As if to prove the wisdom of my last post, a speckled wood came sunbathing on the garden furniture on Sunday but departed again without showing any interest in the buddleia.
Speckled Wood |
The same could not be said of the small tortoiseshells, who increased in number as a not especially warm day went on. At one point I counted nine in total on the three buddleia bushes in the back.
Small Tortoiseshells |
Apart from (mainly large) whites, only one red admiral showed up.
The day after I set off for planned staycation in Lincolnshire, Apart from a much-needed change of scenery, I was hoping to find some butterfly and bird species not available on my home patch.
The plan got off to a good start when I rode along the track into Southrey Woods in a heatwave and quickly noticed some brimstone butterflies nectaring on blue flowers that looked like snall cornflowers. At first I thought they were the pale version of the drimstone but his may have been down to the brightness of the sunlight. There were about 20 seen in the total time I was there.
Brimstone |
There also a good piece of fortune when a single silver-wsshed fritillary started to fly around at speed near where I was having lunch. Unfortunately it never settled and an attempt to video it in flight didn't come off. Although I had seen brimstones near my grandparents' house as a kid, that was definitely my first UK silver-washed fritillary sighting, Also observed were a good number of green-veined whites, small tortoiseshells and red admirals - and this time a couple were feeding near to a peacock - a few small white and a single comma.
There was also a very large fly that looked like a hornet with a yellow hood but I think from facebook posts of similar sightings in Dumfries and Galloway, it is some form of horsefly.
All around the drains there are common darters and I managed to get a photo of one that settled at Southrey.
Common Darter |
Things went less well later and on the following day when I was looking for two sites that are known to have the brown hairstreak as I couldn't find either of them! Apart from a lack of signposting, in one case it was down to a major navigational error on my part.
After seeking creature comforts in Bardney, I decided to ride back very slowly along the Witham with my eyes open and was frankly dissappointed by how little I saw, A couple of whites, a few swallows and very little else. It was a bit like the Canal du Midi two years ago.
One minor positive was that I managed to catch an example of the larger dragonflies that crazily landed in a hawthorn bush. It's a southern hawker.
Southern Hawker |
I'm pleased with this from a photographic point of view, shot from six metres away in dense foliage.
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