That'll be ab. obsoleta - looking forward to the photosGibster wrote:We did find a Small Copper with entirely black uppersides to the hindwings ...

Cheers,
- Pete
That'll be ab. obsoleta - looking forward to the photosGibster wrote:We did find a Small Copper with entirely black uppersides to the hindwings ...
The plant is lime-loving and appears to find cement a suitable growing medium. In the abandoned limestone quarries around here it grows in profusion. Oddly, I've rarely seen butterflies attracted to it in numbers, though Silver Y moths love it.David M wrote:Been a lovely day in Abergavenny today. Saw one Red Admiral on some Valerian (why does it always seem to grow on the tops of walls?), several Small Whites fluttering by and a solitary Speckled Wood in the park.
Ah! Well, you learn something new every day. It spooks me because there's absolutely no soil on these walls yet the plant thrives.Matsukaze wrote:The plant is lime-loving and appears to find cement a suitable growing medium. In the abandoned limestone quarries around here it grows in profusion. Oddly, I've rarely seen butterflies attracted to it in numbers, though Silver Y moths love it.David M wrote:Been a lovely day in Abergavenny today. Saw one Red Admiral on some Valerian (why does it always seem to grow on the tops of walls?), several Small Whites fluttering by and a solitary Speckled Wood in the park.
I have tried seeding some of the walls locally with horseshoe vetch in the hope that it too would like the conditions, but have yet to have any success with this. A shame, as it would open interesting possibilities as regards urban Adonis Blue colonies.
Yes - definitely Red Valerian, even though it looks pink!millerd wrote:Is this Valerian? These little chaps were all over the stuff down near the seafront in Ventnor in June...Dave
YepLee Hurrell wrote:Hi, Is this also Red Valerian? Cheers Lee
That's rarer than your comma ab. d-album Vince, there are only a couple of these Spits in the UK..! One sold recently at auction for a shade under 2 million. Which isn't too bad considering a Merlin 70 engine will sell for £250k in good nick. People like dropping them into vintage Bentleys. Once detuned to about 1,100 bhp you have a nippy little motor on your hands...Vince Massimo wrote:The highlight of the morning was a two-seat Spitfire making two passes at cliff height with a lucky punter in the back.
Vince Massimo wrote:The highlight of the morning was a two-seat Spitfire making two passes at cliff height with a lucky punter in the back.
Spitfires, including the two-seat version, are not rare here. We see them all the time operating from Duxford a mere 6 miles away.That's rarer than your comma ab. d-album Vince
I daresay Spitfire pilots would generally be allowed to bend these rules with relative impunity. I mean, imagine the backlash if the Daily Mail headline read "WWII fighter plane pilot fined and banned from the air for dropping 60 feet too low" (particularly if the sub headline was about benefit scroungers with 11 kids earning £100k off the taxpayer)Jack Harrison wrote: Although as a retired professional I really should know the rules about minimum heights, etc, my memory is conveniently hazyJack
I live very close by a small airfield (and it literally is little more than a field) and we have all manner of weird and wonderful craft flying over. I not sure of their originality but first world war bi-planes are not uncommon and can on occasion little more than skim the roof tops. It's always an experience as their spluttering engines go over and you wonder if they will make it this time!David M wrote:I daresay Spitfire pilots would generally be allowed to bend these rules with relative impunity. I mean, imagine the backlash if the Daily Mail headline read "WWII fighter plane pilot fined and banned from the air for dropping 60 feet too low" (particularly if the sub headline was about benefit scroungers with 11 kids earning £100k off the taxpayer)Jack Harrison wrote: Although as a retired professional I really should know the rules about minimum heights, etc, my memory is conveniently hazyJack
Another one pushing her luck. I was a bit worried that she may take off into the web above her but I am happy to say tha a few seconds after the photo was taken she flitted off safely.Jack Harrison wrote:Pushing his luck. But can butteflies see spiders' webs?
Jack