Showing posts with label White-letter Hairstreak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White-letter Hairstreak. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 July 2021

More Hairstreaks

It was a warm and sunny morning when I awoke on Monday 5th July but with clouds gathering on the horizon and the weather forecast predicting heavy rain and strong winds for the afternoon I headed out to Oreston again for another look at the White-letter Hairstreaks.

It was beginning to get quite overcast when I arrived at Oreston but I soon found the Hairstreaks flitting about in the tree tops with at least 4 present and at times they gave some good views.

White-letter Hairstreak 

White-letter Hairstreak 

White-letter Hairstreak 

A female Purple Hairstreak was less obliging as it flitted about in the foliage of an Ash tree but flashed a beautiful  metallic purple sheen on its upperwings when the sun shone through the clouds.

Purple Hairstreak 

Purple Hairstreak 

Thursday 8th July and a look through the back yard moth box revealed 14 species of moth with Batia lunaris, Bryotropha domestica and Spilonata ocellana (Bud Moth) the highlights. 

Batia lunaris

Bryotropha domestica

Spilonota ocellana (Bud Moth) 

After sorting out the moth box I took a walk to Central Park to look again for White-letter Hairstreaks. It was warm with occasional sunny spells and I managed to find just one flitting about at the top of an Elm tree, binocular views only and no chance of a photo. A Red Admiral was more obliging and a Meadow Brown and a Large White were also seen. 

Red Admiral

On a quick look around nearby Ford Park Cemetery I found a few Marbled White flying low over the grass along with a few Meadow Browns and a flyby Six-spot Burnet moth.

Marbled White

On the walk home I stopped off at Drakes Reservoir on the Plymouth University Campus where Blue-tailed Damselfly, Common Blue Damselfly, Red-eyed Damselfly and Small Red-eyed Damselfly where seen buzzing around the Water Lilies and flotsam. 

Red-eyed Damselfly

And so to Birdy 2021. After he leapt down into the builders yard and out of view he was heard calling occasionally while his sibling remained on our chimney stack. An adult Great Black-backed Gull was then seen over a couple of days, flying around and resting on nearby roofs and being regularly and noisily mobbed by all the adult Herring Gulls in the area. The young chick on the chimney stack across the road from our house disappeared around this time, presumably predated by the Great Black-backed Gull, but the larger chick on our chimney stack remained in place.

However the chick on our chimney stack has since disappeared too, it seemed too small to have fledged already but there now is a chick on the roof of the builders yard. I'm not sure if it is the chick from our chimney stack that has semi-fledged or our rescued bird from the fire grate who must have been placed on the roof by the workers in the builders yard but hopefully it will fledge and the local Herring Gull nesting attempts will be over for another year.

I had the moth box out in the back yard again overnight for Moth Night 2021 and on checking it on the morning of Friday 9th July I was very pleased to find a Poplar Hawk Moth, the first one in the back yard since 2013!

Poplar Hawk Moth

Rustic/Uncertain Montage


Wednesday, 7 July 2021

White-letter Hairstreaks

A warm and humid night meant a nicely filled back yard moth box on the morning of Wednesday 30th June with the highlight being a Lobster Moth, a first for the back yard.

Lobster Moth

Lobster Moth

Uncertain

Heart and Club

It was a warm and sunny day and so after sorting out the moth box I headed over to Oreston for a look at the White-letter Hairstreaks which had recently been reported there. I soon found at least 2 flitting about in the treetops and I had some good views of them although they were fidgety and flighty.

White-letter Hairstreak

White-letter Hairstreak

I also had a look along the Billacombe cycle path nearby but there was no sign of any Hairstreaks there although I did see my first Large Skipper of the year along with a few Ringlet and a Red Admiral.

Large Skipper

Ringlet

I also found a very nice showing of both Bee Orchids and Pyramidal Orchids nearby, hidden in plain sight by the side of the busy road.

Bee Orchids

Bee Orchid

Pyramidal Orchid

Thursday 1st July was a hot and sunny day and so we decided to head out to Stoke Point for a walk and a spot of lunch at The Ship Inn at Noss Mayo. It was a fantastic walk as always and lunch at the pub was as tasty as always and it was great to see a few butterflies on the wing - Red Admiral, Speckled Wood, Large White, Small Copper, Common Blue, Meadow Brown, Small Tortoiseshell, Meadow Brown and a brief Fritillary (probably Silver-washed).

A male Beautiful Demoiselle perched on the vegetation by the woodland footpath near the caravan park was a surprise sighting.

Beautiful Demoiselle

Treecreeper, Marsh Tit, Whitethroat, Stonechat, Cirl Bunting, Kestrel, Raven and Peregrine were the avian highlights and a flyby Six-spot Burnet moth was a first for the year.

