Monday, August 31, 2020

Pamber Forest

The final butterfly trip of my annual leave, and another mature woodland: Pamber Forest

It really was a lovely day, with a decent amount of sunshine, but we saw very few butterflies.


Even though the speckled woods were still going strong, it really feels like the end of butterfly season .... (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).

Saturday, August 29, 2020

Kingley Vale

Our annual leave butterfly trips are nearing the end. Kingley Vale today.

Lovely walk through mostly mature forest. Many meadow browns on the more open pastures, and many speckled woods in the more closed forest. The woodland looks like it would be good for species like white admiral and purple hairstreak, but that's for next year maybe.

Not butterfly-related, but the gnarly ancient yew trees are just fantastic ...

The more open parts also look like they will have a good selection of grassland butterflies (blues, etc), but very few plants were still flowering, so, again, that's for a future visit.


The customary list of the butterfly species we saw (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).

Friday, August 28, 2020

Pennsylvania butterflies

Why a blog post on butterflies in Pennsylvania, given I live an Atlantic Ocean away from there? Here's the story ...

A very dear friend of mine lives on a farm in Pennsylvania. A keen gardener, she maintains extensive gardens on her grounds. We're in frequent contact via WhatsApp and email and of course I told her about my new love for butterflies. It didn't take long for her to get hooked, and soon pictures of butterflies she saw in her garden came my way ...

For instance, monarchs are very common in her garden ...

She has four species of swallowtails (jealous!!); this is an eastern tiger swallowtail ...

And plenty more! This is a variegated fritillary ...


I could go on, but I won't; you get the picture!

Her bullmastiff Jaimie is also very mindful of butterflies. As she told me, "He’s gotten so good at knowing when to stop and wait and not spook one nectaring that I’m looking at. I just say wait and he hangs back!"


Given that I was getting more and more pictures of the butterflies in her gardens, sometimes asking me what I thought the species was, I really needed a good field guide. She had already gotten a copy of this Butterflies of Pennsylvania and thought it was excellent. So I ordered my own copy.


In a way, I'm now 'butterflying' on two continents!

Butterfly / dog picture credit: Riannon Walsh

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Itchen Valley Nature Reserve

It's been a few years since we last walked in Itchen Valley Nature Reserve; we used to live closeby. 

It was a rather gloomy day, and we left just as the rain started to fall. Hardly optimal for butterflies, and we indeed saw very few: a green-veined white and a few small whites.


At one point, near the water, we saw what looked like a very strange butterfly with dark wings fluttering along the vegetation. As it came closer, it was clear it wasn't a butterfly at all; it was a male banded demoiselle, a species of damselfly! Not seen a demoiselle before, so that was nice.

Back to butterflies, you probably don't need the table, but let's remain consistent.

Steyning Downland

Our main reason for going to Steyning Downland was to try and see brown hairstreaks. The site was mentioned as one of the best for this species, and late August was the optimal time. But brown hairstreaks are one of those 'tree top' species, so success was far from guaranteed.

Brown hairstreaks come down from the tree tops to lay their eggs on blackthorn. We scoured every blackthorn bush we could see in the hope of seeing one or more ovipositing females, but no luck ...

The eight species we did see are shown in the table (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).

Sunday, August 23, 2020

Keyhaven to Lymington coast path

Another walk we've down several times, mostly to look at birds. Never looked at butterflies, but this coast path is mentioned as one of the best places in the county to see wall brown. I've seen these many years ago in France and Spain, but never in Britain; my wife has never seen them at all.

Weather was far from ideal for butterflies: heavy clouds and a strong and blustery wind. Not surprisingly, we only saw two butterflies: a single small white and a single wall brown. Yes, we did see one, just as it was blown away by a gust of wind! Not very good, but enough for a positive id.

The customary table:

Saturday, August 22, 2020

Winchester - water meadows & St Catherine's Hill

From Winchester city centre, through the water meadows, and then up St Catherine's Hill is a walk we did almost exactly a year ago, but then we didn't pay any attention to butterflies ...

Fewer butterflies on the water meadows than I expected; just a green-veined white and a few small whites.

St Catherine's Hill featured more or less what we expected: lots of meadow browns, a few small heaths, plus chalk hill blues, common blues, a brown argus ...

... and an adonis blue!

Ten species in total, as shown in the table (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).

Friday, August 21, 2020

Telegraph Hill, New Forest

The wind today at Telegraph Hill was very strong and blustery. Perfect for getting any cobwebs blown away, but less perfect for butterflies ...

