An influx of Painted ladies

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I wasn’t in the UK for the last huge influx of Painted ladies (Vanessa cardui) in the spring of 2009, when an estimated 11 million butterflies arrived here (Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies, p.241) but, in the last couple of weeks of April this year, we experienced a much smaller influx of this amazing migrating species.

This type of influx is subject to weather conditions; the butterflies take advantage of strong southerly winds to fly from sub-Saharan Africa across the Saharan Desert and the Mediterranean Sea to southern Europe and then onwards to more northerly locations, including Britain. (These weather conditions also see an increase in migrant moths arriving in southern Britain, in car owners reporting a thin covering of Saharan dust on their vehicles, and, sometimes, in murky skies and spectacular sunsets.)

I spotted my first two Painted ladies of the year at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park on 30 April, my bumper day of new sightings, as described in my last two blogs. ‘Nice’, I thought, and didn’t really expect to see a lot more, though I did notice reports on social media of large numbers of sightings across southern England.

Then, last Saturday, 2 May, as I walked the paths through the various fields at Cosmeston, Painted ladies just kept on appearing, as if by magic. My personal count after a couple of hours was 16, though I didn’t cover all the tracks around the park and I’m fairly sure there were many more I didn’t see. This number was certainly higher than I’d ever seen in one day before.

And you might be wondering what happens to all these butterflies? Well, according to Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies, research has shown that they breed here in Britain and their offspring migrate south again in the autumn. It’s estimated that, in the spectacular influx of 2009, as many as 21 million Painted ladies embarked on the return journey to Africa. Just incredible!

A bumper day, part 2

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As I mentioned in yesterday’s blog, A bumper day, part 1, last Thursday proved to be a brilliant day for wildlife sightings, in particular for my first 2026 sightings of several flying creatures. These included this beautiful Small tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae), which was a particularly exciting find as, sadly, these butterflies are quite a rarity nowadays in my area and, indeed, throughout Wales. The 2025 UKBMS (United Kingdom Butterfly Monitoring Scheme) report shows a 62% decrease in reported sightings of this species at the monitoring sites in Wales in the 10 years prior to 2025. In England, the statistics are even worse, with a 78% decrease in the previous 10 years’ sightings, and an even more alarming 88% decrease in sightings in the 50 years from 1976. You can perhaps understand why I was so excited to see this particular butterfly.

I had already seen my first Red admiral (Vanessa atalanta) of the year before last Thursday’s walk, but that had been a fleeting glimpse of a single, rather tatty looking creature, so it was nice to see this pristine specimen, likely a recent arrival on the strong southerly winds that have recently been blowing migrant Lepidoptera to the southern shores of Britain. There was one other new butterfly species seen during that bumper day of new sightings but it deserves its own blog post so will appear here tomorrow.

A bumper day, part 1

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Last Thursday, the final day of April, dawned sunny and clear-skied, though the cool nor’easterly that has plagued us recently was still blowing. Temperatures in the previous days had been warm and were forecast that day to rise to the high teens so I thought it might be worth checking sheltered places for any newly emerged dragonflies. That proved to be one of my better ideas as the day ended up being a bumper day for new sightings, both for the Odonata species shown here and for the butterflies that will feature in the blog I will publish tomorrow, A bumper day, part 2.

There is one small clearing at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park where I sometimes find early damsel- and dragonflies so I checked there first, and bingo! Just as I eased past the vegetation to peer in to the clearing, a dragonfly flew up and away.

My heart sank a little, but I waited. Five minutes later, the dragon returned but simply circled the clearing and flew off again. I waited. Another five minutes passed and, this time, after circling around the trees and shrubs once again, the dragon settled. This was my first Hairy dragonfly of the year, Brachytron pratense.

From the clearing I walked across to check a path leading down to the west lake, where there used to a bird hide before local youths burnt it down. At the top of the path, a particularly warm, sheltered spot was alive with many gorgeous little damselflies, basking on the leaves of Bramble and feeding on low-growing wildflowers. Although I had already seen several Large red damselflies before that day, the other two species, those shown here, were first sightings for 2026. The damselfly above is one of the Azure damselflies (Coenagrion puella) I saw, and below is a Common blue damselfly (Enallagma cyathigerum).

NFY: Dingy skipper

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Monday week ago I had a lovely meander around Lavernock Nature Reserve, a local Wildlife Trust site perched on a cliff-top high above Lavernock Point and St Mary’s Well Bay on the edge of the Bristol Channel. It was a warm sunny day so I was hoping for lots of butterflies, and I was certainly not disappointed. In fact, I was thrilled when checking one of the places where I’d previously seen this particular butterfly species, to have my first Dingy skipper of the year pop up to defend its little piece of dirt. And, since then, I’ve also seen more – four one day, one the next – during walks around Cosmeston Lakes Country Park.

