It's not often that one goes out and sees three species of blue butterfly in Norfolk at the same place on the same day, but I've managed it a couple of times recently. It's been an extraordinary year for common blues, plenty of them about and all the more amazing given they had such a dire time last year. Holly blues are much more scarce, but still appearing in ones or twos. The revelation of 2013 has to be the chalkhill blues, so exquisite and I love the way they perch up and pose. The males are fabulously combative, chasing each other up into the air in fast and tight spirals before breaking off and dropping back down to bask or nectar again.
Friday, 30 August 2013
Tuesday, 13 August 2013
One Swallowtail Larva Doesn't Make A Summer...
To Hickling today, and the chance - perhaps - of a swallowtail sighting. This year's first brood was very late and so the second brood will presumably be correspondingly later, or possibly non-existent. A coolish and breezy day offered only random glimpses of sunshine, which sufficed for the 100+ peacocks and accompanying red admirals, commas, painted ladies et al, and had tempted out a swallowtail earlier in the day, apparently. Alas, not while I was there, but some compensation came in the form of several swallowtail caterpillars, one of which was well advanced and looking good to go:
Hope for a second swallowtail brood? Indian summer required! Painted lady sitting pretty, meanwhile.
Sunday, 11 August 2013
The ButtFest continues!
The incredible summer for butterflies goes on, with fantastic numbers of all the common species and a few rarer ones thrown in for good measure. Peacocks have been especially abundant: 14 seen on the hemp agrimony along our drive by ace spotter Clare HV (her pic below), along with commas, small torts and a few red ads (the latter not having a particularly good season, apparently). Plus, clouded yellows have been zooming about, presumably taking advantage of the southerly winds to move up from their HQ in southern Europe. Sue P saw and photographed two separate individuals at Drymere/Cockley Cley last week and I finally caught up with one at Montgomery on Thursday - my first in the UK for over ten years! I obviously haven't been trying hard enough....
Peacock frenzy in Oxborough
My rather weedy shot of the clouded yellow in Wales
Sue P's much more impressive effort!
Saturday, 3 August 2013
A White Letter Day
A tip-off from Clive saw me down at Cranwich Camp on the prowl for white-letter hairstreaks, which he'd seen busy feasting on golden rod the day before. There were butterflies everywhere, hordes of ringlets, meadow browns, gatekeepers and 13 of the white letter beauties, so engrossed in nectaring that they allowed the closest of approaches. Although some were looking a bit tatty and nearing the end of the days, at least two looked very pristine - surely this is very late in their season for recent emergents? Also common blue and a stunning brown argus there. However, the real excitement came on the big buddleia bush nearby which, when I arrived, was covered in peacocks, brimstones, whites, a painted lady, couple of commas.... and then another butterfly appeared fast and furious, charging around the top of the bush, chasing away other butterflies and then perching usually out of sight. Finally got my bins on it though - a grayling!! Managed a rather poor pic, but evidence nonetheless that this species still hangs on there. What it was doing high up on a buddleia is anyone's guess (apart from the obvious, of course).
Fuzzy, but a grayling all the same!!
Wednesday, 24 July 2013
Recent Doings
Yup, it's round-up time, selection below of pics from latest expeditions!
The green-eyed monster... Norfolk Hawker @Strumpshaw Fen
Marsh helleborine @Foulden Common, new to me there but
probably just hadn't looked in the right place before...
Brown Hawker just emerged from its nymph case and drying off
Emerald Damselfly @Strumpshaw Fen
Male Orange-tip on scabious
Female Broad-bodied Chaser
Surely among the top events of the summer so far: one of the many
Broad-bordered Bee Hawkmoths seen along Breckland rides
Another Breckland highlight: male Clouded Buff
Breckland pines at Cockley Cley
Grass snake on the move, tongue out! @Lakenheath Fen
Cockley Cley Lake
Marsh Orchid and BFT @Gun Hill
Sea Bindweed @Gun Hill
Purple Hairstreak giving us the eye @Marmansgrave Wood
(no Breckland Birthwort though!)
One of three Drymere White Admirals seen on one morning
White Ad catching rays
Sunset sheep on Foulden Common
Thistles on Foulden Common, fantastic display this year
Fragrant Orchid @Foulden Common: a bumper year,
with over 20 spikes, a recent record?
