Firstly, an apology if you don’t like wasps. I promise this is the only photo you’ll see here. If you can bear to persevere and read the poem, you’ll see how I’ve shiften a little in my view of them, and I hope that might help.

Picture – Gedling conservation trust – Common wasp
Thank you for bearing with me as I took a bit of a break from writing here over the summer. I do hope to share more with you as the days shorten and outside is a little less enticing.
There are notes in my notebook, ready for some further sharpening of my pencil. One of the things that’s really struck me this year has been the absence of insects here in the UK. Wet and cold earlier in the year, while not newsworthy compared to other weather events, seems to have stricken many of our insects and affected those birds and bats who feed off them. I am pleased to see the garden lighting up with wings, late as it is, and that has lifted my spirits. It’s been a strange, unsettling time, though, looking at the flowers that normally draw bees and butterflies, and finding them empty. I’ve wondered when to cut the meadows down, and left it late, so the last flowers might provide something for these missing friends.

Earlier in the year. A feast spread, but where are the guests?
The Butterfly Conservation trust have just published the results of their Citizen Science Survey, and found that the numbers are very low this year. You can read more about that here.
It’s also been strange to enjoy picnics without being troubled by wasps. I have been suprised to find I miss them, and worry about how they’re doing.
And so this morning, I saw a wasp. One of so few this year. And I wrote this.
Wasp
This morning, eating breakfast, slow,
I heard a buzz and a tap against
the light-streaming windows.
Buzz and tap, buzz and tap.
I turned, saw a wasp on the window,
and felt joy rising, and knew how
strange it was to feel that joy
at the sight of her –
joy, and compassion, too,
as she bumped and bumped
against our shining window.
Oh, hello, I whispered,
Don’t be afraid,
you’ll be out in no time!
And, glass and paper in hand,
I released her. She lingered
a moment on the rim,
gently waving her stinger
up and down, then spread wings,
flew into the clear September
light, bright with late flowers.
And I laughed. Years ago,
I would have flapped her away,
swatted her even, afraid.
And here I was, whispering to a wasp.
Years ago, there would have been
hundreds.
Not this one solitary marvel,
striped, miniature perfection,
buzzing and beautiful,
in search now of the
sweetness of a fallen apple,
the ivy thick with bees.
Precious, so precious.
Late as it is, I am learning
how precious life is.
Edit: 11th November 2025
I was sent this film of the poem by Joseph Davidson. Do watch it, it’s very good.
Thank you for the Wasp. We have seen so few this summer, few bees, few butterflies, few insects. So concerned about our natural friends. Would never kill a wasp or any of the others – so valuable. Where will we end up when they are all gone – and some people still kill them. Learn to love them, they are precious.
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You have summed up my feelings here so well Andrea. I used to question the point of the existence of wasps. Now I am appreciating their worth and saddened by their absence. So many precious insects disappearing, which may lead to a similar fate for creatures further up the food chain, which in turn poses the question, ‘how will the absence of wasps affect us?’
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