Thanks for the comments guys

. I've always thought Snipes to be very comical looking birds no matter what they are doing
Wurzel, but I do think they would suit a Benny Hill tune when running
10th October, and still the butterflies keep coming.
Deep into October and the best day of the week weather wise, for once, fell on my day off. Rather than going to Mill Hill or Southwick again I decided to browse Newhaven Tidemills and also do a recce of a nearby nature reserve I've never been on.
As befits a day in the middle of October, things started off rather slowly and I spent the first hour birdwatching until butterfly life began to appear. A small White got me off the mark and then very fresh examples of Wall and Cloudie gave me the slip. They appeared in front of me out of nowhere, had a brief skirmish and proceeded to fly off in opposite directions, leaving me dithering as to which one to follow and losing sight of both. It was a Common Blue I stumbled across who gave me my first butterfly shots of the day.
The Wall, a male and as predictable as the tide, turned up in the same spot after a short circuit of the area. I only managed some long range shots though, flighty as ever and my long autumn shadow made it impossible to sneak up on him, but still close enough to conclude they are still emerging here
Doing a couple of circuits of the site I had a few Red Admiral flybys, and the occasional Cloudie patrolling. I suspected there were no more than two today.
The next species willing to sit was a fresh out the box Red Admiral, no more than a few hours old and clearly still practicing this new flying malarkey it had suddenly developed.
Late morning and I was preparing to leave when I got distracted by another Common Blue. He wouldn't sit still but then the biggest surprise of the day appeared in the form of a reasonably well conditioned Brown Argus, taking me to six species. He was the first of this species I’ve seen here, although to be fair I only really come here late in the season.
After a few snaps he got in a scuff with a tatty old Small Copper who seemed to appear simply to have a quick fight and then vanish, little thug! Who'd have thought I'd be seeing a Small Copper/Brown Argus fight in the middle of October! Species eight turned up shortly after in the form of a decrepit Small Heath, just about clinging on to life.
then, just as I was leaving, species number nine dropped by to bid me farewell.
The next site was Castle Hill Nature Reserve near the fort on the other side of Newhaven Harbour. I'd been browsing the south coast on Google maps a few nights previously, looking for little pockets of green along the south coast within easy reach that might be worth investigating, and this one seemed like an obvious choice. With its rather exposed aspect with a southerly breeze blowing there was precious little for me to train my camera on as I wandered around the scrubby grassland and hedgerows. Nevertheless I did wrack up five species, Red Admiral, Small Copper, Speckled Wood, a Wall and the most numerous species, Small White. The views wasn't too bad though


I still bad a bit of time on my hands so I returned to Tidemills for another hour, locating what was probably the same Wall as in the morning as well as fleeting glances of 2 or 3 others. The Argus was still in the same spot, keeping the Common Blue company and I saw 2 Cloudies at the same time, confirming what I'd suspected that morning.
And just to prove it's always worth giving a White a second glance, when this one settled it turned out to be a Green-veined, giving me a double figure tally for the day. Like the earlier Red Admiral she looked very fresh indeed.
The birds were also rather well behaved today!