Cheers Trevor

The worse one I've had is returning home on the penultimate day of term in July and I saw an advert for 'Back to school'

They could at least have let me have an hour of my holiday
Cheers Dave

Lulworths seem to be one of the easiest species...you just need to go to the right place
Garston Wood 30-06-2024
It was getting to that time of the year and after the brilliant weather and plenty of Emperor sightings already littering the Evil Book of Face I was lucky enough to get out and try my luck over at Garston Wood. After the recent success and also armed with the knowledge that things were great at Bentley Wood this seemed like the best option. I was also hoping that my disdainful approach that I’d utilized the year before would prove successful again…
From the car park I set off up the hill on the main track. The sun was doing its best to break though the cloud so the conditions weren’t exactly ideal for Emperors so I only kept half an eye heavenward and focused the remaining eye and a half nearer to the ground, scanning the deep verges on either side of the stony track. They were much more lush and verdant than I could ever recall and so it wasn’t too long before I started spotting the odd Brown – mainly Ringlets and Meadow Browns. The Ringlets were very fresh and when they sat with their wings open trying their bets to absorb some radiant heat their wings looked like a grey brown, almost plum coloured crushed velvet. A Large Skipper stopped in and slightly further on up the track a Specklie dropped down onto the path.



When I reached the top and the staggered cross tracks I bore right and went through the gate into the old Plantation. As I strolled along what, in the past had been open woodland rides I was shocked to see how overgrown and tangled it was. The clearings and scallops all looked much smaller as the coppice had started to encroach and the claustrophobic feeling was further exacerbated by the tall grasses and scrub that carpeted them like the deepest shag pile ever, the tall grasses spilling over onto the paths making them even narrower. The Browns were back to their Harry Potter-esque ways of taking to the wing vertically like the puffs of Deatheater smoke. They were mainly Meadow Browns, a fact revealed by glimpses and flashes of orange but occasionally there would be an all-black Ringlet as well. As I worked round the final stretch of track which looped back onto the main track I entered the a miniature clearing and sitting right at the top of a crazy tall Thistle sat a Silver-washed, a female too. She looked brilliant in the glare of the sun light which was only able to reach her due to her lofty altitude. Back at the car park a Red Admiral tricked me into watching it, possibly as a decoy for the Emperors? Indeed when I finally looked up something vaguely Emperor like did go over, it did seem a little too big and chubby to be a White Admiral but it was such a fleeting look I’ll never be able to count it as anything by ‘stringy’.




From here I make my way up the main track still umming and ahhing over the PE/WA? Again I’m beset on all sides by Meadow Browns with the occasional Ringlet and a single Large Skipper. This time instead of right I head left at the staggered cross tracks and saunter down the hill making for the large Bramble verges. On the way a Green-vined White pops up as does James LeRouge and his partner. The butterflies still remain mainly of the Brown variety although I started seeing more and more Ringlets. They started sitting with their wings closed now that they were warmed up and as they were so fresh they appeared a chestnut brown and the eyes starred out at you vacantly from the shade. In the butterfly enclosure itself I watch as a male Large White sticks out like a sore thumb as it glades over the tops of the dark green fronds of Bracken. On the return journey I finally spot the familiar silhouette as it cuts and slices it’s way effortlessly through the air. It was a White Admiral and it cut short its aerial display to refuel. I watched with baited as it started flying in ever decreasing circles as it selected its pitstop site. Unfortunately for me it chose a spot right in the middle of the Bramble, in a little ‘bowl’ which meant the only way I could get anything, even just a distant record shot was to aim my lens in roughly the right direction and hope that the autofocus would find a way through or a gap in the undergrowth.


After this I took another turn round through the Plantation stopping at the staggered cross tracks as a Hawker was quartering the tops of the ferns. It would lazily glide over the top and then suddenly veer off at an alarming speed before completing a loop before dropping back down to dawdle over the tops of the ferns. In the Plantation itself, once again amid the predominantly Brown offering, the Silver-washed was still hanging out on the crazy tall Thistles. She seemed more restless than previously and so I backed off and waited for her to either settle or depart. Unfortunately she chose the later and seemed to defy gravity as she literally drifted upwards to disappear into the foliage. I competed the circuit by walking and then waiting for a bit in the car park and chatting with the other Emperor hopefuls.


Despite our vigil things didn’t appear to be happening today and to ease my itchy feet I made my way for the umpteenth time into the Plnatation but to shake it up a little I started at the bottom entrance from the car park and worked my way slowly up the hill. At the start of my procession was a Green-veined White which actually sat still and looked lovely with the bold black markings contrasting with the pale lemon and white ground colours. Further up I checked out on of the lower scallops and found a rather nicely behaved Large Skipper. Finally in the middle section I saw a definite Gatekeeper looking slightly out of place compared to the duller and darker Meadow Browns and Ringlets right up to the point when it closed its wings and then it conformed becoming another ‘Brown’.



After this I realized that my time was almost up and so I packed up and made for home. As I drove I tried to work out what was going on this year as hardly anything was playing by the rule book? Things are either early or late emerging and so things were emerging in the ‘wrong order’; most species seem to be in much lower numbers than previous years with one or two exceptions which seem to be having a whale of a time and finally almost everything is fidgety and trickier to approach. Hopefully things will sort themselves out and we’ll have a more usual ‘normal’ next year…
Off to Garston Wood
A sea of Brown butterflies
Fleeting Emperor?
Have a goodun
Wurzel