Cheers Wurzel, I hope you had a good time at Lulworth. I've not seen Lulworth Skippers for a few years no and won't get chance this year. One to look forward to next year maybe.
Thanks David, I bet there are some cracking moths flying on the continent, I've no idea how many specie are there but if the ratio is anything like that with butterflies there must be thousands.
Thanks Pauline, the more I look at our butterflies the more I am finding that they have a surprising degree of natural variation.
Saturday 1st June.
The first day of meteorological summer and the forecast was for it to be potentially the hottest day of the year, at least for the southern half of the country with the transition in conditions looking to be somewhere across the midlands. After the grey and gloomy bank holiday followed by a week stuck indoors at work I was itching to get out, although I knew I would not have the time to go far and would have to stick to my local patch.
During the morning, as I was keeping on top of the household chores, I kept an eye out in the garden as usual and spotted a male Speckled Wood in residence. As mentioned in my previous report, the spring brood of Specklies has merged into the follow on brood here in my garden this year which means I am not seeing the short gap between broods that I sometimes do.

- Speckled Wood male - Coverdale 01.06.2019
By late morning I had done all that I was going to do around the house for the day and after grabbing a quick sandwich I went out. I wanted to check out a spot I had first visited in August last year and where I had found the highest numbers of Common Blues for any of my local sites. This is by a business park on the outskirts of Solihull where there is a lot of building development going on but where some pathways have been retained through woodland and meadows around the perimeter of the site. I believe these are going to form the basis of a 'country park' when the development is finished.
On arrival, I walked along a path across a first grassy meadow, seeing a couple of Common Blues and Burnet Companion Moths but didn't linger long as I wanted to carry on through a wooded section to another area that had been far more productive last year. Going through the wooded part of the path I spotted a couple of Speckled Wood dancing about in the dappled shade and coming to a long sunny stretch I noticed a rather worn Comma basking at the side of the path.

- Comma - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
During the afternoon I also saw a couple of elderly Peacocks still hanging in there, although by then it had become rather warm and muggy under thin high level cloud and they where very active and kept their wings firmly closed when they did settle.

- Peacock - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
I also saw a few Orange-tips, at least a couple of males patrolling the edges of the wooded areas plus two or three females, although these were all looking like they were getting on a bit now.

- Orange-tip male - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Orange-tip male - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Orange-tip female - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Orange-tip female - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
Anyway, I had come here to look for Common Blues and hopefully Small Coppers and Brown Argus, these being about as exotic as it gets around my local patch in what is actually a rather species poor area compared to the more favoured parts of the country.
I was happy to find good numbers of Common Blues, approx 25-30 all told scattered around various parts of the site. These were mostly fresh looking males with just two females seen, one of which was part of a mating pair, the other one flying off across a pond before I could get a photo but she looked to be very fresh and a of the typical half brown/half blue type.

- Common Blue - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Common Blue - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Common Blue pair - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
A couple of Small Coppers were seen, both of which were a bit worn around the fringes. These were both males and although like everything else they were very active, once you spot their favoured perches they will keep returning to the same spots.

- Small Copper - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Small Copper - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Small Copper - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
I was particularly pleased to find a Brown Argus, these being very hit and miss around Solihull with some years not showing up here at all. This is the second local site where I have found them already this year which is better than normal as I usually only find a few second brood around here, that is when I find them at all.

- Brown Argus - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Brown Argus - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
A few passing whites were seen with some of them proving to be female Orange-tips but at least one was confirmed as a Green-veined White albeit a rather faded one..

- Green-veined White - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
I have still only seen a few of these so far this year, maybe half a dozen at most with Large and Small Whites being even scarcer with only a couple of each seen.
Burnet Companion Moths were all over the place during the afternoon and very flighty in the warm conditions making them even more difficult to approach than usual. I didn't count them but they were the most common lepidoptera seen during the afternoon with loads flying in all the open grassy areas of the site.

- Burnet Companion - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019

- Burnet Companion - Blythe Valley 01.06.2019
There were also a few Mother Shipton Moths seen but nowhere near the numbers of the Burnet Companions.
After wandering about for a couple of hours, it had become very warm with the temperature in the low to mid twenties plus a fair amount of high level cloud was making it feel muggy and uncomfortable so I decided to call it a day and head home.
Bye for now,
Neil.