Tags
Aglais io, butterflies, butterfly, Cabbage white, Pararge aegeria, Peacock, Pieris rapae, Small white, Speckled wood
‘The butterfly counts not months but moments, and has time enough,’ wrote Bengali Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore – perhaps a lesson for us all.
The first butterflies of spring-summer 2016 have now begun fluttering around me when I’m out walking. Like the bees and the hoverflies, I find they add an extra dimension to my wanderings, a whisper of magic, a hint of fairies …

The Small white (Pieris rapae) was the first butterfly I saw, a couple of weeks ago, during a walk around Cardiff Bay, but it eluded my attempts to photograph it. Both this and the Large white are known as the ‘Cabbage Whites’ for the damage their caterpillars do to the cabbage and other vegetable plants; I have childhood memories of my father regularly checking the undersides of his cabbage leaves and cursing those caterpillars! Though this butterfly has been known to fly as far as 100 miles in its lifetime, it couldn’t fly to New Zealand – in the days before strict agricultural border controls, it was accidentally introduced there, to Australia and to North America.
What a glorious creature the Peacock butterfly is and how lovely it looks on this blackthorn blossom, though this Peacock has seen better days; it’s a little faded and has parts of its wings missing. Aglais io gets its common name, obviously, from the unmistakable ‘eyes’ on its wings, so reminiscent of a peacock’s spectacular tail, but its underwings are quite the opposite, dark and easily mistaken for dead leaves in a woodland setting.
The Speckled Wood (Pararge aegeria) is the butterfly I’ve seen most often in the past couple of weeks, in the woodlands of Cosmeston and Bute Park and also in tree-filled Cathays Cemetery, where the two shown together above charmed me with their delicate spiralling dance. Is it love or the love of the chase, I wonder?
Annie, it is quite possible to go insane chasing butterflies trying to get a photograph as they settle down, only for them to fly off again a nanosecond before the camera focuses.
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Hehe … I will be completely insane by the end of summer then, Paul, as I am not only chasing butterflies, but also hoverflies, damselflies and dragonflies … and my favourite birdies, of course!
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Good luck with it all. I look forward to the photos. We’re off to Broara tomorrow, hope to meet with you again when we get back.
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Well, that brought back memories. Assuming you mean the village in Scotland, my ex’s sister and her husband ran a hotel there a million years ago. Enjoy!
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Yup that’s the one. Staying with friends – if the snow doesn’t slow us up
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Should be magical. I worked a winter in Aviemore – loved it – love the Highlands – love Scotland!
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Your posts are so inspiring. I feel your love of nature oozing out of every one 🙂
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Thank you most kindly, Joyce. It sounds cliche but being out amongst Nature is where I’m happiest. 🙂
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Me too.
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Beautiful. I am yet to see a peacock this year.
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Probably wise of the peacocks not to emerge on days like today!
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Very wise. Brrrr…
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Simply beautiful, all of them!
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Thanks very much, Val. I love them too.
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