Broxhead - 24th Sep 2018
I was last here three days ago. On that occasion I found 7 Small Copper, 1 Brown Argus and no Speckled Wood. Between then and now we have had 40 mph winds, persistent rain and last night the temperature plummeted to 2 degrees. You would I hope forgive me for thinking all this had decimated the remaining butterflies but I am an optimist and my final mission of the year was to see if I could find a Brown Argus in flight in the last week of September. I had never seen one that late in the year before you see.
And what did I find?
I found 20 Small Coppers, 3 Brown Argus and 3 Speckled Wood!
What on earth is going on?
At one point 2 Brown Argus and a Small Copper were in a sparring circle together. At another point there were two male Small Coppers battling it out. Then a male pursuing a female who proceeded to do a Turkey Trot. It was as though the bad weather had never happened and they just continued where they left off.
I can understand that I may have missed 2 Brown Argus on the 21st Sep but in no way could I have missed 13 Small Coppers. Whilst the Speckled Woods, Brown Argus and some of the Small Coppers were faded and jaded, some others of the Small Coppers were quite fresh. Now the third brood of Small Coppers was early here this year so I am wondering now if the increase in their numbers is due to the fourth brood emerging early too and overlapping the remaining tatty third-brooders?
One old geezer was trying his luck with a young lass but of course he was getting the brush-off.

- More Turkey Trotting

- Brown Argus still in pretty good nick for 24th Sep
One of the Speckled Woods had a blue-ish hue to its wings.

- Fading to blue?
Non-butterfly Snapshots of the day
I have already posted about the Fly Agaric but this example at Broxhead today was very unusual. It had a crazy-paving design to its cap where usually its a solid colour either red or orange.
And I have also posted the Peziza michelii cup mushroom before, but that was more like an advance warning as it wasn’t actually out then. Today it was out and about and in exactly the same spot as before, growing straight out of the impacted sand beside the path.
And I came across this nice (Garden) Spider making a web between the fronds of heather. Not good news for those two Small Coppers I saw flying dangerously close-by! There is not a lot of heather still in bloom and so nectaring possibilities for the butterflies are diminishing. Notice how this crafty spider has set up shop right beside a remaining blooming heather.