Working outside in the warm sunshine this afternoon, delighted to see a Hummingbird Hawk Moth spend a while visiting various flowers in the garden @ 1300 hrs.
Wished they reached Gloucestershire more frequently as they do more often on the south coast. Thirty odd years ago, a long since departed relative had a house with a small garden/yard close to and facing the sea at Budleigh Salterton. Some summers in the late afternoon as many as five hummers would be over the Buddlieas and it was not that unusual to see the odd Clouded Yellow come in off the sea ~ strong flyers I suspect on migration. You would think that after crossing so many miles over the sea, they would stop and feed up at the first opportunity. They did not. They all continued their relentless strong flight a few inches above the ground further inland. There again, they could have been insects which had aborted flights towards mainland Europe and had second thoughts so returned back to shore. Buildings in the way did not stop them. Styraight up and over and onwards to the north. I have observed that same strong flight up and over buildings in Essex when I lived there many moons ago.
One childhood memory I will never forget. It was in 1947 when me, aged five was taken by my father when he tended his allotment alongside the North Circular Road between Chingford and Walthamstow. Much more rural then and in "Essex" not london apparently. Close to the location of the now a busy underpass known as the Crooked Billet... an old pub name which was maybe still is closeby. During that hot sunny day at the allotment, every so often a bright yellow butterfly would cross the plot diagoinally at a fair speed always in the same direction. Had no idea what they were and were doing but, I do now.
Some years later, when in my early twenties when I was much fitter of course, I chased one for the best part of a mile through a large wood and surrounding fields on its relentless ever onwards flight. Even so, I thought I would burst a blood vessel trying to keep up ~ never say die me ~ and I netted a perfect .. male which I let go as I wanted a female to breed from. They are easy to raise and breed. As I was kneeling down examining the Clouded Yellow through the net, a shadow of a large butterfly passing overhead closeby could be seen on the gravel track. Looking up, I saw a large specimen female Purple Emperor.
Memories eh ...