NFY: Small copper

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Here’s another very early, surprise, spring sighting, my first Small copper butterfly (Lycaena phlaeas) of 2026. I don’t usually see these beauties until early to mid May but this gorgeous glistening creature popped up to defend its little territory when I walked across a local horse paddock ten days ago, on 25 April. Small coppers are one of my favourite butterflies so I’m very much looking forward to seeing more in the weeks to come.

First dragon of 2026

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This week’s posts will all be about flying creatures, the latest flying creatures to grace our skies, the most recent species of odonata and lepidoptera to begin their short lives, much to my everlasting delight (not, I hasten to add, my delight in the fact that they have short lives but, rather, that I and so many others and many of you can delight in sharing the air with these stunning creatures). I’ve already written about my first odonata species of 2026, the Large red damselflies that featured in my post published on 25 April, First damsels of 2026. Today, I present my first large dragonfly of the year, a surprise Broad-bodied chaser (Libellula depressa) that flitted out from the hedgerow I was passing on 22 April, a much earlier sighting that in previous years.

Lords-and-ladies

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As you can probably imagine, the shape of this plant’s flowers makes it noticeable, and provides the inspiration for the 90-plus vernacular names it has been known by over the centuries and from different locations around Britain (per Flora Britannica).

This is Arum maculatum, a plant most commonly known as Lords-and-ladies, a name that Flora Britannica says is ‘probably a Victorian invention, coined as a polite alternative to this great catalogue of vulgarities’. Those vulgarities include Cuckoo-pint (where ‘pint’, rhymes with mint, is short for pintle, slang for penis), Dog’s cock (a name from Wiltshire), Priest’s pilly (from Westmorland), and Willy lily (from the first Elizabethan era), amongst many others.

Fortunately, not all Arum maculatum‘s common names are focused on its flowers’ shape. In Flora Britannica, Richard Mabey also lists this, amongst others: ‘Starchwort, for example, recalls the era when the dried and ground-up tubers were used as a substitute for starch in laundries’. While you might not favour some this plant’s more ribald names, I do like the fact that the names show that people have taken the time to notice this plant (which people rarely do in today’s busy world) and to look at it closely enough to have imagined names for it.

The Fox and the crow

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I don’t know why this Carrion crow died. It certainly wasn’t the Fox that killed it; it may just have been natural causes. I was alerted to its presence, laying by the woodland edge below my window (I live on the second level of our building, on a steeply sloping site, so I was essentially looking straight down at this scene), by the local Magpies making a lot of noise. Half a dozen of them were standing around the crow, squawking loudly, hopping a little closer, then hopping away again. After about 5 minutes, they seemed to reach a consensus that the crow was dead, and they all flew off to their respective parts of the garden (they’ve paired up now and each pair seems to have established its own territory within the grounds).

Later, in the evening, Mr Fox found the crow and it was interesting to watch his behaviour. He was very gentle, sniffed and nuzzled the bird a few times, presumably making sure it was dead, then sprayed it twice, from different angles, with urine, before trotting off. I’ve since read that this is quite normal behaviour for Foxes; they will spray their prey to mark it as theirs, so that other Foxes leave it alone. The next morning the crow was gone, presumably retrieved by the Fox sometime during the night or in the early morning on its way back to the den.

More Green tigers

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Almost two years ago I found the first Green tiger beetle (Cicindela campestris) to be recorded at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park (see A Surprising beetle find, May 2024), and I’ve been looking on and off since then for any more.

Ten days ago, on 21 April, I finally spotted another one, and then the very next day I found two more. Of course, this means there must have been more back in 2024, at least one male and one female, for this species still to be present at Cosmeston, and not just a one-off anomaly.

I shall continue checking the location where I found these, an area where a lot of loose limestone fragments and spoil from the adjacent former quarry was dumped when the park was first created in the 1970s. Though plants have colonised the area, much of the rock remains exposed; this holds the sun’s warmth well, which these insects seem to like.

Having seen these beetles again, and spent time watching them, I’ve become more familiar with their way of moving, which helps with spotting them. They’re almost impossible to see when still but move away when I walk the paths through the area. If you didn’t know them, you might think they were large flies, as they fly a short distance, scuttle, then stay very still. Green tiger beetles are active in the spring and summer so fingers crossed I find some more in the weeks to come.

Cute cootlet

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Though I’ve been hearing the hungry cheeping of tiny baby birds in nests obscured deep within dense vegetation, I’ve not seen a lot of chicks yet this year. I did see the first local Moorhen babies three weeks ago, on 8 April, but they were, wisely, mostly hiding amongst the reeds and my photos weren’t share-worthy. So, when I was walking along the boardwalk on the edge of Cosmeston’s east lake on Tuesday and heard a low peeping, I was delighted, when I cleared the dense reeds, to spot this well-grown Coot chick feeding with its parents. And just look at the size of that foot!