Padfield

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Padfield
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Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

I was going to visit a site in the Val d'Hérens today, for Dukes of Burgundy among other things; but a cancelled train messed up the connections and I ended up going to a different site, in the Zermatt Valley. This and the Saas Valley were among the worst hit areas of Valais in the recent weather shock and I soon found evidence of this. All along the path, which is usually a mountain-bikers' path, fallen trees, debris and even snow littered the way. I had to pick Minnie up and carry her on many occasions:

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It was a beautiful, sunny day, though, and butterflies were flying, if not in great numbers. New for the year were Glanville fritillaries, including one rather striking melanic individual:

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Here is a normal one:

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Also new for the year was de Prunner's ringlet. I saw many drifting over the meadows and rough slopes but only one actually stopped where I could get a (poor) shot of it:

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Chequered blues were out in good numbers again ...

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... and there was the usual complement of grizzled and dingy skippers, various whites and yellows, small coppers, green hairstreaks, walls and small heaths:

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(southern grizzled skipper)

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(small copper)

I had intended to cycle down to a site in the Visp Valley but I could see, looking across to the road I would normally take, that a landslide had made it impassable. If I took the main road instead, I would have to go through a long tunnel and I hadn't brought my bike lights, so I waited for the train. Unfortunately, for a second time in the same day, there was trouble on the rails and my train was delayed, so I decided to cycle down anyway, and just walk through the tunnel. But it turned out I couldn't even access the road, as the minor road leading to it was blocked with fallen trees. So back to the station and an hour's wait for the next train. I got off that at Stalden, intending to continue by bike, and then AGAIN found my way blocked in every direction by the aftermath of the weather:

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So back onto the train, and then a cycle ride back up the valley to where I wanted to be!

Once again, it was carnage. I got to my destination, but not without clambering over many more trees, carrying the bike and Minnie:

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It was worth it, though. I arrived in the heat of the afternoon, so things were very active, but there were some treats. Provençal short-tailed blues are suddenly common, and one stopped at mud allowing photographs:

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There were lots of Camberwell beauties around, some looking well past their prime:

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Here are a couple of wood whites doing that thing they do, that never seems to go anywhere but is wonderful to watch:

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By now there was quite a wind blowing and photographs were difficult. Here is a female Eastern Bath white ...

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... and here a male:

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Then the trek back over the fallen trees to Visp, where I was able to buy a few beers for the train home! :D I hadn't brought any beers with me because I had expected a long, steep cycle ride down the Val d'Hérens and that's sometimes pretty scary even without beer.

Guy
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
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Wurzel
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Re: Padfield

Post by Wurzel »

Lovely set of species Guy but you certainly had to work for them! :shock: Mind you there must have been a little consolation in sitting back and enjoying a beer or three :wink: :D

Have a goodun

Wurzel
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robpartridge
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Re: Padfield

Post by robpartridge »

The picture of the wood whites steals it for me.
"...we'll live, and pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh at gilded butterflies."
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Padfield
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Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

Hi Wurzel. Yes, hard work - but good beer! :D Well, as good as Swiss beer gets (Valaisanne Pale Ale).

Hi Rob. I'm with you there! I just love seeing wood whites doing this. And the individual on the left, which I think is the male (please correct me), seems to be kissing the one on the right with his/her proboscis.

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Today was a working day so I stayed local. In the afternoon, I found (but failed to photograph) my first little blue of the year. There were also plenty of common blues around, but one female seemed to be particularly interested in the sainfoin instead of the birds-foot trefoil. That is a sure sign of Chapman's blue, so I tried to get a shot. Here she is on an unopened sainfoin flower, showing clearly she is Chapman's:

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She then started diving down low among sainfoin, maybe laying on the stems and leaves, but certainly testing them. I didn't notice until I studied the photos that she is surrounded by ants, identified by ChatGPT as Formica cunicularia.

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For those who are not yet fans of Chat GPT, these snippets from my conversation with him/her about the ants might persuade:

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ChatGPT makes sometimes horrific mistakes in maths, and being disembodied, has no intuitive conception of the physical world, but can nevertheless engage in intelligent dialogue about a lot of things!

She did a lot of oviposturing around the stems but I couldn't find any eggs. I think she is just looking at the moment:

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Guy
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
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Wurzel
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Re: Padfield

Post by Wurzel »

That's a cracking conversation Guy, it's written in such a way that it makes me imagine a spectacled gent wearing finger less gloves and flicking though huge tomes to find relevant information :shock: Lovely butterfly too :D

Have a goodun

Wurzel
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Padfield
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Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

Ironically, Wurzel, though Chatty G is entirely digital, he has neither fingers nor gloves! :D

The good weather is continuing. As I went up for my 16h30 lesson this evening, my first red-underwing skipper of the year was taking minerals at Leysin Village station. I tried to move him on, as others were arriving and I didn't want him to get trodden on, but he kept coming back. Good minerals! When I came down again, later in the evening, there was no sign of a squashed skipper, so I think he got away with it!

These photos were taken with my iPhone:

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Between lessons, I took a short stroll up the mountain from the school. This is why I became Swiss:

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Guy
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
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Wurzel
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Re: Padfield

Post by Wurzel »

Wow - what a stunning vista! That Red-underwing Skipper is a cracking find too :D
"though Chatty G is entirely digital, he has neither fingers nor gloves!" :lol: :lol:

Have a goodun

Wurzel
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