

Trev
If anyone also wonders if they dreamt up seeing Glanville Fritillaries in the Cotswolds in the 1970s, then they probably weren't. I was a very naughty boy. I had collected about a dozen caterpillars (from different nests to spread the loss in the wild plus to ensure diversity of stock) in 1975, bred them through and got some pairings. By spring 1976, the appetite of caterpillars was totally unmanageable. I had already found a suitable site at Caudle Green (SO943103) with plenty of ribwort plantain so put down a huge number of caterpillars in that spring of 1976. I saw several adults that summer and a handful the following year but no more after that. Apparently they were "discovered" by another lepidopterist. When a note was subsequently published in a journal, (AES I think) I had to come clean.Trev Sawyer wrote:That's odd... One of my ealry memories involves finding what I still believe was a large copper whilst on holiday with my parents. It would have been in the late 1960's and was in a field near a lighthouse (sorry, but i really can't remember where I was, but it would have been on the East Anglian coast somewhere). I often wonder if it really WAS a large copper (no real markings, just these bright red wings with one small black smudge - in fact just like your avatar!). Is that even remotely possible I wonder, or did I dream the whole thing up?
Trev
You are so right there Jack.But things were DIFFERENT 30+ years ago so what seems irresponsible today wasn't viewed in quite the same light then.