Cheers Dave

I was thinking that myself - she was a beauty

That's been one of the positives of Lockdown - reacquainting myself with this cracking reserve
Cheers Trevor

I visited Martin Down at the weekend and saw a second brood Small blue there so you might be able to catch up with them
when you're out and about

.If you're back early August we could sort out a Shipton visit for Brostreaks - that's if they haven't already finished, it's been a crazy year so anythings possible!
Martin Down 06-05-2020 Part 2
The Dyke had now ended, petering out to the same level as the rest of the fields a Large White flew rapidly by and there were a couple more Small Blues and a Peacock but what I had been really looking forward to seeing had disappeared in a flash of red and ginger. I strolled across the grass looking out for Adders and took a turn down the small path at the ½ way point. As I strolled down the path a Brimstone flew by and was quickly followed by a second, two Dingies scrapped low down and on a little cleared bank a Small Copper tried to have a breather but two Greenstreaks kept coming down from the surrounding Hawthorns and hassling it. At the end a third Greenstreak was flitting about and on my return a second Small Copper posed on a Dandelion and I don’t know what was brighter – the yellow flower or the orange of the butterfly?


After this brief respite I plunged back down into the Dyke…well that was the intention but the Dyke was closed off with electric fencing. Typical as now I started seeing Marsh Frits – sitting on the far side of the Dyke and well beyond the sensible reach of my lens. I carried on looking down longingly into the Dyke and spying another Small Blue and Marsh Frit. Luckily as I was drawing near to the Butts the fence ended and I was able to get down into the Dyke again and start seeking out Marsh Frits and I was successful, finally after seeing at least 5 individuals without any shots. Also here were a brace of Peacocks that started following me as I progressed further along the Dyke.

Just beyond the Butts the Dyke starts to shallow out again and run for 20 metres or so barely noticeable amidst the other vegetation but then after a track crosses it returns rapidly to its original depth. It was at this point that I started to really get onto the Marshies. First there was the tell-tale flight of on lone individual, the vanguard of the group as it were. Then several just appeared and at one point had had three in one view. These were joined by another two so a small square of approximately 4 metres held up to 8 Marshies - a nice density! Possibly feeling left out by all the attention their distant cousins were getting a Peacock, Small Copper and a Small Heath also put in an appearance but I’ sorry to say they got short shrift as I was enjoying the Marshies so much particularly the variation I could see. Every year I forget and so spend my first few encounters with Marshies revelling and wondering at their difference in appearance. So it was on this occasion; one had a beautiful milk chocolate brown ground colour and yellow and cream chequers whilst another had a similar ground colour but this was only visible as thin streaks in between orange and yellow blocks. My favourite however was a very fecund female who was jet black with orange and red blocks.




After getting started again so abruptly the Dyke then stops abruptly again but only because there’s a large growth of scrub blocking off a section of the Dyke. So I walk round to the final part before the Dyke is cut off by Blandford Road. This final part is divided up by a series of little cross paths into about 4 sections the furthest two don’t hold much and most of the action seems to be focused in the two just after the ‘blockage’. So it’s this part that I climb down into. I spend 10 minutes or so in here with a Dingy, patrolling OT and Brimstone and four brilliant looking Marshies. I climb back out to pour a coffee and leave it to cool by my bag and follow another gorgeously fresh looking Marshie. It lands just as my phone rings. It’s work:
“Can you get onto the network?”
“Err…I’m taking my exercise?”
“Okay stay on the line we can put you through speaker phone while we Zoom”
While this was happening the Marshie had landed in a perfect position…I passed my phone to my other hand, leant in with camera one handed and fired off a few shots and then carried on with the call. Once it was complete and my coffee was drunk I got back to the butterflies picking up even more Marshies and a Greenstreak that was wing rolling and hinting at the chocolate brown uppers.

- One handed...
After this delightful time I realised that I needed to get back as despite having the Conference Call (well I suppose that’s what it could be called) I was dangerously close to being out too long when accumulating my lunch, break, free lessons and the fact that I was intending to work an extra hour in the evening. So I started back and for a while I refrained from counting, just put my head down and motored for home. I was going quite well until I got past the Butts and got onto the diagonal track that carves a the reserve into half when still head down and still motoring I almost trod on a Small Copper. I checked my watch and did a few mental calculations and realised that I still had a bit more time than I’d previously thought. Now motoring reverted back to ‘proceeding’ a gait used by both the Police and Teachers where you can cover ground with minimal effort. I’d just passed the old patch that in years gone by had been ploughed up especially for Stone Curlews when I had a little purple patch. A Dingy started it all off as it appeared from nowhere in the middle of the track. A female Brimstone did a flyover and then a smaller brown butterfly hove into view. At first I was a bit confused about what it could be but luckily it went down on the deck and I found that it was a Greenstreak, totally out of place amid the sea of grass that forms this part of the site. As I look up a male Brimstone flies along the edge of the track – possibly looking for the female and a few steps on a Grizzlie also pops up.


After this I reached the little hollow near the entrance to the tunnel. I saw three Dingies and a Grizzlie all hanging out nearby to each other in the various different ruts. I checked back in my notebook and was so left wondering whether they were the same individuals that I’d encountered squabbling to their hearts content earlier in the morning? Added to this group of reprobates were a few Small Heaths and a pair of Marshies and as I made into the tunnel I was again left wondering – but this time where the Marshies had been earlier in the morning? I seem to recall that of the three Frits that I’ve encountered at Bentley this year Marshies are generally the last species spotted so I reckon that they are the most ‘Student’ like of Frits – odd fashion and favouring long lie-ins. I dove on down into the tunnel stopping here and there for the odd butterfly and to make the odd note in my book. By the end I’d amassed braces of Holly Blue, Specklie, Dingy and Brimstone and then I was leaving the cooler, pleasant shade of the tunnel and starting the final furlong. I didn’t get very far from the entrance/exit to the tunnel when a Small White flew into view. It’s not often that this species does me a favour and usually I’m left cursing it as they’ve just spooked my target species, but today as I was watching the Small White if flew past a Red Admiral and I was able to get at least a record shot before it realised that I was onto it.


On the final stretch there were more Dingies and Grizzlies – most of which I’d probably already counted on the outward route and there was also singletons of Brimstone, Small White and Greenstreak. The star of the reprise was a male Small Blue that was sitting on the very edge of the hedge where it curves round at the old gate. Smiling I thought it best to leave it at that and head home directly. A truly epic morning with both quantity and quality – Martin Down at its spring best!
Have a goodun and stay safe
Wurzel