Padfield

This forum contains a topic per member, each representing a personal diary.
User avatar
Lee Hurrell
Stock Contributor
Stock Contributor
Posts: 2423
Joined: Mon May 25, 2009 7:33 pm
Location: Hampshire

Re: Padfield

Post by Lee Hurrell »

Guy - what a fantastic set of recent pictures, stunning!

I think you have that Adonis perfectly.

Cheers

Lee

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
To butterfly meadows, chalk downlands and leafy glades; to summers eternal.
User avatar
Neil Hulme
Posts: 3595
Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2008 8:27 pm

Re: Padfield

Post by Neil Hulme »

Agreed Lee - but it's the Marbled Skipper for me :D
Neil

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

As ever, I'm glad you like the pictures, and thanks for the encouragement.

Today was a full working day but I did get a moment to nip down to my local woods, mostly to look for early stages. These I didn't find, but I did come across a surprisingly large fritillary cruising along the path, at one point stopping inaccessibly on some bramble. The bramble made me think of marbled fritillary, but it clearly wasn't that and I soon decided it was Clossiana. Now the only Clossiana on the wing at this time around here is euphrosyne, so this is what I recorded it as, even though felt very uncomfortable with the ID. But it 'had' to be this. I took a quick record shot of the upperside when it stopped briefly on the path near me:

Image

Only later did it suddenly occur to me it was a tit frit, over a month ahead of itself. This species usually emerges in mid-June, my earliest recent record being 14th June, in 2009. In the exceptionally early year of 2007 my first record was 16th June. So it is quite something to find it up and about on 10th May... Being so convinced it had to be a massive pearl-bordered fritillary I hadn't made any attempt to look at the underside.

Titania's fritillary is easy to identify in flight and a common species in the Alps. And yet my mind was quite unprepared for it and I completely failed to see what it was even when it was flying around right near me. Humbling.

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

Another blustery, cloudy morning at my violet copper site. I said a couple of weeks ago I would go up for some better photos, so I had a bash today. What I really wanted was to photograph and film females egg-laying, but all the females I saw were still warming up.

Image
This is a male, behaving territorially. They set up territories near rivulets in the wet ground, and always near or on aconite-leaved buttercups, which is their favourite nectar plant.

Image
A different male.

Image
This male is taking a break from defending his patch.

Image
Ideal habitat contains large swathes of the buttercup, with copious bistort too.

Image
A female sits on a bistort leaf at the edge of her domain. Beyond is drier mountainside. The survival of this species depends absolutely on the preservation of marshy areas.

Finally, here is a marsh fritillary, from the same patch:

Image

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

A dancing caterpillar movie, also from this morning.

I'm not very good on moth caterpillars - these are like lackey moths, but are probably some different species.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6TprkM_Dto[/video]

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
Jack Harrison
Posts: 4635
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2006 8:55 pm
Location: Nairn, Highland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Jack Harrison »

...dancing caterpillar movie...
Excellent.

A trick to try here in late summer when the garden brassicas and nasturtiums are infested with Large White caterpillars is to get quite close and SHOUT. They all rear up in unison. My kids loved doing that when they were young.

Jack

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
User avatar
Zonda
Posts: 1225
Joined: Tue Jul 28, 2009 4:58 pm
Location: South Dorset

Re: Padfield

Post by Zonda »

My favourite is No3 which is a Guy trademark shot. With the mountains, the hills and woods, the nectaring plant, and the subject. Great stuff. :D

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Cheers,,, Zonda.
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

The forests of fragile buttercups, growing out of marsh, the dense carpets of bistort and the general abundance of life everywhere made this a particularly difficult area for responsible photography. In several instances I held back on getting the perfect shot because I just didn't want to wade through the buttercups or tread bistort into the boggy ground, perhaps drowning whole families of dancing caterpillars (thanks for the info about large whites, Jack). It's a pity the butterfly didn't get a bit more 'wing on' for the shot Zonda liked.

Here is a big difference between Switzerland and England. I saw no one. No one had visited since I last popped up, two weeks ago. There were no footprints or trails in the marsh, no plants lying broken where a human had blundered past. There are nature reserves in Switzerland but most of the time I am butterflying in unmanaged, open, public countryside, as today.

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
David M
Posts: 17795
Joined: Tue Aug 11, 2009 8:17 pm
Location: South Wales

Re: Padfield

Post by David M »

Zonda wrote:My favourite is No3 which is a Guy trademark shot. With the mountains, the hills and woods, the nectaring plant, and the subject. Great stuff. :D
Agreed. I love the way Guy often 'factors in' a bit of flora and landscape to give up all an extended element of perspective.

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Gibster
Posts: 713
Joined: Wed Mar 17, 2010 8:06 pm
Location: Epsom, Surrey
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Gibster »

Guy, do you reckon you could add some decent heavy metal music to your dancing caterpillar video, pleeeeeease?

Maybe Master of Puppets or Ride the Lightning by Metallica? (a coupla all-time faves of mine, you understand?) :P

Gibster.


