


26th June, Bugboys Big Northern Trip 2018, day 7, a west country Brucie Bonus.
So instead of driving straight down to London we took a minor detour.... via Gloucestershire, and a certain pub called The Daneway. Arriving in the searing heat of mid-afternoon I hopped out the car and did a recce of the bank whilst my chauffeur sorted out the overnight accommodation. There was a lot of general butterfly activity but not much in the way of the target species. I decided to give it a couple of hours in the hope I'd catch something later and helped put up the tent before relaxing in a cool pub with an even cooler drink, flicking through the thousand or so pictures I'd amassed during the week. It was whilst I was relaxing that I think a certain Wurzel was prowling the bank.
Two hours later we returned to look for Large Blues. The butterflies seemed torn between roosting and being hyper active in the still silly heat, but still no Blues of the Large persuasion showed themselves. For an hour we wandered the slopes, Skippers and Brown's all over the place. We did find some blues, but they were far from Large. It was just as we were leaving to have a well-earned meal at the Inn when the unmistakable shape and hue (I think the technical term at this site is Deep Blue) flew past and vanished round a bush. Oh well, at least I knew they were about.
27th June, Bugboys Big Northern Trip 2018, day 8, a west country Brucie Bonus cont.
We got up early the next morning, but yet again the heat beat us. At 7.30am everything was already up and about and mostly not willing to sit still. It took a while but eventually a Large Blue showed up. From the look and behaviour I suspect freshly emerged. She was most unwilling to open up but with a bit of perseverance I managed some underside shots. No more showed up on the lower slope so we moved to the upper bank, Brown's and skippers erupting with every footfall. A very large orange butterfly appeared from nowhere, circled us a few times and landed halfway up a tree. I wasn't expecting a SWF to make it's season debut here. Up here another Large Blue also appeared and gave me the runaround for a bit, but it eventually landed and coyly opened its wings for a minute or two. I'd say more of a Cobalt Hue myself but then what would I know.
Happy to achieve some upper sides we moved on. Large Blues becoming more common as we circled back round to the lower slope again. I probably saw around a dozen before we left at 9.45, most of them now super charged up and not worth chasing around, trampling all over the habitat in the process. How ridiculous, butterflying that early in the day and getting your shots in before breakfast! So that's it really. Mission complete with a shed load of bonus species in the bag too. My friend had work the following day, but I still had four days before returning to work, four days of relaxation.......


