Wednesday, 27 May 2026

A Painted Lady Summer?

 So there I was, in the supermarket car park, gazing happily at a tough-looking low-growing shrub covered with tiny white flowers (maybe a Contoneaster of some kind) – and there, drinking their fill of nectar, were three glorious Painted Lady butterflies, all in my field of vision at once. Some years that is as many as I see in a whole season, but this year we seem to be having a Painted Lady Summer – they are everywhere, even in town. Those three came on top of another half dozen or so I'd seen on my short walk to the supermarket, and there have been many more in the garden. I do love these butterflies, and have done since early childhood, when I first registered the extraordinary beauty of their intricately marked underwings, and marvelled at the journey they had made to get here. We now know that they fly not only from the Med but all the way from the desert fringes of North Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia, making much of the journey at high altitude. And here they are this year, in glorious abundance. 
   Also this morning, just down the road from our house, I spotted a Hummingbird Hawk moth, feeding on red valerian. This little moth, which does give a very good impression of a hummingbird, has thrived wonderfully in recent years, even surviving the winter in many parts. 
  So there we are – at least two reasons to be cheerful. Also, the oppressive heat of the past couple of days has cooled down to a perfect early summer day (even though it's still spring). 

6 comments:

  1. It's not often I've had a poetry recommendation from an Economics blog.
    https://thwaites.com.au/wp/the-jervis-bay/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What a terrible story. I read that one of the few survivors was later killed while covering an air raid over Germany for the BBC.

      Delete
  2. In case you haven't seen it, "4600 Years of Butterflies in Diverse World Cultures" https://x.com/archaeologyart/status/2059253435094937850

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hadn't seen that before – thanks! Some beautiful objects there – and what the heck is going on in that Roman intaglio?

      Delete
  3. Holly Blues are superabundant in Herefordshire. Sometimes I guess it might be simply the survival of some mass hatching in a thistle-rich derelict plot - sadly all being built over.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have a feeling that Holly Blues are going to carry on thriving, as their food plants are holly and ivy, which are never hard to find, whatever else is going on. I hope they do, as they're such a cheering sight. Thanks, Philip.

      Delete