It was home turf again on 10th October, as it would be thereafter this year (barring something unusual happening very late on

Red Admiral 13
Common Blue 7
Small White 5
Brown Argus 4
Peacock 2
Speckled Wood 2
Comma 2
Large White 1
GVW 1
Small Copper 1
Painted Lady 1
The last butterfly on this list was a pleasant surprise. There had been one or two among the Red Admirals in the peak of their southward journey ten days earlier, but this one was flying alone and looked fresher. I also haven't seen another since.
Green-veined Whites have not matched the numbers of Small Whites seen recently, so this rather worn example was a bonus... ...and this Small Copper had also seen better days. The two Commas were putting off hibernation until the warm weather ended... ...as were the Peacocks (but I didn't get any shots of those).
Everything else didn't have the option of a winter sleep, but were making the most of their extended season. With so many Red Admirals on offer, it was difficult not to include a few. However, the Common Blues were really the show stealers again. I'm guessing the September heatwave pushed their early stages right through to pupation, and the subsequent benign weather ensured that they survived to emerge during this October warm spell. Some had suffered a few minor nicks and scratches... ...but one or two looked almost new. This next one in particular was worthy of attention. Reviewing these photos four weeks later on 7th November, when I had just photographed the last Common Blues of the year, made me wonder if this particular butterfly was the one I'd been seeing regularly at the end of October and into November. One thing I could say for certain is that they were seen in the same spot - within a few metres - because of the timings of context photos taken. When thoroughly zoomed, there are one or two minor blemishes on the fresh butterfly that seem to persist and appear on the elderly one. This could be wishful thinking, but I saw no other butterflies fresher than this one on this spot in the weeks in between... I reckon it's the same one. Four weeks is a good life for a small butterfly; I suppose because of shorter days and fewer properly sunny hours, its total active hours would be shorter than in earlier broods, and there may well be fewer predators around too.
Dave