Hi boys,
I'm still enjoying all these posts, though now from Suffolk, where the sun is shining this morning (so might get my gatekeeper year tick!!

). Funny thing - I bumped into Pete Eeles in a pub near Victoria station yesterday and we had a good old chin wag. Young's bitter and chips - two other things (apart from gatekeepers) you can't get in Switzerland (with any luck I should be able to see Pete Eeles on migration there next summer).
I think that unidentified ringlet is quite possibly
aetheria (that is,
E. epiphron aetheria). It looks as if it has an ocellus in the forewing, which would rule out the other two species you mention. As you know,
mnestra does fly there, though I've only found it higher up. The other possibility is (at a pinch)
euryale. Males of this species in the Alps can be entirely without markings on the unh - not even the 'tooth' mark, and this species certainly flies where you saw it. The shape of the hindwing is hidden by foliage so I can't get the full jizz of that. But on the whole, I'd go for
epiphron.
I think you've done remarkable work on that dewy ringlet, Paul. I have to say, though, that the stems didn't distract me in the slightest! I only looked at the butterfly...
Guy