Cheers Dave

It's definitely on my annual visit list now though I think next year I might try a week earlier if I can, mind you the problem is everything comes at once during they few weeks in July
Cheers Bugboy

The best butterflies do have a way of making you pay for the shots
Cheers Trevor

It really is cracking reserve

we were unlucky not to have gotten a Whitters as well
Godshill 23-07-2021
As the holiday had started so well I was loathe to sit on my laurels and so after successful trips for Silver-spots and landing my first Brostreak of the year I scanned through my list to work out what to go for next. I was surprised to see a glaring gap in the Browns – I hadn’t seen a Grayling in 2021. So that was that decided then my next outing would have to be to Godshill…When the morning came the weather report indicated that if I wanted to see anything I’d better get a wriggle on as a cloud covering was forecast for the afternoon. Having previously given up listening to the utter codswollop that had recently passed for forecasting I took this with a barrel of salt but decided to head off first thing anyway as normally I arrive just before lunch and the Grayling are quite frantic by then. Over the past few years I’ve coveted others open wing shots so I was hoping that perhaps there might be some love in air by midmorning?
With the final chords of Purgatory ringing out through my open windows I drew to a halt with a crunch and as the dust settled I geared up, hat on, sunnies in my pocket, trousers tucked into socks and then looking a little like a heavy metal Tin-Tin I set off across the cricket pitch and then down the hill. I’d only gone a few step on the dusty descending track when I spotted something that wasn’t a Meadow or Hedge Brown but it was also too small to be Grayling. I scanned around more and waited for it to make another move and when it did I could see that it was a Small Copper. As it fed the vivid orange on the fore wings contrasted nicely with the violet bells of the heather. After this little interlude I carried on my quest revelling in how widespread the Small Copper is and how catholic it is in its choice of habitats. Further along the track it became less stony and dusty and more consistent in texture and I started seeing miniature piles of sand and neighbouring holes. One of bees that were buzzing around stopped and I was able to get a few shots of it, a Bee-Wolf I think?


All very nice but not the target species so I carried on down the hill feeling the temperature rising as I descended. As I crossed the stream which this season is barely a trickle I surveyed the heath ahead of me. Over the last couple of seasons the Grayling have been migrating away from the old Hotspot track which was at the point of the triangle and towards the sloping heather just on the other side of the stream so that’s where I headed first. I reckon that this is because of the life cycle of the heather as it seems to be coming towards the end of the ‘building’ phase and there aren’t any gaps or sun bathing spots in the heather yet. I’ll have to remember to see if this is over the next couple of seasons. I’d only taken a few scrunchy, scratchy steps through the heather before a butterfly took to the wing. I watched it as it flew, not all flappy like a Meadow Brown but with powerful wing beats interspersed by periods of gliding – my first Grayling of 2021. I managed to follow it for a bit and then they do what they always do; plonk down in a spot which seems obvious but which when you look you can’t see the butterfly and it’s actually in a different spot entirely. This initial one took on an almost two-tone set of hues and had a dodgy proboscis so I’d easily be able to identify it. After the initial shots I spent a bit of time criss-crossing the heather here enjoying the crunch and scratch of the heather and the surprise as a Grayling that wasn’t there suddenly appears in a flurry of browns and oranges before gliding away enraptured in a game of hide-and-seek. All told I managed to find and photograph another 4 Grayling in this little patch but there were plenty of others I’m sure, they just had better evasive manoeuvres.




- No 2

- No 3

- No 4
Sadly there was then an enforced intermission in my Grayling Fest as a totally un-forecast block of cloud covered the valley. With its coming the temperature dropped, the breeze stiffened and the butterflies hid away. While I waited for it to pass over I took to wandering the heather clad slopes and rises and ended up at the old Hotspot track. All the little scallops and bare patches on the side of the track were gone replaced either with shin high heather or a waist height wall of bracken. I carried on round completing the full triangle of tracks and then looking up I saw that there was a slither of bright light at the edge of the cloud on the other side of the valley. As I watched it grew and then became blue sky, the shadow slid down the hill and across the floor of the valley as the cloud, stubborn until now, yielded and retreated chased by the sun. Serendipitously I’d just reached the area that the Grayling had frequented earlier and so I left the path and strode into the middle of heath in readiness for the sun to strike, found a likely looking clump of Heather and stood and waited. Almost immediately that the sun struck the butterflies appeared. First there were the flappy Meadow Browns, a Small Heath put in an appearance possibly just to get its name on the tally for the day and a few aged Silver-studs, well past their best fluttered weakly around the heather tops. The best thing about all of this was that I hadn’t moved from the spot but standing and watching doesn’t get images on the memory card. The easiest to go for were the Silver-studs as they were nicely placed on the very clump that had seemed a likely spot. The males had lost all of their fringes and it was left to the females to put on a bit of a show – moving their wings to catch the sun and glisten with that glorious oily sheen that they have.

- No 5




As the sun strengthened again the Grayling started to appear from wherever it is they go and I settled into a routine. Spot a Grayling, start stalking it, put up a different Grayling so try and stalk that one, put up a different Grayling…After walking round in circles across the whole ‘field’ I stopped playing their game and when the next Grayling took off I followed it unerringly until it finally gave up landed and gave me a look of “well if you want to take my photo get on with it then”. This new habit proved much more successful and I was soon enjoying the Grayling accompanied to the clicks of shots stacking up on my memory card. As I shot away I noticed that the butterflies seemed to favour the same spots but I couldn’t tell if it was the same butterfly holding a territory or whether certain spots just had the equivalent of the Grayling X factor? One particular favoured spot was some dead twigs one of which looked like the head of a serpent and another still the dead heather looked like some pieces of discarded Leylandi. I don’t know how many different individuals I saw and the only one I could really be sure of not double counting was ole ‘Slackjaw’, the first one I’d encountered but to be honest I was having too much fun to worry about the numbers. This species has to be one of, if not, my favourite speices – it has the entire package; gorgeous and different habitat, a brilliant flight period through the warmest part of the year, cryptic colouration, great range of variation (black and white through to golden browns) a great way of flying and plenty of character to boot – what’s not to love?






The sun beat down, the clock ticked by almost as quickly as my camera clicked and I started to feel the little prickle of a thirst headache forming and so reluctantly I shuffled back along the dusty track homewards. However as it oft the way the wildlife had other ideas. As I was climbing back up the now sun drenched and desiccated track I stopped momentarily to have a look back at where I’d come, pleased with the view and the amount of progress I’d made I turned to carry on and then a tiny jewel caught my eye. It was the stunning little Jewel wasp that I’d encountered on the same stretch of path last year but unlike last year it was much more amenable to my advances. A fittingly brillian end to a brilliant trip out.
I never did get back to Godshill during the rest of the season despite wanting to revisit so next year helpfully I’ll be able to make a couple of trips to make up for it…
A glorious day
Coconut scent and heather
Graylings at Godshill
Have a goodun and stay safe
Wurzel