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December 2014

Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2014 7:13 pm
by David M
Doesn't feel quite right doing this....

...but here are a couple of Red Admirals I saw at Bracelet Bay, Mumbles Head, Swansea just after midday today:
1RAs(1).jpg
1RA2s(1).jpg

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sat Dec 06, 2014 1:13 pm
by Vince Massimo
At this time of year I prefer all over-wintering butterflies to be snugly tucked-up, but I ventured out to my local Red Admiral hot-spot at lunchtime today to see if there was any activity.
Red Admiral - Crawley, Sussex 6-Dec-2014
Red Admiral - Crawley, Sussex 6-Dec-2014
This one was basking on a pub bench alongside the footpath. The air temperature could not have been more than 5C or 6C, but the sun was out and there was no breeze in this sheltered location. My latest ever sighting, but I hope that winter comes soon :)

Vince

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sat Dec 06, 2014 8:29 pm
by False Apollo
Found this Red Admiral at the end of Hengistbury Head, Dorset at 14.00 this afternoon. Considering the temperature it was surprisingly active around the cliffs. This is as far as it could have travelled without leaving the coast, so it could have been a case of should I stay or should I go. It did fly out to sea, but I saw it or another 15 minutes later along the cliffs. This is a very exposed part of Hengistbury Head and not where I would have expected to see one in cold weather. My first December 2014 butterfly on a really sunny day.

Regards
Mike

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sat Dec 06, 2014 9:57 pm
by Paul Harfield
I also got my first ever December sighting today :D Although it was very cool there was two, possibly three Red Admirals flying in this sheltered sunny spot near home today in Hedge End.
P1030545 - Copy.JPG

Re: December 2014

Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2014 5:20 pm
by badgerbob
Downland Boy and myself were up on Ashdown Forest today in temperatures of around 7 degrees when a Red Admiral flew past!!

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2014 9:46 pm
by IAC
How many folks have seen Long Tailed Blue this winter? This from North East Branch, North Northumberland. Amazing stuff. https://www.facebook.com/BCNorthEastEngland

Iain.

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2014 10:10 pm
by David M
IAC wrote:How many folks have seen Long Tailed Blue this winter? This from North East Branch, North Northumberland. Amazing stuff.
Stunning...though I suspect this is far from a natural arrival as the text suggests.

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2014 11:25 pm
by millerd
An amazing thing to find in your vegetables... However, I believe it can be a pest of cultivated peas in other parts of the world, and turns up in packs of mange-tout in particular from time to time. Globally, it's extremely widespread.

Dave

Re: December 2014

Posted: Mon Dec 15, 2014 1:54 am
by IAC
Not a natural arrival, and a pest... :shock: Sounds to me like UKIP mantra.....bring on the pests I say. and more unnatural arrivals, I dont care where they come from and care not a jot how they smuggle themselves in :) ..sadly...I may have to settle for an unlikely Small White in me Sprouts.. :cry: :lol:


Iain.

Re: December 2014

Posted: Mon Dec 15, 2014 11:17 pm
by David M
IAC wrote:Not a natural arrival, and a pest... :shock: Sounds to me like UKIP mantra.....bring on the pests I say. and more unnatural arrivals....
Careful, Iain, or you risk 'moderation'. :D

Re: December 2014

Posted: Tue Dec 16, 2014 5:15 pm
by badgerbob
On the slopes of High and Over today I had 2 sightings of Peacock today.

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2014 6:56 pm
by Wurzel
Got an early Xmas pressie today - Red Admiral flying around the shops in town. Got some iPod video footage just for proof just got to work out how to upload it now :D

Have a goodun

Wurzel

Re: December 2014

Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2014 8:34 pm
by David M
Good effort, Wurzel.

Butterflies are still about given the mild conditions.

I'm actually intent on taking my camera to Abergavenny this Christmas because I wouldn't be surprised to find a specimen or two in the prime locations.

Re: December 2014

Posted: Tue Dec 23, 2014 7:59 am
by Ian Pratt
Wishing a happy Christmas and a peaceful New Year to all who have posted sightings in 2014. Thanks to all the photographers who have added much enjoyment to the reports. :D Ian

Re: December 2014

Posted: Wed Dec 24, 2014 12:46 pm
by Matsukaze
Female Small White - apparently freshly emerged - in the garden this morning. It was close enough to the house to suggest it may have pupated indoors somehow; it would not be the first time that has happened (we found one indoors in January a few years back).
Dsc02886.jpg

Re: December 2014

Posted: Wed Dec 24, 2014 5:42 pm
by David M
I feel sorry for the poor thing. It'll most likely have a short and lonely life. :(

Re: December 2014

Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 2:25 pm
by Vince Massimo
A walk around my local Red Admiral hot-spot at lunch time today produced one individual basking on a fence :D .
Red Admiral - Crawley, Sussex 25-Dec-2014
Red Admiral - Crawley, Sussex 25-Dec-2014
Air temperature was 8C but the site was warmer because it was sheltered from the light wind. With such a sparkling, sunny Christmas Day across much of the country, I am anticipating more sightings to be reported.

Wishing everybody a Merry Christmas :D

Vince

Re: December 2014

Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 10:55 pm
by MikeOxon
No butterfly sightings today but I did manage to snap the international Space Station during its pass over Southern England at 18:08 - 18:10. The path shows the amount of movement during a 2 second exposure as it passed from West to South East.
Abingdon, Oxon - 25th Dec 2014<br />Nikon D300s with 18-70 zoom (at 70mm) - 2sec@f/8 ISO800
Abingdon, Oxon - 25th Dec 2014
Nikon D300s with 18-70 zoom (at 70mm) - 2sec@f/8 ISO800
Mike

Re: December 2014

Posted: Fri Dec 26, 2014 9:22 am
by Scott Barron
A Red Admiral flew through my garden in Hayle, Cornwall on 24th December. Other December species I have recorded this year are Small Tortoiseshell & The Peacock.

Re: December 2014

Posted: Fri Dec 26, 2014 1:34 pm
by Jack Harrison
It is quite surprising how few people have knowingly seen satellites. I saw my first way back in 1957. I had to be up in the dark before dawn and caught a brief glimpse of the launch rocket for the first Sputnik. It was illuminated by sunlight against my dark sky and appeared as a moving moderately bright star. Sputnik 2 launched a few weeks later was much easier. In those days, there was little general light pollution, so in some ways satellites were more easily seen. But the ISS can be truly bright and easy enough even in today's well-lit urban environment. This is a good place for predictions:

http://www.heavens-above.com/

Iridium flares are well worth seeing.

I trained to be a flying instructor 48 years ago.. Here is a little note from my memoirs:
We had to learn to teach in front of a class: how to keep the lesson interesting. We could hardly have had a more critical audience than our fellow trainee instructors. One lesson had to be on a service related matter, another on a topic of our choice. My non-service talk was about the visibility of satellites just after sunset of before sunrise. I used a spotlight (the sun) to shine on the earth (globe) around which I had fixed a ring of wire (satellite orbit). I had one of my antipodean colleagues stand on his head to simulate visibility from Australia. Clippings from the day’s newspaper showed them what to expect to be able to see that night. Sadly it turned out to be cloudy.
Jack