Marseilles checklist 2014
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
That olive grove looks positively intoxicating, Chris.
You seem to have a real treasure trove on your doorstep.
You seem to have a real treasure trove on your doorstep.
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
You're right David, I'm spoilt for choice, I alternate my lunchtimes at work in the scrub and in the olive grove. If it has rained, I avoid the olive grove.
Sunday 13 April 2014
No new species this weekend, although I think I saw a Small Blue (I will not tick it off my checklist yet).
Nonetheless I must share these photos.
This is not a male Orange Tip - it is a female Moroccan (Provence) O.T. (euphenoides): Moroccan O.T.s courting: Plus a Broad bordered Bee Hawk Moth: Cheers, Chris
Sunday 13 April 2014
No new species this weekend, although I think I saw a Small Blue (I will not tick it off my checklist yet).
Nonetheless I must share these photos.
This is not a male Orange Tip - it is a female Moroccan (Provence) O.T. (euphenoides): Moroccan O.T.s courting: Plus a Broad bordered Bee Hawk Moth: Cheers, Chris
- LancsRover
- Posts: 552
- Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 10:55 am
- Location: CHORLEY, LANCASHIRE
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Hi Chris, I like the GLANVILLE and I see you are getting into moths,great shot of the BEE HAWK MOTH.
Cheers Russ

Cheers Russ
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
You really are spoiled, Chris.
How have you managed to carve such a niche for yourself?
How have you managed to carve such a niche for yourself?
- NickMorgan
- Posts: 918
- Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2010 5:07 pm
- Location: Scottish Borders
- Contact:
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
I love that Moroccan Orange Tip. It is a butterfly that I would love to see, but I am never there at the right time of year!
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Thanks Nick,
Yes, euphenoides' domain is restricted and its flight period is short (only 1 brood in France). You really have to be in the right place at the right time. I was over the moon when I managed to get a male and a female photo, top and underside!.
Chris
Hi Russ,
There's a photo coming up below that's for you - a souvenir of your Spain trip! I always said that I was about 2 weeks behind schedule compared with Spain.
Chris
Hi David,
Its a long story about how I ended up down here - 28 years ago in my mid twenties I decided to quit Leicester and my dull office job in a dull town. All I wanted to do was further my French and teach windsurfing (and be in the sun), so I applied to an ad from France for an English-speaking windsurfing instructor. I had no ties and was ready for 'total immersion'. I suppose I landed on my feet and now I'm back in an office job but in France, with a French wife, 2 kids and our own place... That's destiny for you. I do miss fish and chips though, etc. etc.!
Cheers, Chris
Yes, euphenoides' domain is restricted and its flight period is short (only 1 brood in France). You really have to be in the right place at the right time. I was over the moon when I managed to get a male and a female photo, top and underside!.
Chris
Hi Russ,
There's a photo coming up below that's for you - a souvenir of your Spain trip! I always said that I was about 2 weeks behind schedule compared with Spain.
Chris
Hi David,
Its a long story about how I ended up down here - 28 years ago in my mid twenties I decided to quit Leicester and my dull office job in a dull town. All I wanted to do was further my French and teach windsurfing (and be in the sun), so I applied to an ad from France for an English-speaking windsurfing instructor. I had no ties and was ready for 'total immersion'. I suppose I landed on my feet and now I'm back in an office job but in France, with a French wife, 2 kids and our own place... That's destiny for you. I do miss fish and chips though, etc. etc.!
Cheers, Chris
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Monday April 14th
SPECIES No. 28: Spanish Festoon (rumina)
Lunchtime at work again, blue skies and in the low twenties. This species is a first-ever for me. Never in my wildest dreams did I expect to see one of these. Unfortunately it loves to perch in prickly rocky places so I did suffer a bit to get these photos. Context (prickly bushes): Cheers, Chris
SPECIES No. 28: Spanish Festoon (rumina)
Lunchtime at work again, blue skies and in the low twenties. This species is a first-ever for me. Never in my wildest dreams did I expect to see one of these. Unfortunately it loves to perch in prickly rocky places so I did suffer a bit to get these photos. Context (prickly bushes): Cheers, Chris
- Lee Hurrell
- Stock Contributor
- Posts: 2423
- Joined: Mon May 25, 2009 7:33 pm
- Location: Hampshire
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Lovely Moroccan Orange Tip shots, Chris. I will call them that until I see one in France as I saw my first in Morocco last year
Great capture of the Broad bordered Bee Hawk Moth too.
Best wishes,
Lee

Great capture of the Broad bordered Bee Hawk Moth too.
