

Five Rivers 08-04-2020
Having spent the morning doing chores I was pretty eager to get out and do some exercise so almost as soon as the lunch was eaten and the crockery cleared I was out of the door and heading towards Five Rivers. As I walked along the Town Path alongside the river there wasn’t an awful lot about; a Small Tort flew by near Waitrose and as I drew near the Wooden Bridge a Small White was visible on a bush on the other side of the river and a duo of Brimstones had a bit of a falling out. It remained quiet all the way along the river and through the Glades but I didn't mind as the quicker the journey the more time I’d have on site.
The action started as I purposefully strode up the gentle slope towards Comma Corner. As I paused by the little track that dissects the Copse and Brimstone cut through the air past me one way and a Small White came from behind. A Peacock was still holding its territory here and didn’t want to get involved leaving the two whites to battle it out for supremacy of the air while it was content holding the terra firma. As I looked back the way I’d come to follow the tussling action of the two whites a third White species hove into view. I could tell by the tangerine cream colour that it was a male Orange-tip. It flew onwards nearer and nearer to the still battling Whites but when it was almost upon them it veered off to my right and disappeared from view across the river. Quite unsporting really.
However Orange-tips are like buses and just as I was considering making a move to somewhere else on the site another male appeared. This time it carried on towards me, flying directly obviously on a mission, and as it went past I found myself in hot pursuit. It flew dizzyingly at times along the Banks, occasionally dipping down the sides to find a likely looking source of nectar before returning back up top to carry on it’s mission. Whilst it was taking these pit-stops I’d dash down the side of the bank too and grab the odd shot when and where I could. At the end of the Banks the small wood should have brought its’ progress to a halt and given me a chance to catch my breath but no the little blighter followed the left hand path, skirting the edge of the wood and then flying on and down the Back Bank. At this point he found the clump of Bluebells and so I was able to grab the almost obligatory shot ‘OT on BB’. As I’m here I carry on zig zagging up and down the bank until I reach the far corner of the site from where I make the return journey. I get slightly waylaid on the way back as I watch a pair of Brimstones chasing each other until they flew over the hedge into the Allotments and in the Nettle Patch two Peacocks seem to be investigating the merits of some of the plants as a possible nursery. I look up and see two whites just on the corner of the Back and Lower Banks. One has the familiar Tangerine Cream look of a male OT but the other appears to be just a white though from the flappy flight and the size I reckon it could be a female OT. I watched from a distance expecting there to be a bundle and then a breaking apart if my surmise that it’s a pair is incorrect. But instead of the spiralling tussle there seems to be more chasing than fighting. I get a little nearer and see that it is indeed a pair. My next thought was that it will all end quickly with the female landing and then raising her abdomen in rejection whilst the male might have a few cracks unsuccessful cracks at the whip. After 30 or so seconds of chasing, with a brief interruption by a confused male Brimstone, the female lands low down in the hedge right against the path. The male lands next to her but instead of her raising her abdomen he is swinging his round and Boom they’re copulating. I stay with them for a fair old while taking advantage of the fact that they’re otherwise engaged and so actually sitting still for once but then give them a bit of peace and privacy. I head back to Comma Corner where the only change in the butterflies was that the Peacock had become Peacocks so excusing me from the feeling of déjà vu (That strange feeling we sometimes get that we've lived through something before, that what is happening now has already happened...) and then back along the Banks to find that the pairing had finished and they’d gone their separate ways. Over at the far end of the site I clock up another Brimstone and male OT whilst a second OT leads me from here back towards the Banks again. On the corner I stare up and a flash of Blue becomes my first Holly Blue of 2020 and predictably it doesn’t come down lower than 6ft he whole time that I watch it. I carry on now starting the inevitable journey back home following a female Orange-tip and cutting across the Lower Banks as I’d been remiss in not checking them before now. As I wade through the long grass which I’m sure has had a sprinkling of Miracle Gro, so quickly has it shot up, I have a little Purple patch with the female Orang-tip settling within spitting distance of a Peacock and a Comma. I don’t know what to go for first so point my lens at the closest and somehow manage to get shots of all three! I was now really glad that I’d opted for the more labourious route back as slightly further along still I manage a record shot of a Holly Blue and pick up my first Specklies of 2020. After this I tarry for a while in the Glades as a pair of OT’s look like they’re about to be my second copulating pair only for the female to raise her abdomen in rejection leaving the male to try to drown his sorrows in some Red Nettles. There also 2 pairs of Specklies and three Holly Blues which unfortunately all decide to remain aloft – I found that I didn’t really mind this I mean to be fair if you’d just crawled out a sleeping bag and found that you could fly I don’t suppose you’d want to come down for a while. Somehow or other I manage to pull myself away and head for home. A brilliant period of exercise – 2 firsts for the year and my first copulating OTs! Have a goodun and stay safe
Wurzel