Cheers Goldie

Good luck in Kent with your Essex...if you know what I mean
WB Larkhill 29-06-2015
29-06
Today saw a change in the guard with the blues being replaced by plenty of the summer browns. Brown Argus and Common Blues are still about but in much reduced numbers now whereas Marbled Whites, Ringlets, Meadow Browns and Small Skippers are all over the site!
30-06 AM
More of the same this morning but I headed down the Westbound Path for a change. I’m tempted to say that all the Smessex that I encountered were Smalls as that’s what some proved to be on closer examination. Plus only saw my first Essex yesterday so I’ll have to keep knackering my knees, risking Tick bites and checking for those ‘dabs’. It was already noticeably warmer than any time so far this year and this was at only 8!
I must send out a big ‘Thank you’ to two sets of people – those that didn’t bother to set the temporary traffic lights at Larkhill up properly and second to the phallus head that refused to move even though 8 minutes is a bit long to be waiting at traffic lights!
01-07 PM
Quick stop off and set off down the Eastbound path. I’d barely crossed the threshold from the car park into the grasses when I saw a Small Tort being harassed by something much bigger, faster and bright ginger in colour – my first DGF of 2015 and possibly ever for Larkhill. The only drawback was that due to almost 30°C heat and the glaring sun it was so super charged it didn’t stop at all. Still great to see!
A further walk down the path meant I also added all the usual summer specialities as well as an aged couple of Common Blues plus a trip of Small Torts (making it four if the original harassed one was a different individual) and a lonesome male Brimstone. I still couldn’t get the DGF out of my head, hopefully I’ll be able to get out at the weekend, and so I struggled to do anything more than watch the butterflies as one would set of a couple and then another couple and so on in a lepidopteral chain reaction.
02-07 AM
A very brief stop this morning with a decidedly damp feel; I thought the mornings of having to drive to work with wet trousers legs had passed for another year? I concentrated my efforts up the Northbound path this morning as that was where the DGF was last seen yesterday and I was hoping to catch it roosting – well we can but dream. As I wandered up the freshly grazed path the odd Ringlet would fly but it wasn’t until I got to the first large bush that I started seeing Marbled Whites, clustered together amongst the long grasses. There were a few Meadow Browns here but as it was cooler and much damper than yesterday not a sniff of a Skipper. I made my way back accompanied by Marbled Whites, Ringlets and Meadow Browns flitting up from the grasses nearby like little clouds of smoke.
PM
As I pulled into the car park the cloud cleared and the sun came out – I’m not used to the weather being on my side! I set off down the Eastbound path determined to make it to the ‘dip’ and checking every Knapweed that I saw on the way. Butterflies were flying everywhere this afternoon; in fact it was almost impossible to count the Marbled Whites, Ringlets and Meadow Browns. I did see two Small Tortoiseshells, a few lingering Large Skippers and also at one point a (possibly the?) DGF but again it was tearing by at full throttle. However for me today the real stars of the show were the Small Skippers, they seemed to be everywhere and I couldn’t take more than a few steps before golden blurs whizzed past me in all directions it was a joy to behold!
03-07 AM
Despite the grass being wet it was already hot and humid first thing. I checked out the Eastbound path and a few paces into the long grass I started putting up Ringlets. As I got further in Marbled Whites joined them along with Meadow Browns and the occasional blur of a Smessex Skipper. They’re usually easier to approach during my morning visits but the heat this morning meant that they were still pretty flighty. Even so I was able to approach a couple and they turned out to be Essex Skippers! And now the knee and back busting work of trying to ID and count Smalls and Essex separately as opposed to lumping them all as Smessex!
PM
By the afternoon visit the heat had really risen and it was baking. I wandered down the path in something of a daze, bewildered by the masses of butterflies that surrounded me. The Browns must be having a fantastic year as the main three species are in fantastic numbers. The golden Skippers aren’t that far behind either! Additional species this afternoon came in the form of 2 Small Torts, 8 Small Heaths and the rascally DGF that keeps flitting by at breakneck speed, never stopping just taunting me!
I had to call in at my sister in-laws on the way home and while she was collecting up the bits to pass onto my wife I got called into the garden by my niece. Apparently there was a butterfly that didn’t fly away but just moved its wing when she touched it. It turned out not to be a butterfly at all but a monstrous Privet Hawk Moth, as big as my hand it was, and I know as I helped it first onto the table for some shots and then onto the fence so it could seek some shelter.
Have a goodun
Wurzel