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Spring is sprung - butterflies are out


Phil Bullock
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  • 3 weeks later...

it's getting near the end of the season for butterflies but there are still some to be seen. Yesterday we went off to Broughton Down hoping for same late silver-spotted skippers and some second brood adonis blues. No skippers were seen but three or four adonis blues were about.

 

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If you can get them at the right angle with the sun out the blue is stunning.

 

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Also saw a lot of common blues, brown argus and small heaths. Found one of the latter species perched nicely and backlit...

 

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Sue spotted this red-legged partridge five feet away from us.

 

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A very obliging bird.

 

Chaz

 

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Spring is long gone but this month offers a last chance to see those little gems - small coppers. They have a third flight period in September and, as I have had little luck finding them this year, I set off today to Old Winchester Hill with my fingers crossed.

 

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They really are quite small and the ones I found perched on the bare chalk path were hard to get near being easily spooked.

 

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The ones busy taking nectar from flowers were easier to get closer to.

 

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Chaz

Edited by chaz
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  • 2 weeks later...

The butterfly season draws to a close. This week is the last transect week of the year and yesterday was the warmest, sunniest day so I went up to Magdalen Hill Down to do my duty. very few butterflies were showing but I did find small coppers and one common blue in surprisingly good condition, a few others I saw were very tatty.

 

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Below, two shots of the same small copper.

 

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Chaz

 

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The butterfly season draws to a close. This week is the last transect week of the year and yesterday was the warmest, sunniest day so I went up to Magdalen Hill Down to do my duty. very few butterflies were showing but I did find small coppers and one common blue in surprisingly good condition, a few others I saw were very tatty.

 

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Below, two shots of the same small copper.

 

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Chaz

 

Forgive my ignorance but what is the last transect week and what happens to Butterflies during the winter?  This is the first year I've really taken notice of things flying around my garden and got to say it's fascinating. I'm planning stuff to plant next year to help the little creatures. 

Steve.

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Forgive my ignorance but what is the last transect week and what happens to Butterflies during the winter?  This is the first year I've really taken notice of things flying around my garden and got to say it's fascinating. I'm planning stuff to plant next year to help the little creatures. 

Steve.

 

 

Transects are butterfly counts. A fixed route is walked (usually on a reserve) and numbers of all species seen are recorded. The results can be compared year by year and trends noted. This week is the last week for transects in Hampshire. There isn't much point in carrying on longer as numbers seen will tail off fast. 

I did two transects yesterday and saw less than a dozen butterflies in about two hours.

 

What happens to butterflies in the winter varies from species to species. Some overwinter as adults - for example the comma disguises itself as a dead leaf and hibernates on top of logs and branches. Many species overwinter as a chrysalis (cocoon). The small copper is an example of a butterfly that overwinters as a caterpillar. The chalkhill blue survives the winter as an egg. Painted ladies can't survive our winters and migrate south to warmer conditions. 

 

HTH

 

Chaz

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Thanks Chaz, I've learnt something there.  :)

Steve.

 

 

Happy to oblige. 

 

Should you get to the point where you want to get a field guide I recommend Richard Lewington's "Pocket Guide to the Butterflies of Great Britain and Ireland". For each species (we have 59) it has a double page spread with several life-size illustrations (male and female, top and underside), pictures of eggs, caterpillars and chrysalis, a distribution map, a calendar showing how the life cycle goes in a year and some detailed notes. All for around a tenner. 

 

Chaz

Edited by chaz
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Hummingbird hawk-moth feeding on the window boxes of the Olde Ship Inn in Seahouses this morning, not brilliant photos as I only had little compact camera with me.

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Nice photo's, we got one in my Girlfriends garden earlier in the year, it never stayed still enough to get a good photo! Fascinating to watch though as I never knew they existed up until then.

Steve.

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The season is definitely drawing to a close but a very warm day yesterday prompted me to make another trip to Old Winchester Hill. I spent an hour and a half spent walking around the site of the iron-age fort and I saw only a red admiral and two very distant small butterflies fluttering together on the steep bank. I was on the point of leaving when I came across two small coppers close to the path (possibly the two small insects that I had seen earlier).

 

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Low, early evening sun making for a very photogenic light.

 

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Damage to the left upper wing shows this to be a different insect.

 

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I couldn't resist this view across the reserve as the balloon appeared.

 

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And having taken a few more butterfly snaps I noticed a second balloon had joined the first (launched from not far away?).

 

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Chaz

Edited by chaz
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Just caught up to date with this thread today and thought 'ah no Hummingbird HM this year ' , went out into the back garden and low and behold, there's one on the Valarian !

And on possibly the last warm day of the year too.

Its been a bit strange as despite the long hot bits, poorish year. Only 5 Torts on the Buddlea at one time. Worst ever. 23 a few years back. 9 last year and I thought that was bad.

One from august.

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Edited by Co-tr-Paul
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  • 2 months later...
  • 2 months later...
  • RMweb Gold
20 minutes ago, Downendian said:

Well do I win a prize? First RMweb 2019 sighting of a new brood male Brimstone  seen about 15 minutes ago on the wing in Bristol. A balmy 15-16C here.

Neil 

 

No. I saw a butterfly on Thursday afternoon. But it went past the window too quickly for me to identify it.

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  • RMweb Gold

Any advance on Thursday lunch time for a female brimstone in Churchdown? I was off work with laryngitis, the sight of her outside the lounge window certainly brightened the day

 

Phil

 

 

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