Cheers Pauline

The butterfly itself adopted a pose that was perfectly perpendicular so all I had to do was kneel and click
Cheers Goldie

Hopefully the fortnight of high pressure will turn out to be more than a rumour, fingers crossed
Cheers Neil

That's one of the advantages of not having a garden - you have to make those sneaky stop-offs

Another method of sneaky butterflying is detailed below...
Martin Down 03-05-2014
I’d planned to meet Philzoid on the Sunday for our now annual meet up at Bentley Wood for Pearls and so when I woke up to wall to wall blue skies on Saturday I wondered how I would wangle some butterflying? That’s the thing with this time of year – everything seems to emerge at once and you have to work around the unpredictable weather. Come August pretty much everything has emerged and there is a more relaxed feel to my trips. Then I remembered that I had already arranged to visit my parents in the afternoon and so we were stopping off for a picnic at Martin Down on the way – such foresight!
We pulled into the main car park on the Blandford Road and made our way along the path heading towards the rifle butts. As you come through the scrubs there is a little haven just off to the left of the main path which we’ve visited before and as it offers shelter form the breeze and springy, spongy grass that’s where we headed. While we ate various butterflies passed by just within my vision and every now and then I’d take a brief break from eating, saunter a few steps and take a few shots before returning to the rug to continue my lunch. So over the course of lunch I saw 2 Grizzlies, a male Brimstone and my first Dingy of 2014



While my wife relaxed in the sun I took a quick stroll with my older daughter and investigated the edges of the large island of scrub and Hawthorns that we’d set up camp in. On the left hand side there was another couple of Grizzlies and a pair of Brimstones and on the right hand side more Brimstones and also my first Small Copper of the year which didn’t stop. One male Brimstone did and it acted as a perch for a Nettle moth. A second thought about joining the first but as it settled the Brimstone had had enough and took off scattering butterflies and moths in all directions.

I headed back and swapped daughters and after finding my second Dingy we both set off to the right hand side again hoping to relocate the Small Copper. Back at the scallop where the Brimstones had been there were a few whites and another pair of Brimstones, both males who started to pursue a female as she arrived. She wasn’t having any of it and quickly saw them off and the reason became clear as she started ovi-positing.
The Small Copper did a fly-by so I left the female to ensure the next generation and tried to follow the Copper. I’d forgotten just how active they can be as my last encounter before today was back in October when they were tired, cold and aged. Luckily this one settled pretty quickly but I could tell that it was nervous because it didn’t close its wings fully but propped them three quarters open for a quick take off. I think I can detect small faint blue spots on the hind wings?
We then packed up and made our way back to the car and on way a Specklie landed on the path. It looked quite washed out suggesting that it has been out for a while yet this is only the second time that I’ve seen them this year. Have they been there all along just keeping their heads down while I’ve been to other sites or trapped indoors by renovations or the weather?
Bentley tomorrow - will there be Pearls?
Have a goodun
Wurzel