Cheers Trevor

I was possibly at Shipton Bellinger so much that it could be considered my local patch

My parents have a camper van, maybe next year...
Cheers Bugboy

I seem to recall just staring at the camera dial in disbelief for what felt like 15 hours filled with dread (but it was probably about 5 seconds

) but luckily it all worked out in the end. For future visits I'm thinking of taking one memory card for each day - it would make sorting them out a bit easier as well
Godshill 07-08-2023
Everything was set, we just needed to check whether the new paint would cover the lurid yellow that the kitchen had been mistakenly painted last time. As the paint needed two hours to dry I needed to kill some time…as I’d already been to Shipton a few times and I was still awaiting the Girlstreaks, Godshill seemed like the best bet and it would let me catch up properly with the Grayling – possibly my favourite butterfly.
I strode out across the Cricket pitch, lime pickle sandwich in one hand and camera in the other and a Small Copper and Meadow Brown, obviously aware of this sat beautifully for me while I deliberated how to remove the lens cap, hold my sandwich and my camera with only a single pair of hands. So I left them to it and carried on down the main track and about half way down veered off right into the more overgrown edge of the track. In a little clearing I spotted another Small Copper, another Meadow Brown, a few Hedgies but best of all a Grayling fly past. I love their flight; deep wings beats and veering glides all wrapped up with a sensational finale – the disappearance. Even better I’d finished my sandwich so I was able to start stalking and firing off shots. Further away from the path the Gorse which had previously blockaded this side of the hill like a boundary hedge, had burnt away and so I was able to venture out onto the heather. I could tell, from the paler hue of the heather (Cross-leaved Heath) that it would be boggy and I ended up with 3 more Grayling on the tally, one, maybe two, on the memory card and soggy knees! Still they’d dry off sooner rather than later and I followed the boggy ground as gravity pulled it towards the brook at the bottom of the hill.







Once there I couldn’t cross as it was just a little too wide and a little too deep so I followed it round towards the Ford at the bottom of the main track. Along the way I was joined by both Golden-ringed and Emperor Dragonflies as well as 4 or so Common Darters and a non-stop Red Admiral. Once I crossed over the Ford I started walking across what I think of as the Main Block. A large expanse of heather flowing up the hill to a small wood at the top. The Heather here is generally in the ‘Building’ phase and so forms rounded clumps with small passage ways between them. There are what look like drainage channels, carved into the gentle slope which all run down towards the Brook and these are generally filled with closely cropped grass which doesn’t let other species get a toehold. I started moving between the clumps waiting for a Grayling to erupt from in front of my boots whilst also keeping an eye on the cattle that are driving themselves along the Brookside path. I spotted a Grayling but then got distracted by a Blue. At first glance I wondered if it was a very late Silver-stud but luckily it landed and I saw that it was a female Holly Blue. Quite what it was doing all this way from either Ivy or Holly I wasn’t sure? As I wondered I noticed that the cattle had stopped on the path and there were many pairs of eyes giving me the once over so I walked away up the hill. There were many Hedgies on the way as well as three more Grayling. When I was about half way up the gentle slope I spotted a massive butterfly. Again my initial thought was proved wrong as it wasn’t one butterfly, but two, a pair of Grayling locked together in cop. They’d land, I’d get a few shots and back off and then 30 seconds or so later they’d be off again. I was fairly sure it wasn’t be that was moving them on so perhaps one or other couldn’t get comfy?




Right at the very top I found a really well ‘striped’ Grayling as well as a massive, ginger Robber Fly – it was huge and evil looking so I only grabbed a few record shots as I didn’t want to get too close WINK. I then followed treeline along the side of the ridge and then followed another track down the other side of the hill. This was ‘path’ was more of a ride of well cropped grass with the odd island of Gorse and Bramble. The butterflies congregated around this little outcrops of heathland amid the desert of grass and as one I spotted a Grayling, Small Copper, female Brimstone as well as several Hedgies. The Small Copper played hard to get so I turned my attention to the Grayling and followed it down the hill and out into the upper edge of the Main Block. It was a lovely warm, brown colour; at least it appeared to be in flight, when it landed it still looked quite brown but the stripe was a cream colour. I resumed the path and it flowed down to the stony track that had been the original ‘hotspot adding a few Small Heath to the Tally as I went. As I rounded to the corner onto the track proper a Hedgie was squabbling with a Blue – another possible Silver-stud I wondered? Nope once again it was a Holly Blue but I was only sure of this once it returned and landed for a moment or two.






Have a goodun
Wurzel