Thanks Wurzel and David.
Since my last post we had a few days of mixed, dry weather, followed by a
lot of rain. It looks as if this will clear up next week, but it hasn't made for good butterflying, or even dog-walking.
Before the rains came, on 19th September, I climbed the local hill a little, to the field where I found Dukes, grizzlies and various fritillaries back in May (when I came out for graduation). The site is at about 1700m and it was clear the butterfly season was over here. Only Adonis blues, clouded yellows and Berger's clouded yellows were about, and they only until a cloud crossed the sun and the world went cold!

(Adonis male)

(Adonis female)

(Berger's)

(Clouded yellow)
Lower down I saw a few very ancient great banded graylings!
I don't think I've seen any wild butterflies since then. Here is a local black redstart making the most of the grim weather:
So yesterday, to get a butterfly fix, I headed off (in the pouring rain) to the Papiliorama, in the hope of getting a 'lifer' - I usually manage to see and photograph one or two species I've not recorded before, and this is always interesting, even though it's a butterfly house. Yesterday, a rainy Saturday, there were more people than I've ever known there, but it was still worth the trip.
With lots of people around, photography is harder. but with a telephoto lens there are places you can stand and photograph things others miss:

(
Parthenos sylivia)
This species also has a blue form:
There were lots of butterflies clinging to the walls near the roof, out of the way of the visitors. These included several
Charaxes species, like this
Charaxes candiope (with a plain tiger):
I don't know what the eggs are. It always makes me sad to see eggs away from foodplants, but perhaps the caterpillars are intended to drop down when they hatch, the way silver-washed fritillary caterpillars climb down oak trees.
That was a 'lifer'. Another was
Archaeoprepona amphimachus:
Papilio dardanus is always present, with females in many of their different, mimetic forms. For a while, I took this butterfly, of which there were one or two present, to be female
dardanus:
But even though it flew like a Papilionid, it just didn't look right, and when I looked at that first photo I saw there were only four legs, so it had to be a Nymphalid. It is
Hypolimnas usambara. Here are two forms of
dardanus for comparison (both taken in 2014):
I last saw
Morpho peleides on a Spanish hillside - in July last year :
No sooner did I return to the UK that year than I got reports of another flying around Woodbridge. So I enjoyed seeing the species again in the Papiliorama, even though it is a butterfly house staple:
Maybe one day I'll see a blue morpho in its natural environment ...
A few other interesting species flying yesterday:

(
Catonephele numilia)

(
Eumaeus toxea from the southern States and Mexico - the only Lycaenid I've ever seen in the Papiliorama)

(
Doleschalia bisaltide)

(female
Vindula dejone)

(
Cethosia cyane)

(
Papilio demodocus)
As ever, I could go on. But it was interesting to see they had some moths too. I haven't got the resources to identify tropical moths, so if anyone knows what it is, please tell me!
The same complex houses a tropical zoo - something I am not at all keen on. The animals are in wonderful surroundings, and the Papiliorama raises huge amounts of money for conservation, especially in Belize, but I don't like seeing birds like this. These roseate spoonbills seemed happy enough wandering around their forest dome:
Guy