Cheers Katrina

I'm lucky in that quite close to me a a relatively flat and sheltered site where they fly

I used to try for them at Broughton Down which is a fantastic site but very hard work on the

calves
Cheers Bugboy

There are few more to come as well from a trip to Ashton Rowant
Shipton Bellinger 01-08-2024
This was supposed to be a ‘meet up’ trip with Dave, Trevor and Philzoid all looking to come over and sample the delights of Shipton Bellinger now that the first Brostreaks had been seen. However the weather soon out paid to that with its forecast of not just doom and gloom but also heavy rain showers and a yellow warning of thunder. It would be a long way to go for the other members of the party so the day was postponed. For me however it would be worth the risk, I’d be able to ‘pop’ out for a couple of hours, do some butterflying in the breaks between Thunder showers and as a bonus I could fill up the car with the cheapest petrol in Wiltshire prior to my forthcoming trip to Wales. So off I set, rain coat diligently packed, and mid-morning coffee in my travel mug...
As I parked behind the hedge in the small car park (the MOD don’t like you parking elsewhere and when they can enforce parking restrictions with tanks you don’t argue!) I checked out the little enclave and then the round the Nettle beds. On the way round there were various Meadow Browns, Brimstones a plenty and at the Nettle Bed itself a Comma or Wall shot off up from the path. I wasn’t sure what it was as I’ve encountered both here before and all I was left with was the vague impression of something ‘ginger’. A couple of Red Admirals passed over or fed off the remaining Bramble flowers which were disappearing fast and a couple of Peacocks also showed up. Everything had a kind of ‘pushed down’ feeling to it, probably due to the high pressure and getting shots prove to be tricky. All I had to show for my efforts were a handful of images of a Meadow Brown.

My wanderings had brought me back to the enclave when I had an idea…I called my wife for a chat, which after the usual spousal greetings went something like this:
“What’s up? How come you’re phoning?”
“Well to be honest I needed to check what you wanted me to get from Waitrose but also because normally you have an unerring ability to call me just as something good turns up. I’ve not seen any Brostreaks yet so I wondered if calling you would…oh there’s one now…” So I signed off, raised my camera and clicked away at a lovely looking male. It hung around for about 20 minutes or so, walking and feeding across the tops of the Wild Parsnip. When it reached the end if it was close enough it would stretch out its front legs and then pull itself across the void. If the gap was too big it would do a little flutter to the need flower top, land underneath the florets and then pull itself up and over onto the top, a little like it was doing a chin-up. While it worked its way in this fashion across the collection of Wild Parsnip it was consistently being hassled by Meadow Browns and Hedgies and at the end of the strip it flew up into one of the trees, possibly to get some respite or maybe to just let the flowers have a chance to refill their nectar reserves?




- Crossing the void
Happy that my idea had paid off I moved onto and started up the main hedge. However I didn’t get very far as a I bumped into Mark, last seen at Alners, and rather than trying to (very ineffectually) explain where I’d spotted the Brostreak and wandered back to show him. As we started towards the little break in the trees I spotted him, once again feeding on the Wild Parsnip. He followed the same pattern as before, albeit at a slightly increased pace which meant getting the classic side on profile shot proved a little trickier than before. Eventually he went back up into the same small tree as before and while we watched and waited for him to return, a larger, brighter Brostreak came down and then shot through leaving the impression that it wasn’t a ‘he’ but a ‘she’.

- Chin-ups
I left Mark to await the return of the male and set off to do another circuit of the Nettle Beds and back to the Main Hedge. As I was walking back round along the track that runs at the bottom of the field I checked out the large growth of Creeping Thistles. There were a myriad of butterflies – mainly Meadow Browns and Hedgies but also 2 or three Small Whites, three Peacocks, a Red Admiral and a single Common Blue. The ‘mainly Brown with a dash of White’ theme continued up the Main Hedge until the end where a couple of people were staring at a distant male Brostreak, slightly deeper in the hedge where I’d found my first. Still that brought my count to 3 Brostreaks for the day…

Leaving them trying to will/whisper and coax the male down into range I wished them well and moved off to check out the little field on the other side of the main track. I was hoping for a few Blues but I was met once again by Browns and Whites…well Brimstones at any rate. A couple of Walls let themselves be spooked from the tracks and paths and then something ‘peachy’ hove into view. It was a Painted Lady and only my second of the season so I set off after it, hernia be dammed! Luckily I clocked that it seemed to be honing in on the larger, more obvious flowers so when it took off I’d move off aiming to reach the next most obvious bloom in good time. It seemed to pay off with a couple of passable shots but whilst I was contemplating more it broke the pattern and shot off across the field obviously having refuelled sufficiently.



I pressed on up the rise out onto the top and checked out the various scallops and miniature clearings at the top. There were a couple of DGFs bombing past as well as the ubiquitous Browns which also featured a few Small Heath in the mix. A very fresh Common Blue played really hard to get but eventually I tracked him down on some Brid’s Foot Trefoil. I didn’t stay too long as the heat was getting a little intense and the high pressure was starting to make my head throb so I thought it best to make a move homewards, before the risk of electrocution or the deluge hit. As I was carefully picking my way down the chalk path I spotted a familiar looking shape sitting on some white flower heads. It was Brostreak number 4. As he was at such a reasonable height and seemed to be of a likewise disposition it would have been rude to have just passed by. So instead I plumped myself down and clicked away for a couple of minutes.




So not a bad haul for a few hours ‘work’ especially considering that I wasn’t even going to head out today. Chuffed I drove home, making those previously planned stop-offs on the way. I never did get my raincoat out…
Threat of Thunderstorms
Puts paid to a big meet up
Still get four Brostreaks…
Have a goodun
Wurzel