With the warmth have come the butterflies, the Buddleia in the garden is flowering again, and is in full sun during the height of the afternoon, and at this time of year we usually get a Painted Lady visiting the garden. This week was no exception. As I stepped out into the garden late afternoon on Tuesday 25th I saw one flying around the flower heads, I rushed upstairs to get the camera, and when I came back down it wasn't there.
There were though two Red Admiral, another butterfly that hasn't been that easy to see this year. The buddleia hangs over the fence,and with the house wall behind it there is a lovely bokum behind the subject.
The Red Admiral looking superb.
The two would nectar on the flower heads, and then spring up and circle around the bushes and then settle once again.
But when they were on the buddleia they were intent on making the most of the nectar.
Finally the Painted Lady returned, for awhile it stayed on thee other side of the fence, but eventually it came around to my side. This time the bokum was a window reflecting the deep blue sky.
It then settled on a flower head with the orange background.
Like the Red Admiral it would take off and circle around the trees before settling once again. As it did this it would lift the body upright with the wings spread out. You can see that in this position it was not nectaring.
While the wings are not being used to warm the butterfly through the veins, they do catch the sunlight and direct it to the body.
The following day at about the same time I noticed another orange butterfly on the bushes. The weather was just the same, clear blue skies and sunshine, but this time it was a butterfly that I would normally see from March onwards, but this year I haven't seen at all, until this afternoon. A Small Tortoiseshell.
It would seem that the Small Tortoiseshell has had a very poor two years, this year I have seen figures that state the populations have reduced by 70 per cent.
It was nice to finally see one this year, I was giving up hope.
With not seeing one at all this year I took the chance to photograph this one.
A Peacock was also about, butt I never managed to pin it down, as it prefered to nectar on the other side of the fence.
At the start of the week just after sunset I had seen a Hummingbird Hawkmoth around the flowers, it wasn't seen Tuesday, but today, Wednesday it was back, and I was able to get some photographs.
Again some lovely backgrounds.
The next day, Thursday, the Hawkmoth was back again, this time preferring to fly around the flower heads in the sun, and with the orange background.
They are the closest we will ever get to having Hummingbirds in the garden, and the way they move around the flowers is exactly the same as the Hummingbirds I had photographed in Costa Rica.
The hummingbird hawkmoth is a day-flying moth with a
wingspan of about two inches. It has a brown, white-spotted abdomen, brown
forewings and orange hindwings. It is very swift on the wing and an expert
hoverer. The wings beat so rapidly that they produce an audible hum and can be
seen only as a haze. The darting movement from one flower to the next with the
long proboscis uncoiled completes the illusion of a hummingbird.
This species does not normally over-winter here, although some do finding crevices and holes where the over winter in cocoons. The
population is replenished each year by new migrants. However, if winters become
milder in future, we may see them over-wintering more frequently.
2017 was a very good year for sightings, and they may have struggled this winter. The southerly winds recently have probably brought them into the south of the country.
The feeders are once again busy, dominated once again by the Goldfinches, but also up to four Greenfinches,and a single Redpoll a few weeks ago. Unfortunately we had a break out of trichomonosis, but after bringing the feeders in for a couple of weeks this seems to have gone. Please though, do keep your feeders clean, and if you see small birds behaving strangely, and not flying away if you approach them do clean your feeders and take them down for a week or so, the birds will come back.
When we returned from holiday at the start of August the House Martins had fledged and the nest was empty. However the House Martins then set out to have a second brood. There are young still in the nest today, you can see one of the young here.
They must be about to fledge as the parents fly around the house calling as if to tell them to leave the nest, where upon they will fly around the estate here with their parents for a few days before embarking on an incredible journey south, across the Sahara and into southern Africa. When you look at the little bird in the nest you have to wonder how they do this. They typically are gone by the second week of October. One day they are all flying around the house, the next they are gone and won't be back until the end of April
Our Blackbird is going through the moult. He will still come for food early in the morning and last thing at night. The body feathers are looking very good, but he is currently going through a moult of the feathers on the head and neck which gives him the appearance of a monk! As soon as he has eaten enough he flys off to the safety of the surrounding bushes. While in moult the birds are very vulnerable, and careful about where they are.
Here are a couple of photographs of him earlier in the month
We have been feeding him now for at least four years, and we are heading into our fifth winter. I am not sure how long Blackbirds live for, but he is doing very well.
It has been awhile since I posted on this blog, and as I have said before I am concentrating more on sites away from Four Marks, but every so often I will post and keep providing updates locally. Lets hope the wonderful weather continues.