Search found 1845 matches

by Matsukaze
Wed Apr 24, 2024 9:33 pm
Forum: Sightings
Topic: 2024 - Large Tortoiseshell
Replies: 33
Views: 1724

Re: 2024 - Large Tortoiseshell

Dizzy Skippers, imo.
by Matsukaze
Sat Apr 20, 2024 10:09 am
Forum: General
Topic: Earlier and earlier
Replies: 5
Views: 230

Re: Earlier and earlier

All winters and springs are different, and each species reacts in a different way. This year the orange-tips are out early but the sallow blossom is running late.
by Matsukaze
Fri Apr 19, 2024 8:16 am
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Neil Hulme
Replies: 4450
Views: 517762

Re: Neil Hulme

Whilst we're talking snakes, does anyone know if putting corrugated metal down for reptile surveys can be used to create bare ground for the establishment of butterfly foodplants?
by Matsukaze
Tue Apr 16, 2024 10:57 pm
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Matsukaze
Replies: 223
Views: 389522

Re: Matsukaze

More Orange-tips...
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by Matsukaze
Sat Apr 06, 2024 9:39 am
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Padfield
Replies: 4309
Views: 982439

Re: Padfield

I like the way Minnie's alert ear directs us to the butterfly.
by Matsukaze
Thu Apr 04, 2024 9:25 pm
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Matsukaze
Replies: 223
Views: 389522

Re: Matsukaze

The Orange-tips have started to emerge.
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by Matsukaze
Thu Mar 28, 2024 8:12 am
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: David M
Replies: 1860
Views: 5529752

Re: David M

Same here in Somerset - only one vanessid to date (unidentifiable but flight pattern suggested Small Tort). A few Brimstones about. Opportunities for butterflies are few and far between amid the endless rain.
by Matsukaze
Wed Mar 13, 2024 9:32 pm
Forum: Sightings
Topic: March 2024
Replies: 64
Views: 2438

Re: March 2024

Male Brimstone in central Exeter on Monday.
by Matsukaze
Thu Mar 07, 2024 8:36 am
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Matsukaze
Replies: 223
Views: 389522

Re: Matsukaze

I have seen butterflies. Admittedly, I had to go to the south coast of France for them...
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by Matsukaze
Fri Mar 01, 2024 4:42 pm
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: David M
Replies: 1860
Views: 5529752

Re: David M

I wouldn't dare walk in the woods round here. Far too slippery.
by Matsukaze
Wed Feb 28, 2024 10:19 am
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Padfield
Replies: 4309
Views: 982439

Re: Padfield

Thanks Pete and Roger! If we’re both still around, Roger, I look forward to losing the bet! When I was 21, in the winter of ‘85-6, I watched Halley’s comet creep through the constellations. When it faded from sight in the spring, I said, ‘See you again!’ That requires me to live to 97… Guy Belated ...
by Matsukaze
Sun Feb 11, 2024 12:40 pm
Forum: Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary
Topic: Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary - Favourite Photo of 2023
Replies: 28
Views: 586

Re: Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary - Favourite Photo of 2023

Thanks Wurzel. Hopefully the Glanvilles will still be there in 2024 - in truth I'm surprised they have lasted that long, as their populations seem to struggle to survive on chalk downland. I've seen Marsh Fritillaries a couple of times at Priddy, and they certainly used to be resident there 25 years...
by Matsukaze
Sun Feb 11, 2024 10:57 am
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Bugboys mission
Replies: 4120
Views: 1368523

Re: Bugboys mission

Enjoying the pictures! The kites have arrived in numbers here in east Somerset in the last couple of years, to the extent that I saw one over the garden on 1 January 2023, becoming my first bird sighting of the year. Their arrival has coincided with a drop in the buzzard population and I wonder if o...
by Matsukaze
Thu Feb 08, 2024 9:33 am
Forum: Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary
Topic: Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary - Favourite Photo of 2023
Replies: 28
Views: 586

Re: Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary - Favourite Photo of 2023

Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary With the Bentley Wood Small Pearls now sadly gone I once again had to make the trek to Priddy Pools for my fix of this species. However they seemed to be having a lie-in this year and when Philzoid and I first visited none were found and we had to make up for their l...
by Matsukaze
Thu Feb 01, 2024 6:26 pm
Forum: Personal Diaries
Topic: Neil Hulme
Replies: 4450
Views: 517762

Re: Neil Hulme

Lovely Small Eggar larva - we get these locally in Somerset, with blackthorn and wild rose being the usual foodplants. We don't find it everywhere, but for some reason it's a little more widely distributed here than Brown Hairstreak is.
by Matsukaze
Tue Jan 30, 2024 1:26 pm
Forum: Sightings
Topic: January 2024
Replies: 36
Views: 13399

Re: January 2024

A queen bumblebee in the garden today, which is ridiculously early for these parts.

I was in Croydon at the weekend and was entertained by flocks of green parrots, at one point flying fast and low just above car height like iridescent green kingfishers.
by Matsukaze
Tue Jan 30, 2024 1:24 pm
Forum: Overseas
Topic: Pyrgus ID - Queyras, June 2023
Replies: 7
Views: 302

Re: Pyrgus ID - Queyras, June 2023

Thanks folks - I have more photos but they'll require a bit of editing to make clear which Pyrgus is which, if I can work that out. Hopefully in a few days.
by Matsukaze
Mon Jan 29, 2024 8:52 pm
Forum: Small Blue
Topic: Small Blue - Favourite Photo of 2023
Replies: 15
Views: 283

Re: Small Blue - Favourite Photo of 2023

The Small Blue is an intermittent garden visitor here. This was the first example since 2020.
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by Matsukaze
Sun Jan 21, 2024 7:37 pm
Forum: Overseas
Topic: Pyrgus ID - Queyras, June 2023
Replies: 7
Views: 302

Pyrgus ID - Queyras, June 2023

I'm trying to take my mind off the vile weather by trying to identify some butterflies from earlier in the year. We spent a few days in the Queyras in early June last year, and have no shortage of photos of Pyrgus to keep me busy. I'm having a go at getting to grips with this genus, but could do wit...
by Matsukaze
Sat Jan 06, 2024 8:43 pm
Forum: Overseas
Topic: Nostalgia
Replies: 2
Views: 3818

Re: Nostalgia

The butterflies aren't bad either. I was there in September 2022 and saw Southern White Admiral, Berger's Clouded Yellow and Great Banded Grayling well within the city limits. The city sits in a bowl of limestone, which looked promising for butterflies and that I wanted to explore, but did not have ...

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