Yesterday afternoon, at 1 p.m., a Humming Bird Hawk Moth spent about ten minutes nectaring on flowers in my garden. I was able to get quite close to it and felt it was a tad undersized by about a few millimeters in wingspan. My son cut back the Red Valerian severely in the summer as the poor plants had been stripped of most of the foliage by manys dozens of moth larvae. I would guess they are Lesser Yellow Underwings and most reached maturity leaving the poor plants as stunted bare stalks. For the past month or so, these plants have been putting on a fine show of flowers having fully recovered from the larval attacks earlier... Good eh...

It is the first time I've seen this moth active on a cloudy but quite warm day. In the past, I have seen them take shelter in walls and grassy banks when the Sun suddenly is clouded over.
The moth also visited the spindly flower stems of the
Vebena bonariensis several times. This plant has been in flower most of the warmer months and was visited by a fine, large and freshly emerged Painted Lady the day before the Hummer appeared. Continuous sunshine that day and I half sighted a Hummer very briefly whilst working on one of my cars.
Today looks like being another fine one ~ will look for more garden activity ~ small group of Long Tailed Tits have passed through my garden each of the past few days ...
In a 'normal' season, I do not like this time of year with most things in decline and far too long dark nights. This Autumn's fine weather with still much to see and give pleasure both in the garden and elsewhere helps to make the winter that much shorter. In the past, i have photographed Red Admirals on a mild December day nectaring on the Lilly of the Valley like flower clusters on my Strawberry Trees.
Arbutus unedo on which i have raised numerous examples of Europe's largest butterfly, the Two-Tailed Pasha
Charaxes jasius.
I caught my very first Humming Bird Hawk Moth as a twelve year old schoolboy back as long ago as 1954.....

It was the first one I'd ever seen. I simply used a clean jam jar and placed it over the hovering moth whilst it was in front of the large bell shaped red
Petunia flowers. It continued hovering inside the jar until I released it. Many many sightings since, this delightful moth never fails to give pleasure when i see them in the garden.
Thirty years ago, an aged relative lived in a small cottage close to the shingle beach at Budleigh Salterton in South Devon. One visit there saw about a dozen of these hawk moths over the large Buddleias in her back garden. I sometimes observed Clouded Yellows coming in from the sea there and not stopping at all but continuing to fly strongly inland. A very strong flyer is the Clouded Yellow when on the move....