Thank you, Goldie - I had to get down very low to get those skipper shots, but it was worth the effort!
Yes, They are definitely the cutest of the bunch, Wurzel, though I suspect we will have to agree to differ on no. 2...

That Holly Blue was very stripy - though their local dialect around here definitely lacks any hints of Geordie (or I wouldn't be able to do the whispering...

)
August actually kicked off on the
1st with a pretty decent day - a sunny morning and some summery warmth. I made an early start and headed down to Bookham, and in due course met up with Paul (Bugboy) and quite a few others of similar mind, with Brown Hairstreaks the goal for the day.
The path along next to Banks Common didn't offer any sightings of this particular species, but there were a few worn remnants of their Purple relatives...
...and large numbers of their mimic (at least when your eyes are looking for brown/orange combos

).
There were a couple of quite fresh Meadow Browns as well, opening up in the early sunshine. It seems they can be tempted by a blackberry or two - like most species really.
At pretty well the same moment that Bugboy texted me with his whereabouts in the wood, a small brownish butterfly buzzed me and plonked itself down at around head height on some nearby foliage. I was pleasantly surprised to find that this wasn't the Speckled Wood I expected to see, but instead was a male Brown Hairstreak. It wasn't well-placed though, and I only managed a couple of shots from not all that close before it disappeared upwards. With no input from me other than holding it above my head and pointing it, the camera decided all by itself to focus on the butterfly.
I made my way in the direction of the station, and a large area of suitable blackthorn. Approaching the target area, I spotted another male Brown Hairstreak on a thistle, nicely posed.
After a while with this very amenable butterfly, a heard voices from the other side of the hedge - it appeared that the main Hairstreak event was just out of sight. A surprisingly long detour, and I met up with all the other folk, including Bugboy.
There were more Brown Hairstreaks here, including a ragged male that appeared to be a fixture as it had apparently been there all morning.
This particular area was cleared of dense overgrowth a couple of years ago, but carefully leaving small blackthorn suckers - which are favoured by the hairstreaks. This became apparent when I spotted a perfect new female sitting low down seemingly drying her wings. I alerted Bugboy, but before either of us could capture her image, she was off up into the hedge somewhere. The one that got away... But there would be others, though open-winged females would have to wait a few days.
This seems like a good point to split what will otherwise be a rather extended post...
Dave