Cheers Trevor

Glad you're off the mark as I predicted
Cheers Bugboy

Perhaps they're all using the same letting agent for hibernation suites and today they all got evicted?
The Whites
8 Wood White, 22-05-2016 Botany Bay
For the second successive year I managed to make it to Botany Bay for Wood Whites. However there is no real way that I can make any comparative statements about how well they did this year as I made the trip much earlier and so caught the first brood. This also negated any idea of whether they emerged earlier or later.
As Philzoid and I walked along the paths all was quiet. We rounded the corner and worked our way down the hill and towards the little bridge and from where there were none Wood Whites just appeared as if evaporating from the grass, eerily materialising like spectres. There were certainly more around this year compared to last though I seem to recall reading that the first brood is generally larger in number? However compared to my very first visit four years ago (also during the first brood) they did seem scarcer, the odd few here and there along the main track and in the triangle and not the rolling, fighting menage a trois’s previously encountered.
9 Brimstone, 11-03-2016 Work
Brimstones seemed to have a fairly unremarkable year in 2016. I saw my first about week earlier than in 2015 but despite that they seemed to be around in their usual density and at the usual sites. The danger is that as they are so common unless there is a drastic decrease they could end up in trouble before we pay attention…
10 Large White, 20-04-2016 Vera Jones
My first Large White of the year came 3 weeks earlier this year and I took it as a positive omen and it indeed seemed to be the case. Not only did I encounter them at many more sites and also across the usual range of sites but instead of one here and there they were in good numbers. Last year I think I saw only about 5 or 6 all year, this year at one site I saw that on one visit! A definite upturn in fortune and hopefully it will continue and they’ll get back to pre-crash numbers soon.
11 Small White, 12-04-2016 Work
This species didn’t follow the same pattern as its larger cousin. For a start there was about a fortnights difference between when I first saw it this year compared to last. Also my general feeling was that there weren’t quite as many as in recent years – although this is only a gut feeling, nothing more substantive.
12 Green-veined White, 29-04-2016 Vera Jones Mill
This species was also affected by the late showing put in by spring, again by about a fortnight. This tardy start to the season however seemed to be beneficial for this species as nationally it increased by 58% (Waitrose Weekend, 20-10-2016). A species after my own heart this – it likes and functions better after a bit of a lie-in! They did take a while to get going (again like me) but subsequent broods did better and better. Any qualms over the Small Whites were salved by the GVW which from personal experience had a very good year. I’m still slightly concerned though – is this bounce back temporary, will they get back to a similar population density as in by gone years?
13 Orange-tip, 19-04-2016 Pewsey
For me this was probably my best ever year for Orange-tips. I’d finally found a site with plentiful Cuckoo Flower and damp woodland rides that meant that seeing Orange-tips finally became easy. Previously I’d relied on my garden (since moved) or a little stretch of road with very steep banks on my way home (tricky for photography). Now however I have Fenland and boardwalks so the nectar sources are at knee height.
Nationally this species seemed a bit patchy. So on the UKB boards some people were worried others were seeing plenty, luckily my personal observations placed me in the latter camp. I was worried for a while as my first came 12 days later in 2016 plus others had been seeing them for a while before me. That was until I checked out my new site and it paid dividends.
14 Clouded Yellow, 17-08-2016 Martin Down
Unfortunately I have no comparative data for this species as last year I didn’t see one despite being in the what should have been the right places at the right times. I almost didn’t see them this year and thought that I spied a pattern in my yearly observations…In 2012 I saw Wood Whites but not a Cloudy, 2013 and 2014 Clouded Yellow but no Wood White, 2015 Wood White and no Clouded Yellow…and this year? Well I saw both, phew!
It wasn’t really a vintage year for Cloudies but I managed to get onto 3 in total, all from Martin Down, my first on one day and the other two on my penultimate trip out. My first at Martin Down was along Bokerley Ditch near my favourite hotspot. I’ve found a Cloudy in roughly the same place on three successive occasions. Whether this is due to the habitat being just right or some form of genetic memory I’m not sure. Either way I need to remember the frequency with which I’ve found the species here during my visits to Martin Down this season!
Have a goodun
Wurzel