Cheers Goldie

They do seem to hang around more in the South, hopefully it'll be a good year for them or even better an invasion year, fingers crossed
End of Year Tally 2018
The new season has kind of started, it was all going so well and the British weather reverted to type and as I type this (3rd March) outside it’s cool, wet and very windy…Still this means that I might have a little time to get the Tally Posts up and running prior to the season getting back up and running…
This time last year I wrote that 2017 was “a funny old year” well if that was the case then 2018 was bloody hilarious! We had the mildest of winters in 2017-18 which almost felt like the way that I remembered Autumns in my youth. Then when things just seemed to actually be starting we suddenly got Winter – with snow and ice and plunging temperatures. This seemed to hold everything back and when Spring belatedly arrived most species were emerging late and seemed to be playing catch-up. As the weather went full bore towards Summer the temperatures sky rocketed and reached record levels but not only was it hot it was also really, really dry and in my area at least there was no June gap in 2018. After this things seemed to revert almost back to normal although there were some partial 2nd broods and miniscule blues and certain species took full advantage of the climatic conditions. I remember reading that after the record breaking year of 1976 the butterflies decreased noticeably in 77 and whether 2019 will see a similar decrease only time will tell, fingers crossed that it doesn’t…
The Skippers
1 Small Skipper, 22-06-2018 Duke Site
SO to business…First on the list but not the first seen was Small Skipper which I saw for the first time at my Duke Site and 5 days later. I didn’t read too much into this at the time because it was only a matter of days and things were still catching up from a very late start to the season. However looking back now it wasn’t the later start that stood out but the apparent decline. I still saw them at all usual sites but in far fewer numbers. I was most struck by this when thinking back over my visits to Larkhill. True I made fewer visits there this year but on those visits the fields of ‘hundreds of Smessex’ just weren’t there. They seemed to be in their 30-40’s rather than 100’s. Last year at Larkhill they were almost in plague proportions but this year there was a famine of them. Possibly the high numbers I saw last year coloured my judgement and they’d just returned to a more usual balance after a very good year. Fingers crossed this is the case.
2 Essex Skipper, 28-06-2018 Work
It seems that the Essex Skipper isn’t just extraordinarily alike to the Small in looks but also in their future outlook it seems. For like their slightly more ginger kin this species was also slightly later (7 days) and also notably reduced population wise. That being said I did have some more positive news for this species. I found a small colony (or more likely rediscovered…or even more likely actually noticed them) at work in the small patch of waste ground that was once the jumping pits. It’s always nice to find a species somewhere new especially when it means additional butterfly interest during a lunchtime break.
3 Lulworth Skipper, 24-06-2018 Lulworth Cove
When I visited their stronghold at Lulworth Cove they were already there which was earlier than I’d seen them last year. They were already in full swing and doing really well from the looks of things; crawling all over the cliff faces and venturing down to the shoreline to take slats from the recently exposed pebbles. One even decided to pay us a visit upon our arrival as we ate lunch taking up residence in our sunshade! Although I only saw than at this one site on one visit I was able to get the full gamut of shots – male, female, fresh, worn, taking salts, nectaring, a male and female in one shot and the crème de la crème, a mating pair. With favourable reports from Durlston it seems that this species protracted flight season is paying dividends as it can cope with periods of extreme weather be it cold, wet or hot and dry. Long may it continue.
4 Silver Spotted Skipper, 22-07-2018 Broughton Down
This year I was able to make two visits to Broughton Down the first of which came 2 days earlier than in 2017 yet there they were. It seemed that things had caught up and were marching ever onwards after the late start. The Silver Spots were in reasonable numbers on my first visit and were showing nicely so much so that I could see that some had already been out for a while; slightly frayed around the edges and starting to look greyer. On my second visit they were all over the place including over on the small triangle field right at the top of the site – somewhere I’ve not seen them before. Speaking of which I didn’t relocate any at Shipton this year but then I think the one form 2017 was just a (unsuccessful) scout. Despite this I felt slightly chuffed that they were having such good year.
5 Large Skipper, 02-06-2018 Bentley Wood
Despite seeing my first slightly further East it was still a few days later this year. Species were still playing catch-up even into June. I had a few notable moments with this species this year. The first came with finding my first of the year at Bentley Wood in between Small Pearls and Marshies in the Eastern Clearing. The second was when I found my first air in cop whilst checking out the ‘Meadows’ at work and the third was finding my second pairing at Slop Bog in between my first pair of Silver Stud pairs.
On the downside however I don’t recalls seeing them in the large numbers that I’m used to. Usually during their main flight they’re crawling all over the place at Larkhilll and Bentley Wood but I didn’t see that wasn’t the case this year. Was this one of the drawbacks of the old spring and then subsequent heatwave?
6 Dingy Skipper, 07-05-2018 Laverstock Down
A fortnight later this year which I can’t decide whether this was due to the late start or whether it was due to them reverting back to a more normal time frame? I also saw my first Dingy before a Grizzlie this year, but only by 5 minutes. They seemed to have a positive year and I can’t recall seeing as many as I saw during 2018? They were certainly out numbering the Grizzlies at Laverstock where I saw my first as well as at my Duke Site and they also cropped up at Larkhill and Bentley Wood too. My notions of them having a good year were backed up further by seeing several second brood individuals with one at Laverstock and then 2 on another occasion as well as finding one at Shipton while seeing Brostreaks.
7 Grizzled Skipper, 07-05-2018 Laverstock Down
Like their distant Dingy cousins the Grizzlies also had a bit of a lie-in this year, turning up a fortnight later than in 2017 and for the third year on the trot on the same day as my first Dingy. However the similarity ended there as they didn’t seem to fair as well as in previous years; I didn’t find them at Larkhill although they were at Bentley Wood in the Eastern Clearing and they were outnumbered by DIngies at almost all of the sites where I found them apart from Martin Down where they seemed to be doing quite well and were holding their own number wise compared to the Dingy – possibly due to the more suitable habitat? I also saw a Grizzlie in early August. But only because it was a malvoides and not malvae!
Have a goodun
Wurzel