Return to The Irish Trader
- Darren McLoughlin
- Category: Guide
Since 1974 the outline of The Irish Trader, a coal transporting ship, has made an interesting focal point on the long sandy beach at Baltray County Louth on Ireland's Irish Sea coast.
I have written about previous visits to The Irish Trader shipwreck here.
I decided to revisit the old, rusting frame this month, July 2018, to see exactly what remains and what damage has been done in recent storms during autumn and winter 2017/2018.
Zigzag clouds in the morning - altocumulus undulatus above the west of Ireland.
Over the years I have photographed many types of clouds but this is one of the most interesting skies that I have trained my camera on.
Early morning in July on Galway Bay and the diving tower at Salthill saw the formation of this dramatic skyscape but it was not until we got to Lough Corrib with its calm waters reflecting the unusual clouds above that the scene looked so impressive as to make you stop and breathe it all in. A moment never to be repeated, unusual enough that in 20 years of photographing the Irish landscape I have never seen similar before.
Leafcutter Bees, Ireland
- Darren McLoughlin
- Category: Guide
Megachile is the scientific name for this species of bee, commonly found in Ireland.
This is a leafcutter bee, a solitary species that makes its nests in small sticks and holes in walls, sealed up with a portion of leaf that it has cut with its powerful jaws.
Above, collecting pollen from Erigeron flowers, below here it is seen resting on a calendula leaf amongst cultivated tomatoes with a cut leaf in its possession. I watched them flying in hot conditions with their cut leaves, a heavy ballast. They land on another plant and wait for about a minute, resting, before flying off again to seal up a hole not too far away.

Bees are important pollinators of plants and trees and it is always amazing to watch these industrious insects as they fly through the garden on their busy mission. I saw my first bee of 2018 back in January - alas Google Plus no longer exists.
Read more about Irish bees here: http://www.biodiversityireland.ie/projects/irish-pollinator-initiative/bees/solitary-bees/
Even the graveyards of Ireland are looking green, colourful and lush at this time of year.
Here an old gravestone has been broken, the dead cross section placed against the rest of the grave as long grass and wild flowers grow in the warm, dry summer.
Ireland is looking particularly colourful this summer as warm weather bathes the country in sunshine and heat.
The spring is colourful in Ireland, summer is also colourful as seen here with the pinks of rhododendron lining a path through the mountains.
A recent visit into the Irish mountains took me through large rhododendron groves, often over 12 feet in height and covering acres of upland.
The pinks of spring cherry blossom are gone, see here for more of those.
The pink flowers are very attractive and of course a source of food for bees but these invasive, non-native shrubs are taking over much of the Irish countryside unchecked.
In places it is difficult to find a way through these large thickets or groves, the impossibility of viewing anything in the distance means wayfinding is impossible.
Despite this the pink colour is nonetheless impressive alongside the green leaves and blue sky.
Join me on a photography tour of Ireland's mountains in summer or Dublin's parks in spring.

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