Re: millerd
Posted: Wed Jun 07, 2023 9:21 pm
My next two days were largely butterfly-free, despite good weather - one can't really abandon an old friend and go out on butterfly hunts when their interests don't lean that way!
However, my next stop was with a friend who felt entirely differently, and she was very enthusiastic about my suggestion of a walk along the Devon coast to the east of Sidmouth. It turned out she knew the area well too.
We started at Branscombe and headed along the beach to start with before angling up to a sheltered area between what must be an ancient landslip and the mainland proper. This verdant defile is actually part of the Coast Path, so the going is relatively easy (a bit steep in parts). It was a perfect day, and the views were gorgeous. As we climbed up through the greenery in the foreground, we were often accompanied by little groups of Holly Blues: there must have been dozens flying along this path. Most were females, and with a lot of dogwood around, it wasn't difficult to find an egg or two. However, as we came to the point roughly from where the second view was taken, my hoped-for target started to appear - Wood Whites. I have seen this species many times in the woodland at Chiddingfold, but have for a while wondered whether the populations I'd heard flew along the Devon coast still existed. The answer was a pretty definite yes.
Overall, we saw well over a dozen.
Whether it is a feature of the more open habitat or not, I found the Devon coastal Wood Whites were rather more energetic than their Surrey woodland relatives, flying higher and faster (though a bit more willing to stop in bright sunshine perhaps). My companion was fascinated by the sight of a rare butterfly, and particularly entertained by an example of the "courtship" behaviour peculiar to Wood Whites which they kindly laid on for us.
We continued to Beer for refreshment (though not of the eponymous sort!), and then returned back along the same route. A pause on the cliffs above Beer gave us a quick sighting of a female Common Blue... ...and I caught sight of two orange butterflies dancing out of reach over the drop to the sea. Too small for Walls, I suspect they were Small Pearl-bordered Fritillaries. However, those Wood Whites really made my day - almost like seeing a whole new species for the first time!
One curious point - reviewing the day later on with a map to hand, I realised that I had originally meant to head west from Branscombe, not east...
Oh well!
Dave

We started at Branscombe and headed along the beach to start with before angling up to a sheltered area between what must be an ancient landslip and the mainland proper. This verdant defile is actually part of the Coast Path, so the going is relatively easy (a bit steep in parts). It was a perfect day, and the views were gorgeous. As we climbed up through the greenery in the foreground, we were often accompanied by little groups of Holly Blues: there must have been dozens flying along this path. Most were females, and with a lot of dogwood around, it wasn't difficult to find an egg or two. However, as we came to the point roughly from where the second view was taken, my hoped-for target started to appear - Wood Whites. I have seen this species many times in the woodland at Chiddingfold, but have for a while wondered whether the populations I'd heard flew along the Devon coast still existed. The answer was a pretty definite yes.

Whether it is a feature of the more open habitat or not, I found the Devon coastal Wood Whites were rather more energetic than their Surrey woodland relatives, flying higher and faster (though a bit more willing to stop in bright sunshine perhaps). My companion was fascinated by the sight of a rare butterfly, and particularly entertained by an example of the "courtship" behaviour peculiar to Wood Whites which they kindly laid on for us.


Dave