A tip-off from Alan Thornbury of Glanvilles in Surrey sent me scurrying back to Wrecclesham this morning for the fourth time this year. On the shady pathway lead-in to the site, a solitary Speckled wood flew on ahead as it had done on all the previous visits. This time I hoped it would be a good omen ….. and it was

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Within five minutes I spotted a Glanville nectaring on buttercup, but with the cameras in their bags to protect them from impending rain, the butterfly had made off before I was properly set up . My daughter Izzy came along with me and was very helpful with looking after my camera bags, lens caps, moving obstructing blades of grass etc. She was also kitted with a raincoat which proved a wise move as the clouds came over and the heavens sprinkled.
In the interim period of finding another Glanville I snapped those two grassland favourites: the Burnet Companion and the Mother Shipton moths, the overcast conditions keeping them reasonably quiet.

- Burnet Companion

- 'old hag face'

- Small Noctuid, Tawny Marbled minor perhaps? any ideas?
Later on the persistent searching paid off as I spotted a male Glanville on a thistle

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- Male Glanville with slight wing damage
The torn wing may have been a result of a wind blown crash landing into this prickly plant

.The butterfly was quite torpid until the sun returned. A couple of minutes of solar blast and the butterfly fluttered rapidly from daisy to daisy, belying it's behaviour earlier.

- On onoe of the plentiful Ox-eyed daisys
Further searching got me another male, this one is better nick than the previous

- Glanville No. two
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After 2 hours searching I reckoned I'd saeen only two butterflies … not the great numbers of last year but possibly more to come?