Maybe I'm getting a bit paranoid in my old age but I do wonder sometimes. A little while back I saw a lot of Marshies at one location, then when I went back a couple of days later there were only a few left. Sure it was cooler and cloudier so many were probably roosting but I started to get a little worried that my posts were being read by 'the wrong sort'. You know the ones with nets!
Today I went back to a place where recently I had seen Adonis Blues and saw none this time. It was warm and sunny so the weather could not be the excuse this time. I spent a long while searching for them too, not just a walk by.
From now on, just to be on the safe side, my future posts will not include location information. If anyone wants to know a location please send me a personal message and if you post regularly on this website I will answer.
Today I did see Marbled White, Large Skip, Dingy Skip, S Heath, S Blue, Common Blue, Meadow Brown, Silver Y and Cinnabar.
I managed to get a butterfly/orchid combo shot. This is a Large Skipper on a Fragrant Orchid.
I am beginning to develop a new theory about butterflies and moths. Today was not the first time it happened to me but let me tell you this example. I was watching a Cinnabar Moth in flight zig-zagging about. It was very difficult to keep track of and it didn't stop. It ducked behind a small bush momentarily and my eyes blinked for a second. The next thing was it had miraculously transformed itself into a Meadow Brown - it was on the same flight path and the same height above ground, but now on the other side of the bush. No Cinnabar to be seen. As I say, this is not the first time I have witnessed such an event and will probably not be my last. Has anyone else seen this strange phenomenon?
It kind of explains why there are so many Meadow Browns!