Wednesday, 17 July 2013
At The Court of His Majesty
So, finally this week I get the royal summons and it's off to the Kingdom of Fermyn Bois for a date with the Emperor, accompanied by Count Clive de Magdalen. It was hot and sunny, just how it was the last - and only - time I was granted the royal audience, in 1982 at Alice Holt Wood in Hampshire. On that day I wandered innocently (not having any idea that the Emperor was in residence there) from the car park down a nearby drive and there he was, His Majesty, resting on the ground, wings out and glinting. A quick shake and he was off, powering over my head and up to the treetops. And that was it for the day.
Thirty-one years later and I had high hopes of my new audience. The omens were good as we walked into the wood through fields and along hedgerows, with clouds of ringlets and meadow browns, small skippers, gatekeepers and burnet moths nectaring on wild privet. A couple of white-letter hairstreak false alarms (ahem, again) - they must be there, as there was a lots of sucker elm - and then we were into the wood....
First up, a speckled wood. Nice but not quite what we were after. And a tad tatty to boot. But always worth remembering that a decent supporting cast always makes The Star shine brighter.
The rides were busy, with as many large skippers as I can remember seeing anywhere, shooting around and perching up nicely...
A lot of the butterflies were moving up off the low herbage and exploring the tree canopy, so there were flying beasts at every level, including brown hawkers busy chasing some of the smaller butts.
Suddenly we saw a large black-and-white butterfly whizzing around in a glade, first thoughts being white admiral but oh no, much too large. But then gone.
Not to fear. A few metres on, His Majesty made a much more gracious showing, hammering past and then settling nearby to show his fabulous underwing. Anxious not to spoil or overexcite, he refused to give us a flash of his purple robes, however.
The Royal Way at Fermyn Bois
The royal presence now firmly established, we walked towards the main processional ride where surely the chief audience would take place. Suddenly there He was, several incarnations in fact, including one almost trodden on by Count Clive (surely a capital offence). Everything I'd ever heard about the imperial predilection for foul liquids and excrement is all true, with The Majesty descending on to the path to partake of fish sauce - put down as bait - and merrily decomposing horse manure. A close but cautious approach was allowed, and at one point three Emperors supped together, with a Comma acting as diminutive court page.
It was so hot that the Majesty kept his wings tightly closed for most of the time, only flicking them open for a fleeting second at a time. However, by craftily shading The Presence, he was lulled into showing his full splendour and it was then that there was a chance of catching the iridescence. Only one wing at a time it seems, but one is grateful for any royal dispensation...
In total we saw as many as 40 Imperial Highnesses, a remarkable number, although we were some way behind the NT's Matthew Oates, who was on 85 when we last saw him. With the exception of the first one we saw, which might have been a female, they were all males, which emerge first - the first one was seen on Thursday 11th July and it is proving to be a bumper year. Females should follow in the next few days. Fermyn was always a traditional sight for Emperors, but the small relict population which it is generally agreed survived there was boosted by introductions during the 1980s. If the conditions are right, and you're there at the right time of year, it is hard to imagine how one could go there and not see them. We got there at about 8.45am - terrifyingly early for me - and they were still on the wing when we left at 1.30pm, although in rapidly declining numbers: they move up into the canopy around lunchtime. Memorable moments: the bright lemon-yellow proboscis of HIM, and Count Clive's smelly trousers which proved irresistible....
As for the supporting cast, this included at least three silver-washed fritillaries and up to half a dozen white admirals, these of course usually stealing the show but NOT on this occasion! Another highlight was a beautiful drift of musk mallow, and nearby we also got distant views of up to four white-letter hairstreaks flitting around the top of an ash. A great day, and one of my most exciting butterfly experiences to date.
Tuesday, 4 June 2013
Back to the Common
Quick afternoon visit, breezy but warm sun and butterflies enjoying themselves: two brimstones, two orange tips, three each of small coppers and male common blues, a couple of grizzleds and a probable dingy.... Also several burnet companions and mother shiptons. Plenty of warblers singing, including sedge and garden, and a sulphur-hued yellowhammer. Still not heard a turtle dove purring this year though :-(
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