Indeed it is Mrsp0ck, although I'd already made other plans...
I'll let you off that typo
Wurzel given how manic this site has been this season (I've given up trying to keep up with everyones diaries now, skimming them on the train too and from work is all I can do now)
Given the way things are running along down here it's only a matter of time for you
Goldie, as long as the incoming storm doesn't do too much damage
13th June, a trip to the Black Country
The Black hairstreak had fallen off my radar this year. Suddenly is was June and a couple of messages to
PhiliB over the weekend had me making some rushed plans to rectify this oversight. With train tickets booked on Monday evening I went onto UKB to find THAT announcement! I was in the area last week but the situation in Sussex was still being assessed so had yet to be made public.
Well anyway, Phil was promising me a day to remember, this year at Castor Hanglands Nature Reserve just outside Peterborough.
I left at a nice civilised time, a 45 minute train ride arriving at Peterborough just before 10 where Phil met me for the 20 minute drive to the site.
The site itself looks well managed; a mosaic of meadows, scrubland and woodland with areas fenced off areas to protect flora rich sensitive meadows from idle trampling. It didn’t take long to see our first Hairstreak, surprisingly fluttering low over a meadow towards the hedge we walked along. When it landed I took a few record snaps, as you would with a supposedly rare species, but Phil hurried me along, telling me not to worry about that one! We passed several more fluttering here and there and the sightings increased as we entered a maze of freshly mown rides that snaked through thickets of Blackthorn. As we continued along these paths I gave up counting individuals, Black Hairstreaks already far outnumbering all other species combined, which mainly consisted of Speckled Wood and Large skippers. I did manage a few more record shots, little did I know how much better things were to become though!

We made camp and Phil said to just wander around the rides and wait for one to sit low. I did, and they did, with relative frequency. The only problem was there were too many of the bloody things. You’ll just see your target, and another would fly by and put it up.
Eventually I found one unaccosted long enough for some snaps and what a little stunner she was, auditioning for the Hairstreak version of Vogue!
I would hazard a guess that for everyone that settled low down there were another 5 or 6 that stayed up high.
I’d been wandering around for about 30 mins when I realised I’d become totally disorientated and had no idea which direction to go to find Phil and base camp and it was almost by accident that I stumbled across him again.
As morning became afternoon low down landings became more commonplace and you could even be confident enough to pick and choose your target, “skip that one, bit tatty”, and we were able to concentrate on fresh specimens, all seemingly trying to outdo the previous one in Vogue posing stakes. Much to our surprise it wasn’t just females that are still emerging either, we came across at least 3 mint males as well, the third of which seemed rather unsteady and was almost certainly only hours old.
A friend of Phil’s turned up mid afternoon (I forget your name, sorry), after getting stuck in traffic for a few hours, and another couple of enthusiasts stopped by but apart from them we had the place and what was probably hundreds (if not thousands over the entire site) of Hairstreaks, to ourselves.
It really was an incredible day and will go down as one of the highlights of the year for me. In Phil’s 20 years of observing them he can’t remember a year like it and one of the other enthusiasts who had 50 years in the bag said the same thing. We really are experiencing a once in a lifetime event with them this year, even without the Sussex population appearing! I remember bumping into Neil Hulme at North Stoke a few months ago and saying I had a good feeling about this year, I didn’t think it was going to get this good! Big thanks once again to Phil, good to catch up and have a natter
