Wiggonholt and Pulborough Brooks, 31 August 2011
Today started and finished in the same place. An early and very short visit to Wiggonholt on my own, followed by a late afternoon visit with my son to Pulborough Brooks which ended in the rough pasture outside of Wiggonholt church.
My early visit produced just a single male Common Blue.

- Common Blue (male), Wiggonholt (31 August 2011)

- Common Blue (male), Wiggonholt (31 August 2011)

- Common Blue (male), Wiggonholt (31 August 2011)
Our afternoon visit to Pulborough Brooks was far more productive and started with a tip off that a female Marsh Harrier had been seen on the southern brooks earlier in the day … a scarce spring and autumn passage migrant and very scarce winter visitor to Sussex. Armed with binoculars and cameras we set off in anticipation … maybe we’d strike lucky and see the Marsh Harrier and get a Brown Hairstreak (well you have to live in hope)!
I reality we saw neither of these but had a very pleasant walk around the reserve clocking up a number of bird and insect species along the way. Though I failed to get a good photograph, several worker hornets were observed stripping bark from an ash sapling for nest building. A single specimen of the hornet mimic hoverfly
(Volucella zonaria) was also observed along with a male Southern Hawker
(Aeshna cyanea).
We left the reserve by the public footpath, which leads to Wiggonholt church. The area surrounding the path is comprised of a mixture of rough pasture with numerous beds of bramble and nettle, stands of ragwort and fleabane along with various grasses. Our walk through this area produced a beautiful Small Tortoiseshell, a single Red Admiral and numerous Small Copper.
Species seen included:
Small White
Green-veined White
Small Copper
Common Blue
Meadow Brown
Gatekeeper
Speckled Wood
Red Admiral
Comma
Small Tortoiseshell

- Comma, Pulborough Brooks (31 August 2011)

- Small Copper, Wiggonholt (31 August 2011)

- Small Tortoiseshell, Wiggonholt (31 August 2011)

- Southern Hawker (Aeshna cyanea), Pulborough Brooks (31 August 2011)