Cheers Dave

I'm still struggling to see them - mind you it was the same last year - a few in the spring and then from the late summer on good numbers

The Pearls are out - won't be long until the Marshies are too
Browns
26 Specked Wood, 01-05-0218 Pewsey Vale
Overall I thought it was a fairly average year for the Specklies and I don’t know whether this is tied into their late arrival what with their arrival being an entire month later in 2019. Could the snow which hit in March have knocked them back considerably I wonder? The definitely seemed to have quiet phases and were down in some places whilst in others they were more noticeable. For example I found my first at work and I recall seeing a few out of place at Laverstock but in a more likely stronghold such as Bentley Wood they were much scarcer. Perhaps they were having a good year but their late arrival meant that they were busy playing catch-up and making up for lost time as well as making cats WINK. This could be what I witnessed as they were still hanging on late into the year when I managed to see a couple ono my final ‘proper’ visit out.
27 Wall, 17-05-2018 Pewsey Downs
Last year I wrote about a associating Wall with the number two (2 weeks early, two sites and 2 individuals) but this year things in the association game got a bit trickier. First of all they weren’t two weeks or even a week early but only 4 days earlier. Second up I saw them at three sites – Pewsey Downs, my Marshie site and Shipton Bellinger. At these sites the maximum number I saw was two at my Marshie site…hang on 4,3,2…I could go the whole hog and really overplay the association and say that the other sites only produced 1 individual and that there were zero coastal sites but that I think would be pushing it. Whilst it’s good that I saw them at Shipton Bellinger it will still a bit worrying to see so few but hopefully by visiting different sites next year I can catch up with a few more – there were 25 reported at Morgan’s Hill on one visit!
28 Marbled White, 17-06-2018 Daneways
The thing I’ll remember most from 2018 about Marbled Whites was from a visit to Lulworth Cove. As I sat on the pebbles, drinking my coffee and gazing out onto the azure, millpond still waters a tiny chequered flag fluttered along the mirror like waters; too white to be a small Skull and Cross Bones it was an errant Marbled White taking the most direct route from one side of the Cove to the other. There were plenty of other moments from 2018 of Marbled Whites to add to this one single stand out memory but I don’t think that this was down to their numbers being up. Actually to be honest they were again almost ‘Blink and you’d miss them’ once they’d emerged 2 days later than in 2017. I think this was why I had so many memories – I made a conscious effort to focus on them this year after treating them so disrespectfully last year.
29 Grayling, 07-07-2018 Godshill
I didn’t get to investigate whether there were any Grayling along the coast in West Wales as when I visited the weather was less than conducive for butterflies. In fact it wasn’t a spectacular year for me with this species. When I visited the ever reliable Godshill they were much harder to locate this year and at one point I’d almost given it up as a bad job until I stumbled across a couple. To be fair though perhaps they didn’t fare as poorly as I thought at first? Indeed there were two reports from within Wiltshire (right on the margins of Hampshire but still in Wiltshire) which was great news as they are considered extinct in the county. Plus I only managed to get to this one site where I know that they are and didn’t make it back to Dorset and the heaths this year. On top of this when I made my visit it was a fortnight earlier than in 2017 so perhaps they were still just ‘getting going’. Here’s hoping…
One thing I did discover this year should prove useful in future ventures when looking for this species. Often Grayling will zip about here and there making it generally difficult to follow them visually and sometimes they will finish this off with a flourish, flying directly at you and passing you so close that you think they will collide with you. As you spin round trying to locate them again somewhere in the distance they’ve completely vanished from view! But they haven’t. This year a Grayling carried out this ‘getaway plan’ on me but I happened to glance down to check my footing and there was the Grayling down on the deck directly behind me. I reckon that as it passed me it stalled and literally dropped to the ground where it waited for me to realise that I’d lost it and move off. Sorry Mr Grayling I’ve got your number mate! I eagerly await the Grayling 2019 season to see if this wasn’t just a one-off fluke.
30 Hedge Brown/Gatekeeper, 24-06-2018 Lulworth Cove
Almost a week earlier this year and my first came unusually from Lulworth Cove; not something I’d expected as I normally plan to pick my first Hedgie up from Bentley Wood. It felt at times like the trends seen last year continues – they were earlier but also fewer in number. I was seeming in the expected places but they were definitely down. They were also over comparatively quickly. Usually I can pick up plenty on the annual summer trip to Ffos-y-ffin but this year I was able to count the total on my hands. Also there were none of the unusual beauties that this little area has thrown up in the past and I think I saw only one excessa through the whole season. In between the UK Hedgies worrying me I took a family holiday to the Dordogne. Here they were much more ‘present’ and interestingly looked slightly different to those seen in the UK. The underwing didn’t have the noticeable cream band that runs from the bottom to the top of underside of the hind wing. Also the ground colour was much lighter and the spots were much less noticeable. In fact until I saw these slight ‘eyespots’ I was convinced that I’d seen a Southern Gatekeeper – is it possible that rather than the two separate species overlapping they form a graduated cline from Hedgie through to Southern?


31 Meadow Brown, 03-05-2018 Kingston Lacey
Almost three and a half weeks earlier this year and it looks like ‘getting up early’ did them good as it was a great year for Meadow Browns in my neck of the woods. Not only were they back to their fluttering and annoying best but that also turned up at most of the sites that I visited and they lasted well into September and beyond which was great. They were so early in fact that I wasn’t expecting my first when I did. I wonder if the Beast form the East did them a favour as the cold could have knocked any parasites and microbes on the head and then after the Beast we had some gorgeous warm weather which would have brought them on? Or was it the melting snow which gave the grasses a really concentrated drink? Whatever it was it was great to see so many butterflies. They even turned up at work in the sections of uncut grasses left as a meadow.
32 Small Heath, 21-05 2018 Laverstock Down
Last year I quickly moved on from this species as the report was so dire but things were much different in 2018. After arriving a fortnight later on the scene they seemed to be all over the place. One also turned up at work in the ‘Meadow’ which was very unexpected as I’d been worrying that we again would see a dearth of them. Instead they were often the commonest butterfly and I had to refrain from cursing them as they started on their old trick of spooking the other species I was trying to photograph. One thing I did notice this year from other peoples’ reports was a slightly odd behaviour. The butterfly would perch and occasionally flick it’s wings open. I saw this reported by at least three people as well as observing it personally. Why I still don’t know but it was very hot last year perhaps a method of cooling down or maybe during the dry weather they were more likely to get dust between their wings? Either way it’ll be something to look out for in successive seasons.


33 Ringlet, 17-06-2018 Daneways
My first Ringlet cam 4 days later this year on a dismal trip to Daneways. I was hoping that the weather forecast was correct but it changed drastically a minute before I left the house. As I said back then it was a bit of a trip for Ringlets and Marbled Whites! Again they had a good year but they were, like the Marbled Whites, almost a ‘blink and you’d miss them species’. They seemed to arrive on the scene and then they were gone again; was this because of the really warm weather accelerating their behaviour? Maybe it was because they were so abundant that I became Ringlet Blind, ignoring them for other butterflies as we had a quite compressed season; we started in slow motion then the season was ’freeze framed’ before the season hit fast forward. So in amongst all the frenetic catching up with slow starters and being surprised by the early arrivals I skimped on the Ringlets.
Have a goodun
Wurzel