PS - anyone who, even for a moment, thinks that "decent heavy metal music" is an oxymoron is mistaken. Very. :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Raising £10,000 for Butterfly Conservation by WALKING 1200 miles from Land's End to John O'Groats!!!
See http://www.justgiving.com/epicbutterflywalk or look up Epic Butterfly Walk on Facebook.
User avatar
David M
Posts: 17795
Joined: Tue Aug 11, 2009 8:17 pm
Location: South Wales

Re: Padfield

Post by David M »

Gibster wrote: "heavy metal music"
There's your oxymoron. :)

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

Gibster wrote:Guy, do you reckon you could add some decent heavy metal music to your dancing caterpillar video, pleeeeeease?
:D

They did remind me of of a head-banger I once knew. Unfortunately, I haven't got any heavy metal in my music collection.

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
Jack Harrison
Posts: 4635
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2006 8:55 pm
Location: Nairn, Highland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Jack Harrison »

decent heavy metal music" is an oxymoron is mistaken.
Never understood heavy metal. I have always been a huge fan of Judith Durham (lead singer of the Seekers). This is lovely:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzxdgsSCth4

(Romantic) Jack

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
User avatar
Lee Hurrell
Stock Contributor
Stock Contributor
Posts: 2423
Joined: Mon May 25, 2009 7:33 pm
Location: Hampshire

Re: Padfield

Post by Lee Hurrell »

Zonda wrote:My favourite is No3 which is a Guy trademark shot. With the mountains, the hills and woods, the nectaring plant, and the subject. Great stuff. :D
I have to agree. When looking through Guy's diary, I stopped at that photo for a long time :D

Cheers

Lee

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
To butterfly meadows, chalk downlands and leafy glades; to summers eternal.
User avatar
Matsukaze
Posts: 1852
Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2006 9:18 pm
Location: North Somerset

Re: Padfield

Post by Matsukaze »

Can't help wondering if the caterpillars of the micro-moth Nemophora metallica get down to a spot of head-banging.

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

Matsukaze wrote:Can't help wondering if the caterpillars of the micro-moth Nemophora metallica get down to a spot of head-banging.
:D

Cowbells are such a constant accompaniment to butterfly-watching in Switzerland that the ears filter them out. I did notice, though, as I was crouched under a blackthorn bush this evening, looking for brown hairstreak larvae, that one bell in particular seemed to be getting louder and louder.

Then ...

Image
"So what is it we're looking for again?"

I think the poor beast was just a bit lonely, so I scratched its nose and headed off to the woods, hoping that it would then go back and join its friends in the meadow.

In the woods, I had an enjoyable encounter with a slow-worm:

Image

For anyone who's never got close to one of these lightning-fast creatures, here's a video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gurFd9ssflg[/video]

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
Pete Eeles
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Administrator & Stock Contributor
Posts: 6777
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2006 6:10 pm
Location: Thatcham, Berkshire
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Pete Eeles »

Brilliant! I feel so sorry for the many many individuals that are disconnected from nature!

Cheers,

- Pete

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies: http://www.butterflylifecycles.com
British & Irish Butterflies Rarities: http://www.butterflyrarities.com
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

A slightly frustrating afternoon, with wind and cloud almost thwarting my third attempt this year to find Iolas blues at a site I first discovered in 2004 but which is becoming increasingly overgrown with poplar and bramble to the extent I wondered if the blues were threatened. In the end, I saw a single female and a single male - but can't draw any conclusions about numbers because of the weather conditions. But I did explore neighbouring areas and found that bladder senna (iolas foodplant) had colonised new, recently cleared, stony slopes and the species certainly isn't at risk here for the time being. It might just be less easy for me to find in future.

Just two and a half weeks ago I reported my first red-underwing skippers (for the year) from the same site, looking all shiny and proud. Today all individuals were pale and faded. They were still proud though, perching atop salad burnet plants - their larval foodplant:

Image

There were plenty of other blues around, including what was almost certainly my first chalkhill blue of the year, though it was a rather distant, flight view. Adonis, turquoise, Chapman's, common, green-underside, little and Provençal short-tailed were all taking to the wing whenever the sun did show through the clouds.

But my favourite sighting of the day was a couple of large tortoiseshells that zoomed past me and carried on up a dried, stony river bed that I'd never walked along before. I followed them and was able to get some pictures of one as he caught the last rays of the sun. For those who were wondering recently what geriatric large tortoiseshells look like when they age naturally (there were questions about the condition of that one seen recently in the UK), here's the answer:

Image

The chances are, he's ten months old, having emerged probably in mid-July last year.

He then closed his wings and rested immobile until I left:

Image

Guy

EDIT: I think I'll add this pristine, fresh male large wall (Lasiommata maera - a close relative of the British wall butterfly, Lasiommata megera) I found this morning. Not my first of the year, but the first that has stopped near me:

Image

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

This and the next post are just filler, so the poplar admiral piccies to follow can enjoy being at the top of a page and stay visible for a while!

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
User avatar
Padfield
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 8182
Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
Location: Leysin, Switzerland
Contact:

Re: Padfield

Post by Padfield »

Filler!

Guy

Diary entries for 2011 have been archived. If there are missing images in this post, then they can be found in this archive if one exists. All archives can be found here.
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
Post Reply

Return to “Personal Diaries”