The Butterflies of Sussex

Discussion forum for books and any other media concerning butterflies.
User avatar
Jack Harrison
Posts: 4635
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2006 8:55 pm
Location: Nairn, Highland
Contact:

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by Jack Harrison »

I am steadily working my way through this splendid book.

Large Tortoiseshell was apparently resident Houghton Forest 1964-81. I lived in the area 1974-81 and was aware of the rumours. I visited Houghton almost every spring but apart from a few heart-stopping possibles in the form distant Commas, no LTs. Was I just unlucky, a bad observer or was LT simply not there? Does anyone know of confirmed sighting in Houghton during that period?

Of course, Houghton Forest isn’t a million miles from where LT was seen this spring at North Stoke.

Jack
Last edited by Jack Harrison on Tue May 16, 2017 6:44 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
peterc
Posts: 427
Joined: Mon May 12, 2014 5:45 pm
Location: Hertfordshire

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by peterc »

I know Houghton Forest pretty well as I used to go there in the 1990s when mum lived in Worthing. My first ever White Admiral, Silver-washed Fritillary and Dark Green Fritillary were spotted there. I never saw more than Dark Green on any one visit - always around the same spot in a clearing SU9922 1144 but has it disappeared from the site?

Nearly finished the book now :)

ATB

Peter
User avatar
Pete Eeles
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Posts: 6779
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2006 6:10 pm
Location: Thatcham, Berkshire
Contact:

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by Pete Eeles »

Congrats Neil (and Michael)! My review here:

http://www.dispar.org/reference.php?id=131

Cheers,

- Pete
Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies: http://www.butterflylifecycles.com
British & Irish Butterflies Rarities: http://www.butterflyrarities.com
User avatar
Vince Massimo
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Posts: 1855
Joined: Sat Aug 16, 2008 7:36 pm
Location: Crawley, Sussex

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by Vince Massimo »

That review is absolutely spot-on, Pete.

Completely agree :D

Vince
User avatar
Pete Eeles
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Posts: 6779
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2006 6:10 pm
Location: Thatcham, Berkshire
Contact:

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by Pete Eeles »

Thanks Vince - one of the easier books to review, I have to say :)

Cheers,

- Pete
Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies: http://www.butterflylifecycles.com
British & Irish Butterflies Rarities: http://www.butterflyrarities.com
User avatar
Jack Harrison
Posts: 4635
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2006 8:55 pm
Location: Nairn, Highland
Contact:

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by Jack Harrison »

Have I come across an omission? Queen of Spain Chichester in (I think) 2009.

Jack
User avatar
Neil Hulme
Posts: 3595
Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2008 8:27 pm

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by Neil Hulme »

Hi Jack,

To quote a reliable source (myself :D): "Only those species recorded in Sussex during this period [2010 - 2014] are included, so the Queen of Spain Fritillary, which secured a brief foothold in the county between 2007 and 2009, failed to make the cut."

BWs, Neil
User avatar
Jack Harrison
Posts: 4635
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2006 8:55 pm
Location: Nairn, Highland
Contact:

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by Jack Harrison »

Neil
"Only those species recorded in Sussex during this period [2010 - 2014] are included
That explains. I had missed that quote.

Jack
User avatar
PhilBJohnson
Posts: 696
Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2014 11:04 pm
Location: Lincoln, Lincolnshire
Contact:

Re: The Butterflies of Sussex

Post by PhilBJohnson »

Jack Harrison wrote:I [think I] posted my review earlier somewhere on ukb but it has vanished.

The Butterflies of Sussex is an excellent publication with informative text – despite not being a butterfly novice, I am nevertheless learning a great deal. The photos are first rate, mostly I believe taken by Neil with his bridge camera (who needs a DSLR?).

The layout is ideal with none of those all-too-often pictures split over two pages – one of my pet hates. Neil has told me that he was quite firm with the publishers about layout. Congratulations to the publishers for accepting the authors’ guidance

I don’t know Michael Blencowe and don’t think he contributes to ukb (pity) or at least not very often.

Michael and Neil have set the standard in wildlife books that will undoubtedly be the benchmark for many years to come.

Jack
"i'll cross that bridge camera, when I come to it"
"This superb book I have started reading to Melissa should be a resource for a long time to come, then we might have a "The Butterflies of Sussex re-visited" :wink: or better still (in my opinion), a different media resource.
I am still waiting for the Camberwell Beauty to spread out from Camberwell, then it might be renamed "Southwark Beauty".
#Morning Cloak

Kind Regards.
Kind Regards,
Post Reply

Return to “Books, Articles, Videos, TV”