Best wishes,
Lee
To butterfly meadows, chalk downlands and leafy glades; to summers eternal.
- CFB
- Posts: 590
- Joined: Mon Oct 03, 2011 8:06 pm
- Location: Valbonne, Alpes-Maritimes, France
- Contact:
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Hello Chris and others,
I had hoped to see a Spanish Festoon or two this morning, but failed miserably. I have a couple of spots where I have seen them the last three years, but last year there were very few of them (because of the bad weather?), and I wasn't very optimistic for this year. But there is still plenty of time I suppose.
I did however see my first Moroccan/Provence Orange Tip of the year (#25), which was dashing furiously around, but I managed a long distance shot:
I also saw what I suppose is a Clouded Yellow f. helice (I will surely get corrected if it isn't), which allowed me to get very close:
--
Colin
I had hoped to see a Spanish Festoon or two this morning, but failed miserably. I have a couple of spots where I have seen them the last three years, but last year there were very few of them (because of the bad weather?), and I wasn't very optimistic for this year. But there is still plenty of time I suppose.
I did however see my first Moroccan/Provence Orange Tip of the year (#25), which was dashing furiously around, but I managed a long distance shot:
I also saw what I suppose is a Clouded Yellow f. helice (I will surely get corrected if it isn't), which allowed me to get very close:
--
Colin
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Well done you!cjackson wrote: Its a long story about how I ended up down here - 28 years ago in my mid twenties I decided to quit Leicester and my dull office job in a dull town. All I wanted to do was further my French and teach windsurfing (and be in the sun), so I applied to an ad from France for an English-speaking windsurfing instructor. I had no ties and was ready for 'total immersion'. I suppose I landed on my feet and now I'm back in an office job but in France, with a French wife, 2 kids and our own place... That's destiny for you. I do miss fish and chips though, etc. etc.!
I guess you're more French than English these days. You're also in a pretty decent area for wildlife by the looks of things.
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Thanks Lee,
Bee hawk moths are more docile than Humming bird hawk moths, which makes photos a lot easier.
David,
Its a one-way journey; once you're here you can't afford to go back, house prices, .... wages ....
However, I love the Mediterranean flora and fauna. Garrigue (scrubland) rhyms with wasteland but it is far from that - there are loads of plants and insects to admire.
Colin,
If you're used to seeing rumina most years, I'm sure they'll be along shortly. This is the first time I've seen one around my way in 3 years so perhaps its a bumper year!! Well done for the Moroccan OT; I think that they tend to calm down 2 weeks after their initial appearance - better for photos!! I think your Clouded Yellow is more than helice, but I'm notoriously bad for my opinions. If no expert turns up, I'd post it in "Identification" to get a better reaction.
EDITO : After looking in T&L, it does look like helice!!
Chris
Bee hawk moths are more docile than Humming bird hawk moths, which makes photos a lot easier.
David,
Its a one-way journey; once you're here you can't afford to go back, house prices, .... wages ....
However, I love the Mediterranean flora and fauna. Garrigue (scrubland) rhyms with wasteland but it is far from that - there are loads of plants and insects to admire.
Colin,
If you're used to seeing rumina most years, I'm sure they'll be along shortly. This is the first time I've seen one around my way in 3 years so perhaps its a bumper year!! Well done for the Moroccan OT; I think that they tend to calm down 2 weeks after their initial appearance - better for photos!! I think your Clouded Yellow is more than helice, but I'm notoriously bad for my opinions. If no expert turns up, I'd post it in "Identification" to get a better reaction.
EDITO : After looking in T&L, it does look like helice!!
Chris
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Quite.cjackson wrote: Its a one-way journey; once you're here you can't afford to go back, house prices, .... wages ....
However, I love the Mediterranean flora and fauna. Garrigue (scrubland) rhyms with wasteland but it is far from that - there are loads of plants and insects to admire.
I guess once you're established a permanent return soon becomes unthinkable.
I mean, why would anyone swap a guaranteed 5 month long hot summer for the climatic vagaries we experience even in the warmer parts of the UK?
- Padfield
- Administrator
- Posts: 8374
- Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
- Location: Leysin, Switzerland
- Contact:
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Some lovely butterflies being posted in this thread.
Colin's Colias looks to me like a male Berger's. By general shape and appearance it is Berger's and it does seem the dark margin on the upperside ducks outside the black spots without enclosing a pale spot. Colour is notoriously difficult to judge in photos but the constancy of the yellow underside and the apparently yellow upperside count against helice.