We actually saw a grand total of two butterflies, which is two more than I had expected. One small heath and one grayling. The grayling was a new species for my wife, but not for me, as I had seen its disappearance act before, years ago in the Netherlands. Grayling was new for Britain for me, though.


What's that disappearance act, you might ask? Flush a grayling from the heather, and it will fly a short distance away, land, and then immediately fold its wings together. Because of the colours on the underside of the wings, unless you saw exactly where it landed, it's incredibly hard to find. In this particular case, I had seen where it landed, and managed to crawl to it to take the picture. It took a long time for my wife to see it, even though I pointed out where it was and she was less than half a metre away from it .... 

Hardly need a table for today, but here it is anyway.

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Magdalen Hill Down

Magdalen Hill Down is a small nature reserve squeezed between several roads, just outside Winchester. It's maintained mostly as a poor grassland habitat. It was a sunny day, but with a similarly blustery wind to yesterday.

Probably not surprisingly, given the habitat similarity, the species we saw were a subset of those we saw yesterday: chalk hill blue, common blue, brown argus, small heath. The only species we saw today that we didn't see yesterday was a holly blue

Eight species in total; here's the table (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Old Winchester Hill

Old Winchester Hill has extensive chalk grasslands, and it was highlighted on several web-sites as a very good place to see butterflies, among which were silver-spotted skipper, adonis blue and chalk hill blue. All species we'd never seen, so ...

The weather was, let's say, changeable. Some sun, some squally showers, and rather windy throughout the day. At least there were still plenty of flowers, but at times the wind kept the butterflies well down.

Our hope was to see one or two new species. We saw several silver-spotted skippers (first ever skipper for us!), we saw many chalk hill blues, ...

..., and once we found a calm south-facing slope, the adonis blues didn't disappoint either!

And to add to these three new species, we also saw many small heaths. I can't imagine I never saw this species before, but as I'd never positively identified it as such, it does count as a new species.

Happy with our species haul, and just as we got back to where we parked the car, I noticed a small tortoiseshell feeding on marjoram flowers. Whereas this species was one of the most common butterflies when I was a kid in the Netherlands, I can't even remember the last time I saw one in Britain; it must have been years ago .... 

So a nice cherry on top of the four new species!

The usual table of the twelve (!) species we saw, with an indication of their frequency (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).

Monday, August 17, 2020

Hillier Gardens

As I mentioned before, my wife is a gardener by profession. She has an annual pass for Hillier Gardens, and I usually come along with her once or twice a year. Now there's an extra incentive: check out butterflies! 

We covered the whole garden today, but decided to focus our attention on the Centenary Border

The weather was mostly warm and sunny, but with a few sharp showers. Butterflies were pretty active; it's amazing to see how quickly they are back nectaring once it stops raining!


In total, we saw ten species. Plenty of small whites and red admirals, a few holly blues, commas and painted ladies.


A single small copper was new for my wife (I'd seen it many years ago in the Netherlands, but never in Britain), and the few brown argus butterflies we saw were new to both of us.


We did see a very tattered silver-washed fritillary along the Centenary Border, but just as we left the Gardens, a much fresher silver-washed fritillary let itself be photographed.


And here's the table of the species we saw, with an indication of their frequency (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Bentley Wood

We'll have two weeks of annual leave coming up in the second half of this month. Often during annual leave, we go for long walks, which we love to do. But this year, there is the whole new dimension of trying to spot and identify butterflies! 

As a foretaste of these upcoming butterfly walks, we decided to go to Bentley Wood today, a mature woodland known for its purple emperors and white admirals. We were very much aware that we were very late into the flying season of both these species, and that they're not easy to see at the best of times, spending most of their life in the tree tops. But, nothing ventured ...

It was a very warm day, and we walked for nearly five hours. I lost count of how many tree tops we scoured through our binoculars, but, alas, no purple emperors, no white admirals ... 

But what did we see? A total of nine species, one of which (ringlet) was new for us. We saw many speckled woods, gatekeepers and brimstones. 


One Buddleia bush gave us a few peacocks and red admirals, which we didn't see anywhere else in the forest. And we saw several silver-washed fritillaries! This species was not new for me, as I'd already seen one in our garden earlier this summer, but it was new to my wife.


With nine species, I feel our very first butterfly walk is a success. Below is a table of the species we saw, with an indication of their frequency (one  = 1; few = 2-4; several = 5-9; many = 10+).