Ah, thanks Chris - much appreciated but I still have a long way to go to match your stunning close-ups.
Thank you for your kind words David and thank you for taking the time to comment.
I imagine everyone has their own reason for starting a personal diary and they are probably all slightly different. For me, my diary is not just a vehicle to record my outings and what I have seen; nor is it a platform to showcase my photos. My diary is a record of the learning curve I am on - the quest to improve my butterfly photography and my photography knowledge in general. This is the reason I am so keen to solicit views, suggestions and criticism of any sort and I am continually grateful to those of you who are helping me with this. I want to be able to look back next season at the photos I am taking now, and be able to demonstrate to myself that I have improved - that I have moved a step closer to the quality of the photos I aspire to. I take every opportunity to practice and try to put in place the hints and tips I have been given.
I have been on a couple of long trips recently so yesterday decided to stay closer to home and as Mark described an 'easy' way down to Rake Bottom that is where I went. At 7.00pm the place was alive with a variety of beautifully coloured moths. I do not know much about moths as their sheer numbers tend to overwhelm me but these beauties could easily convert me. It was cooler and overcast and the butterflies were roosting as I had expected. Because of this I had brought along a monopod - first time I had used one but needed to see if it would help with sharper photos. Unfortunately, the connection I had brought along was the wrong size for the camera so the following is a selection which are still all hand held ( I WILL find the connection Maurice

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Some lovely caterpillars as well as moths:
and an evil looking fly of some sort:
Now I know that a small aperture (large F number) gives a greater depth of field but a small aperture means a slower shutter speed to allow enough light and with it comes the increased risk of hand shake (hope I've got that right). So, when I found a subject posed with wings shut I increased the aperture (faster shutter speed) to try to get a sharp shot - forgot about the flower which obviously needs more depth of field so is hopelessly out of focus-another lesson to remember!