Guy
Colin's Colias looks to me like a male Berger's. By general shape and appearance it is Berger's and it does seem the dark margin on the upperside ducks outside the black spots without enclosing a pale spot. Colour is notoriously difficult to judge in photos but the constancy of the yellow underside and the apparently yellow upperside count against helice.
Guy
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
- CFB
- Posts: 590
- Joined: Mon Oct 03, 2011 8:06 pm
- Location: Valbonne, Alpes-Maritimes, France
- Contact:
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Hello Guy,Padfield wrote:Colin's Colias looks to me like a male Berger's.
Thanks for the ID.
--
Colin
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Wednesday April 16th - 18°C, blue skies, cool wind from South
SPECIES No. 29: Western Marbled White (occitanica)
SPECIES No. 30: Red-underwing Skipper (sertorius)
First sightings this year. A lunchtime walk in the scrub at work came up with both these, although the breeze didn't help for photos. The occitanica seemed excitable, possibly its first day. My records show it being 2 weeks in advance compared with last year - this species should be around until the 3rd week of June.
occitanica: sertorius: context for occitanica (I think the wavy grass is one of its host plants): Cheers, Chris
SPECIES No. 29: Western Marbled White (occitanica)
SPECIES No. 30: Red-underwing Skipper (sertorius)
First sightings this year. A lunchtime walk in the scrub at work came up with both these, although the breeze didn't help for photos. The occitanica seemed excitable, possibly its first day. My records show it being 2 weeks in advance compared with last year - this species should be around until the 3rd week of June.
occitanica: sertorius: context for occitanica (I think the wavy grass is one of its host plants): Cheers, Chris
Last edited by Chris Jackson on Sat Apr 19, 2014 7:15 am, edited 3 times in total.
- LancsRover
- Posts: 552
- Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 10:55 am
- Location: CHORLEY, LANCASHIRE
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Hi Chris, Well done with the Spanish Festoon, I bet you were really pleased with that one. I also found it in an area covered in small thorny shrubs about 18 inches high, that was probably why the 1st one I saw had a piece of wing missing?
I like the W.Marbled White and the Red-underwing too, I have never seen either of those
Cheers Russ.
I like the W.Marbled White and the Red-underwing too, I have never seen either of those

Cheers Russ.
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Well done with your occitanica, Chris.
You truly ARE blessed.
You truly ARE blessed.
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Hi Russ, when I saw my first Spanish Festoon I thought of you in Spain straight away - but now I have "joined the club"!!. I was lucky to get a good couple of photos on my first sighting - despite the prickles!!
The W. Marbled White is starting only now, but it should have been starting 2 weeks later.
Hi David, I was expecting occitanica in 2 weeks time. I will now note precisely its last week of flight this year (normally 3rd week of June) to see whether the lead or lag is consistent.
Good hunting.
Chris
The W. Marbled White is starting only now, but it should have been starting 2 weeks later.
Hi David, I was expecting occitanica in 2 weeks time. I will now note precisely its last week of flight this year (normally 3rd week of June) to see whether the lead or lag is consistent.
I do realise how lucky I am here in my little 'paradise' when I see how courageous and unwavering all you UKBFers are in following up your passion in the conditions that exist in the British Isles. I dont know whether I could muster up the same energy to follow this passion through if I were back in the UK. It is very humbling for me when you report your sightings in the UK with enthusiasm and when I see the images you all post back home.David M wrote:Well done with your occitanica, Chris.
You truly ARE blessed.
Good hunting.
Chris
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Friday April 18th
Lunchtime at work today it was overcast in Vitrolles though I managed to get a top shot of a Western Marbled White to go with the undershot higher up from Wednesday.
occitanica: No doubt because of the lack of sun, this female Baton Blue allowed me a topshot and underside shot with less running around than usual: Here are 2 context photos of the scrub today with a Tassel Hyacinth and Cistus salvifolius in flower:
Have a good weekend everyone
Cheers, Chris
Lunchtime at work today it was overcast in Vitrolles though I managed to get a top shot of a Western Marbled White to go with the undershot higher up from Wednesday.
occitanica: No doubt because of the lack of sun, this female Baton Blue allowed me a topshot and underside shot with less running around than usual: Here are 2 context photos of the scrub today with a Tassel Hyacinth and Cistus salvifolius in flower:
Have a good weekend everyone
Cheers, Chris
- LancsRover
- Posts: 552
- Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 10:55 am
- Location: CHORLEY, LANCASHIRE
Re: Marseilles checklist 2014
Hi Chris, great shot of the Baton Blue, and like you said they are very similar to the Panoptes Blue.
Have a good Easter.
Cheers Russ
Have a good Easter.
Cheers Russ