother's family came from before moving to London in the late 1890s.

We met up with Stefanie, the town historian and director of the town museum, whose office is the the building in which my great grandfather was born. She showed us both that building and the town museum, even though the museum is closed on Monday.

Stefanie was incredibly generous with her time, and we have to thank my cousin Linda for arranging it.

The house in which my great grandfather was born 

Susan and Stefanie

Fritzlar Cathedral. The tower on the right collapsed during a thunderstorm in 1868 killing 21 people.
One of the dead was my great-great-grandmother 

Susan and Stefanie spent a lot of time talking about how you deal with uncomfortable local history.

The answer to yesterday's question. I was looking out of the window in our apartment circled in red,


Monday, 8 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 5

Aachen to Fritzlar via Cologne.


Currywurst for lunch, eaten standing up in Cologne Station

As it was a Sunday all the big trucks were parked 

Fritzlar: the view from here to there

...and the view from there to here.

Can you work out where our accommodation for two nights is?

Distance covered 281km
Cumulative total 1181km@ 54km/h

Sunday, 7 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 4

Aachen and it's treasures.

The cathedral. The domed part is Carolingian 

That's handy. A larger than life reliquary 

Aachen town hall

The inside of the Carolingian dome

Added bonus: goth samba


The car stayed at the hotel, and we caught the bus.

Saturday, 6 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 3

Yesterday was a relocation day, not far, just from Tervuren to Aachen. As it's only 111km as the crow flies I thought we'd take the opportunity to get lost and see some interesting things we didn't have plans to see. We managed the first part of the equation, including 2½ turns around Maastricht, with the added bonus of an excursion into the forbidden zone. Oops.

The second part wasn't as spectacular as we had hoped. Hey ho.

We're now in Aachen for two nights. Today our plan is to get seriously early mediaeval.

Life on the road. We picnicked by the autoroute.


Distance travelled 169km

Cumulative total 907km@ 53km/h