



Have a goodun
Wurzel
Yes, with the lack of bright sunshine it particularly stood out - almost a luminous shining red against the green of the grass. A beautiful insect.
Interesting statistics, Dave. Certainly, September has become far warmer than it was in my youth (as have October & November).millerd wrote: ↑Sat Oct 28, 2023 7:55 pm..Here are the rough average daily maxima for Heathrow, with the long-term averages in brackets: 1991-2020 first, and 1961-1990 next, just to show how things are changing.
June 25.3 (21.6; 20.4)
July 22.9 (23.9; 22.5)
August 23.0 (23.4; 22.0)
September 24.4 (20.2; 19.3)
The Coppers continued to perform right through October too, Trevor - a great late season species. As for Cloudies, as you may have seen in another thread, one finally turned up on my local patch yesterday. My only one of 2023. A week's worth of posts to go before Lancing, but I look forward to writing that one - a real highlight of the year.
No, you're quite right, David. The Met Office say that as far as they can tell, this is the first time on record that July has been the fourth warmest month of the year. The order (June, September, August, July) is unprecedented. I find it interesting that though July was slightly cooler than the average for the most recent reference period (1991-2020), it was actually warmer than the previous one (1961-1990).