Butterflies in November!!!

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Denise
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Butterflies in November!!!

Post by Denise »

2 Red Admiral and a single Speckled Wood in my area this morning. :D

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Padfield
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Post by Padfield »

6 species of UK butterfly still battling on today (Nov 4th) in Switzerland. I couldn't photograph the red admirals, but the rest are:

Queen of Spain fritillary...

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... those two look a little world weary, but there were fresher ones too:

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... adonis blue ...

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... common blue ...

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... wall brown ...

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... and clouded yellow.

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And just for interest, here's my dog next to a remarkable trompe l'oeil in Branson. The two humans, the window and even the pavement are simply painted onto the wall (look at the bottom right, next to the artist's signature if you don't believe it):

Image

Guy
Last edited by Padfield on Sun Nov 04, 2007 6:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Bryan H
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Post by Bryan H »

Remarkable, Guy!

That's the butterflies and the trompe l'oeil.

You can almost hear the hiker: "Is this the way to Gurnigelbad?"

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Post by Padfield »

OK - next year I'm going to go to Gurnigelbad and drink a beer at the Gurnigelbad tavern and send you some piccies, Bryan! It's quite a long trip on public transport for me, but if you punch it into Google Earth you'll see it actually looks quite good for meadow/woodland butterflies. Frankly, it doesn't look the most obvious place to hunt for femmes chaudes...

Guy

PS - Sorry to sabotage your thread, Denise. It's Bryan's fault. Now let's have some more November butterflies!
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Post by Bryan H »

Sorry, Denise!

:oops:

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Post by Simon C »

Comma, large white and red admirals in Bath over the weekend.

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Jack Harrison
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Post by Jack Harrison »

Guy,

In what stage do the Q of Spains hibernate in Switzlerland? My Collins suggests it can overwinter in any stage which must be very ususual for a butterfly.

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Post by Gruditch »

A single Speckled Wood today(6th). :)


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Jacqui Jay
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Post by Jacqui Jay »

One Red Admiral (a bit battered) flying today at Gibraltar Point.
Jacqui

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Padfield
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Post by Padfield »

jackharr wrote:Guy,

In what stage do the Q of Spains hibernate in Switzlerland?
This is a very good question, Jack! The Swiss literature itself is unsure, though my assumption had been that it hibernated as a chrysalis. This year, however, it seems to have been continuously brooded in the Rhône Valley. I saw my first on 3rd February and that included some very worn ones, so they had clearly been flying in January. I have seen them every month since, in good numbers. I will be checking again in December!

I think perhaps it doesn't have a true diapause stage and just goes torpid in whatever stage it is when the cold weather comes. In 2006-7 there wasn't any cold weather so it just kept flying.

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Jack Harrison
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Post by Jack Harrison »

That makes it all the more surprising that Q of S hasn't suceeded in colonising the milder, almost frost free, parts of coastal S England.

Perhaps Q of S might be better thought as having a life style more analagous to Red Admiral than the other fritillaries?

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Post by Padfield »

I agree, Jack - it's a bit of a mystery. But the British status of Q o S has remained pretty constant over the years - "rare migrant" - so I guess there's a reason why our shores are not favourable to the species as a resident.

This picture was taken 3rd Feb this year, when all the books say no Queens of Spain should be flying anywhere in Europe (in fact, there shouldn't really be any butterflies about!):

Image

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David Tipping
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Post by David Tipping »

A solitary red admiral on the wing in a sheltered, sunny area at Thorpe Underwood, near York, today.
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Denise
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Post by Denise »

A single Red Admiral braving the breeze today and a most unusual sight of a Comma feeding on cut up apple that I had put out for the birds.

Someone in my local wildlife group saw a Holly Blue in Marshfield today. :shock:

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eccles
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Post by eccles »

Two days ago (11th November) I saw a very active red admiral crossing the road (no puns please) in Longwell Green, near Bristol. :)
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Post by Dave McCormick »

yesterday I saw around 17 red admirals at Mountstewart going at quite a speed most of them.
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Post by Dave Mac »

This appeared in the garden this morning. It did not hang around for long, only enough time to get a quick snap.
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Post by NickB »

A Peacock sunning itself on the gravestones in Mill Rd Cemetery at lunchtime. Didn't have the camera with me!
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