We stopped off briefly at Blagdon's Meadow along the River Plym on the way home and I found my first Small Skipper of the year here along with another Six-spot Burnet moth and 5 Ravens flying overhead, a presumed family party. 

Tuesday, 21 July 2020

Butterflies and a Trip to Suffolk

Monday 13th July and I had a walk out to Oreston where a colony of White-tailed Hairstreaks have recently been discovered in an elm tree where the canopy of the tree is level with the footpath allowing some great views of the butterflies.

I soon found a White-letter Hairstreak on arriving at the site and there were at least 3 present in the tree top along with a Speckled Wood, a Holly Blue and a Purple Hairstreak.

White-letter Hairstreak

Purple Hairstreak

I had a look at another White-letter Hairstreak site nearby on the walk home, this time in an elm tree along the cycle path behind The Range Superstore on Billacombe Road, and after a bit of a scan around before the clouds rolled on I found one nectaring on Old Man's Beard below the elm tree before it disappeared from view.

Tuesday 14th July and we drove up to Ipswich in Suffolk for a few days away at my Mums. There were fewer than usual roadside casulalties seen on the journey to Ipswich, presumably due to the lower traffic levels following the COVID-19 lock down giving the wildlife a better chance, but I did see 3 Red Kites soaring over the M3/M25 Motorways. Even better were at least 5 Essex Skippers seen on a layby embankment along the A12 just off the M25 - we had stopped to check the car radio aerial and I had noticed some small orange butterflies flitting about over the grass which turned out to be Essex Skipper although they were very flitty and flighty.

Essex Skipper - black undersides to antennae tips

Essex Skipper

Essex Skipper - Male with short, straight and inconspicuous sex brands on upper wing

Essex Skipper

Essex Skipper

Our time in Ipswich was dry but mostly overcast so butterflying was difficult but I did have the moth box out in my Mums garden on 2 nights and I did manage a short visit to Minsmere although the hides were closed, it was very busy and only 2 of the nature trails were open

Lesser Black-backed Gull Chick, Felixstowe

Mothing was interesting with some familiar species and some new ones too and in much higher numbers than I get in my own back yard here in Plymouth. The highlights were Poplar and Elephant Hawk Moths, Box-tree Moth, Least Carpet, Marbled Beauty, Brown-tail, Dusky Sallow, Feathered Ranunculus, Festoon and Ruby Tiger amongst a good assortment of commoner species.

Box-tree Moth - a pretty pest introduced from Asia

Festoon  - Male

Feathered Ranunculus(?) 

Least Carpet
Small Emerald

My trip to Minsmere on July 16th gave 9 species of butterfly in the dull and grey skies - Small Copper, Small Skipper, Gatekeeper, Ringlet, Meadow Brown, Large White, Red Admiral, Peacock and a Silver-washed Fritillary - but it was too cloudy for White Admirals to be enticed to fly along the woodland rides.

Silver-washed Fritillary

Peacock

Peacock

Yellow-horned Poppy

Bird wise it was much more interesting with a good  range of waders seen - Redshank, Dunlin, Black-tailed Godwit, Lapwing, Turnstone, Ruff, Avocet, Green Sandpiper, Ringed Plover, Oystercatcher, Spotted Redshank and Stone Curlew - along with Common Tern, Sandwich Tern, Mediterranean Gull, Kittiwake, Marsh Harrier, Hobby, Sedge Warbler and Sand Martin.

Stone Curlew

Stone Curlew

Another 3 Red Kite were seen on the journey back to Plymouth on July 18th, this time along the M3/A303, and the traffic around Stonehenge wasn't too bad for a change considering we travelled home on a July Saturday.

Sunday 19th July was cool and cloudy and so we had a walk along Devonport Leat on Dartmoor, starting at Burrator Reservoir. We have never undertaken this walk before which is surprising as the scenery was beautiful and the Leat very interesting. It was quite busy with walkers and cyclists but not too bad and I heard Green Woodpecker and Siskin and saw Swallows and House Martins plus Beautiful Demoiselles, Ringlet, Gatekeeper and Meadow Brown.

Beautiful Demoiselle

Beautiful Demoiselle wing

Devonport Leat Aquaduct

Brown Trout, Devonport Leat

On the way home we stopped off at Blagdon's Meadow in Plymouth where Clouded Yellows have been reported and within a few minutes of arriving I found 2 dashing across a surprisingly verdant and flower covered meadow although they rarely settled for more than a few seconds.

Monday 20th July was my last day off before returning to work and so I walked out to Oreston to look again for White-letter Hairstreaks and I soon found one perched in the eye-level elm canopy although it was very battered looking.

White-letter Hairstreak

I stopped off at Blagdon's Meadow on the walk home and again quickly found a Clouded Yellow dashing about and again it rarely settled for very long and I also saw Common Blue and Meadow Brown along with 6-spot Burnet and a Small Copper.

Clouded Yellow

Common Blue  - female