Thanks
Trevor, it does seem they all faired quite well.
Thanks
Wurzel, yes I got handed a bit of luck there
Thanks
David, I find that’s a thing with all the Hairstreaks, once they’ve properly plugged themselves into a tasty nectar source you can get right up into their palpi!
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June 2023
Tuesday 27th. An ex-work colleague (who happened to have the winning combination of a driving licence and a car) had long wanted to visit Knepp to see some of its avian specialities, so what better time for us to both go than peak Emperor season! We arrived a bit later than planned due to an unfortunate decision by one of us to try and meet at Gatwick station, really dumb! Anyway we arrived around 11 and immediately set off looking for (as far as I was concerned) Emperors. Since neither of us had been here before it was lucky we arrived at a similar time as a couple of other Emperor hunters so we set off in the direction they went in. One of the avian species which we both hoped to see were the re-introduced White Stork, which as it turns out are pretty hard to miss, so much so you’d probably have to walk around with your eye’s closed to miss them!

- 2 black billed Juveniles and an adult on the right with the red bill.


We still hadn’t seen an Emperor after wandering through various fields and hedgerows for half an hour or so but a familiar figure up ahead gave us confidence we were in the right place. hovering expectantly around a sunny, sheltered corner, much like an Emperor, we found a Mr Hulme who was only too happy to let us know of his encounters in recent days including a good old trousering earlier in the morning. Cloud cover had unfortunately increased at this point and things had gone quiet, but he was able to point us in the direction of some other good areas and it wasn’t long after that were caught sight of a few souring around. However, cloud cover persisted so a grounding was unlikely. Instead we switched to looking for one of the other Avian specialities. Having refreshed our ears of its call from everyone’s friend, Mr Google, we went off wandering along one of the many Oak lined paths that border the fields of the site. Right at the end and just as we were about to head back we heard exactly what we were after and it didn’t take much looking to find the handsome male Turtle Dove, our second avian lifer of the day.

After he and what we presumed to be his mate flew off we found we were also being watched. A very handsome Roe buck with an impressive set of antlers was casually peering through some undergrowth at us, inadvertently giving us a pretty good Bambi impression.
Also we noticed about half a dozen Emperors patrolling some of the surrounding Oaks, the cloud cover was starting to break up a bit at last

.
We headed back in the direction of Neil but took a slight detour and found another cluster of Emperors flying around some Oaks in the corner of a field, perhaps as many as a dozen. I took a few distant shots of some perched up high, but I kept a close eye on one that seemed to prefer to stay low. I saw him nip round a corner and as I followed him I found him settled much lower than the others, close enough to catch the occasional flash of purple. A few shots in the can I called my friend over to get a closer look through her bins.
It was at this point that she said, casual as you like, “there’s a pair mating up there”. In the greenery underneath the perched male, secreted in the shadows was indeed a ‘Pushmi-pullyu’ Emperor! Not the best position to get shots but I wasn’t going to complain

.
After taking a shedload of very similar pictures we went back to where we last saw Neil to find him still there, and upon returning after showing him the mating pair we had a brief grounding from the one Neil had been playing with all day. Not as sunny as we’d hoped for but a fine day nonetheless, and after a rough count of around 40-50 individuals in below par weather, I can see how three figure counts can be easily attained if you know all the best spots!