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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: butterfly migration

Clouded yellow incoming

27 Wednesday Sep 2023

Posted by sconzani in nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, Clouded yellow

A bit of butterfly magic happened yesterday when I was birding on Cardiff Bay’s Barrage. I’d just managed to get quite close to one of three Wheatears feeding on insects in the grass and had headed back to the path that runs along the top of the Barrage when I noticed something small and very yellow-looking flying in from the sea side of the rocks, across the road and the path I was standing on, then down in to the grassy area I’d just left. I followed it down the slope as quickly as I could, watching to see where it landed. And there it was, sitting quietly as if resting, a Clouded yellow butterfly, only my second of the year and the first I’ve been able to get photographs of. Just brilliant!

230927 clouded yellow

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An early Painted Lady

05 Monday Jun 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, migrating butterflies, Painted Lady

It’s three weeks since I saw my first Painted lady of the year and I’ve not seen another since then. Apart from a sighting in early April some years ago, I don’t usually see them until the summer. Considering this beauty had flown across to south Wales from Europe, battling wind and weather along the way, it was looking remarkably good – a little faded on the wings perhaps, a couple of small snippets missing along the edges of its wings where birds had tried but failed to grab it. I’m looking forward to seeing many more Painted ladies as the summer progresses.

230605 painted lady

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Feed up, fly south

13 Thursday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

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Tags

British butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, ivy flowers, Red Admiral, Red admirals feeding on Ivy

It’s not only the birds that head south in the autumn. During a walk along the coastal path earlier this week, I noticed several Red admirals getting ready to migrate.

221013 red admiral (1)

Ivy flowers are essential for them at this time of year when they need to take on as many nutrients as possible before they take the big plunge and fly off over the cliffs, a feat that never ceases to amaze.

221013 red admiral (2)

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A migrant returns

18 Wednesday May 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

British butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, Painted Lady, Painted Lady migration, Vanessa cardui

Today’s guest has travelled thousands of miles to be here with us today (and is, understandably, looking a little jaded after such a long flight). Distinguished guests, please give a warm welcome to the Painted Lady!

220518 painted lady

I’d seen a report from the Suffolk butterfly recorder on Twitter on 16 May that, a few days previously, Painted Ladies had been seen ‘in their thousands streaming through Spain from north Africa’, so I’ve been keeping an eye out for the first to reach us here in south Wales. It’s a migration miracle!

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232/365 Lifer : Long-tailed blue

20 Tuesday Aug 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, insects, nature

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

British butterflies, butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, butterflying, European butterflies, Long-tailed Blue, Rowland Wood

It was the final day of my five-day visit with my friend Jill in East Sussex and she very kindly indulged my wish to look again for the butterflies we don’t see in my part of south Wales. The weather so far had not been kind, with heavy rain some days and almost constant wind, and the huge clouds rolling through Sunday’s skies didn’t augur well, but we would at least enjoy some fresh air and exercise. Our first stop was Butterfly Conservation’s Rowland Wood reserve, a site neither of us had previously visited. Apart from the almost constant dog pooh (which someone had sprayed with pink fluorescent paint making it much easier to avoid), the reserve was lovely, with mature woodland interspersed with large areas of heathland. I imagine it would be a paradise for fritillaries in early summer.

190820 Rowland Wood

We’d spotted a small number of the more common butterfly species – Gatekeeper, Speckled wood, Common blue, Small heath, when I stopped in my tracks, almost unable to believe what my eyes were seeing – a Long-tailed blue, sitting on a bramble leaf right next to the path!

190820 Long-tailed blue (1)

This is a European butterfly, which sometimes makes the journey across the Channel to spend a little time in the summer sunshine along England’s southern coast. I’d been told two or three had been seen along the Sussex coast in the previous ten days, and had been keeping an eye out for them on our earlier walks, but I never expected to see one on the north side of the South Downs, especially in a location where there was none of the Everlasting pea it uses as a larval plant. I guess the wind had done me a huge favour by blowing the butterfly further inland than usual.

190820 Long-tailed blue (2)

Except for opening and closing its wings ever so slightly, this little beauty didn’t move and we didn’t disturb it. I took rather a lot of photos and we continued on our walk. As you might imagine, I was amazed / delighted / overjoyed – in fact, I’m still buzzing from the excitement of spotting such a special butterfly. The Fates were kind to me that day.

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223/365 Sunshine after rain

11 Sunday Aug 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, insects, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

British butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, Clouded yellow, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park

For those who don’t live in Britain, we’ve had some wild weather over the past few days, with torrential rain at times and some very high wind gusts. I was starting to go stir crazy so, as soon as it began to clear around midday today, I headed out for a walk.

190811 clouded yellow (1)

I was wondering if I would spot anything unusual the wind had blown in … and I did! This blast of sunshine, a Clouded yellow, an occasional migrant to our shores, was flying around in the east paddock at Cosmeston.

190811 clouded yellow (2)

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213/365 A privilege of Painted Ladies

01 Thursday Aug 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, insects, nature

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

2019 Painted Lady influx, British butterflies, butterfly, butterfly migration, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Painted Lady, Painted Lady migration

190801 painted lady (1)

I’ve been pondering what the most descriptive collective noun might be for a group of Painted Ladies? Apparently, for butterflies, there are several possibilities including swarm, flutter, flight and kaleidoscope. The latter appeals because it conjures well the vision of a mass of beautiful, ever revolving colours. I thought of a ‘pleasure’ of Painted Ladies but the double entendre is a little tacky.

190801 painted lady (2)

Then, one of my Twitter acquaintances came up with ‘privilege’, which is just perfect, thank you, Martin. Because it certainly was a privilege to see 27 of these gorgeous creatures as I walked the fields at Cosmeston yesterday (and I’m sure there were a lot more than that). We’re not getting the thousands (perhaps hundreds of thousands) that have been arriving along England’s east coast in recent days, but it’s still a lot for this area and it was an absolute delight to see so many.

190801 painted lady (3)

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159/365 On the wings of the storm

08 Saturday Jun 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, insects, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, British butterflies, butterflies, butterfly migration, Cathays Cemetery, Painted Lady, Vanessa cardui

There are two good things about the drenching and battering we’ve just suffered at the hands of the Spanish Storm Miguel: the first is that we really did need the rain, as the ground is already dry and cracked in places, and the second is that the strong winds may well be responsible for this glorious little lady I discovered at Cathays Cemetery today.

190608 painted lady (1)

She (or, in fact, it may be a he) is a Painted Lady (Vanessa cardui), a butterfly which, according to the Butterfly Conservation website, ‘Each year … spreads northwards from the desert fringes of North Africa, the Middle East, and central Asia, recolonising mainland Europe and reaching Britain and Ireland.’ And s/he’s still looking quite pristine, despite that long journey.

190608 painted lady (2)

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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