Back home from Yorkshire, and all the angst around the loss of my laptop - compounded on 24th August by what has been a bit unusual down here since mid-July, a wet day.
However,
Sunday 25th was much better, with 8 hours of sunshine, though temperatures only reached 22 degrees locally. I set about renewing my acquaintance with my local patch (a lot can happen in nearly a week) and did a lengthy circuit. I found around 85 butterflies of 11 species, with the recently-discovered patch still boasting numbers of Common Blue and Brown Argus, plus a bonus butterfly joining them, a Small Copper.
This was clearly not a new butterfly, but I'd not spotted it on my previous recent visits though as a male on territory it had almost certainly been flying around the same spot.
I initially concentrated on the Brown Argus, which included a few new-looking examples - like this female.
I was not the only one that had taken an interest...
...
After all this attention, she left backwards, with the attentive male remaining on the flower.
A few of the others seen.
The Brown Argus outnumbered the Common Blues 3:2 today, and all the later looked a little worn...
...or a lot.
It was good to see a selection of fresh Small Heaths - apparently a third brood of this species (the second brood had two distinct peaks as well, so it may be more complicated).
Also notable today were the three species of Whites, with fresh examples of each - though I managed shots of only two of them.
Holly Blue numbers have been down in their second brood, but they are still almost everywhere in their reduced numbers.
The other species seen today:Meadow Brown, Speckled Wood, Red Admiral and Small White.
I suspected I might be stuck on my local patch for a few days now, as the car was headed garagewards for a service, MOT and in response to one of those nagging warning messages from the engine...

Oh well, at least there appears to be no shortage of butterflies at the moment.
Dave