Hi Goldie. Yes some species are running late and emerging in relatively low numbers. It seems that the more common and widespread species are suffering most with some rarer ones doing quite well. That is very much a generalisation and it will be interesting to see how the rest of the year pans out.
Wednesday 26th June.
With a free day today I weighed up various options of where to go and with temperatures forcast to be up in the mid to high teens I figured a woodland site woud be more comfortable than open grassland. For a number of reasons, not least some stormy and windy weather last June, I had missed White Admiral last year and was keen to catch up with them this year. They have had a number of poor years in Warwickshire although they seem to do better over the border in Worcestershire so that influenced my choice and so I settled on Grafton Wood, this being my closest Worcestershire site.
I left home just before 08.00am in order to miss the worst of the school traffic in Solihull and just over an hour later pulled in by the church at Grafton Flyford under clear blue skies with the display in my car already reading 20 degrees. I set off along the path through the farm and over the fields, seeing a few Ringlets and Meadow Browns along the way.
Entering the wood I saw more Ringlets and Meadow Browns but nothing else until I reached the crossroads of the rides in the middle of the wood and turned right along the main ride. Here I spotted a White Admiral fluttering about in a spot of dappled shade in a rideside scallop and I watched as it settled a few times, sometimes half in and half out of the shade but I managed to catch a few shots of it nicely posed.

- White Admiral - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- White Admiral - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- White Admiral - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
I carried on, seeing a few more White Admirals and then spotted one fly across the ride in front of me and settle on a leaf about head height showing those lovely undersides. I did the usual thing of taking a couple of photos from a distance in case I spooked it and then slowly moved closer.

- White Admiral - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- White Admiral - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
It must have felt comfortable there as apart from a bit of shuffling about to vary the angle to the sun it did not move and was still there when I moved away after filling my boots with photos.

- White Admiral - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
A secondary target for this morning was Wood White and although they had been on the wing here for some time I had seen reports a couple of days back of some still flying. Shortly after seeing the first White Admiral, I spotted a Wood White fluttering along at the side of the track and followed it until it settled.

- Wood White - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
During the morning I eventually found around a dozen Wood Whites scattered around the wood, some looking a bit tatty but some not too bad apart from some worn fringes on their wings.

- Wood White - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
I also spotted some egg laying activity deep in the vegetation and a pair involved in attempted courtship including some 'antennae tapping' but they soon went their separate ways.

- Wood Whites - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- Wood Whites - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- Wood Whites - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- Wood White - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- Wood White egg - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
Both Ringlets and Meadow Browns were seen in fair numbers but still nowhere near what there should be, in fact Ringlets appear to be doing better than Meadow Browns with once again a ration of around 2:1 in favour of the Ringlets.

- Ringlet - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
Other species seen were half a dozen Large Skippers and singles of Red Admiral and Marbled White, and that was it.

- Large Skipper - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024

- Marbled White - Grafton Wood 26.06.2024
I bumped into John Tilt, the reserve manager, and stopped for a chat. He was quite despondent about the numbers of butterflies so far this year with him telling me that his transects were showing nearly everything being down in numbers this year. There has been some excellent management carried out in Grafton Wood in recent years but unfortunatly you cannot manage the weather.
After about an hour here it had become very warm and nothing was settling so I did a slow circuit of the wood just enjoying the sight of the White Admirals, of which I reckon I eventually saw a good dozen or so, flitting and gliding along tracks and up into the trees.
I almost feel ungrateful for saying this after the poor weather we have had up until these past few days but by 11.30am it was feeling too warm for me so I decided to head back to my car and head for home.
Back home in the afternoon some clouds bubbled up but if anything they made it feel more muggy and sticky so I stopped home. At least that gave me the chance to write up this report so I could stay up to date.
Bye for now,
Neil.