The end of my quarantine was dominated by holly blue larvae, which I posted on a separate thread. The last few days - of freedom - have been more about Pierid early stages. Two days ago, I watched a female small white laying on feral crucifers of some species along the river (lots of arable land nearby):

(the strange, grey markings are the shadows of flowers)
She was not at all careful about where she laid - flower, leaf, upperside, underside - and spent little more than a second on each egg:


There were plenty of older, yellow eggs on the leaves:

Today, while repairing our beanpole structure after the storms and rains last night, I spotted a female green-veined white laying in a weedy patch near the tomatoes. As soon as I could, I had a look to see her work and found plenty of eggs on what I think is shepherd's purse, but all the plants were very young:


As this patch will probably be reworked in the next few weeks, I thought I'd repot a few plants with eggs on and keep them safe:

There are four plants and five eggs there - the two plants in the right pot came out of the ground together so I kept them together.
According to Pete's book, the eggs should hatch in just a few days. If the plants thrive, I'll keep the whole lot in a cage and provide more plants as necessary. If not, I know where the eggs came from so will return them to the wild.
Guy