26
June 2022
I
recognised the lanquid flight of a handful of Ringlet
Butterflies amongst the orchids
over the southern verge of Buckingham Cutting, north Shoreham. There was
also a Box Tree Moth, Cydalima
perspectalis.
19 June 2022
Mill Hill Cutting (SW)
6 June
2022
There
were small patches of Horseshoe Vetch
flowering on the shady southern bank of the eastern (west of the bridge)
Slonk Hill Farm Cutting with frequent Spotted
Orchids.
3 June 2022
Rough
Hawkbit, Spotted Orchid,
Black Medick
Mouse-eared
Hawkweed, Common Lizard
Pixie
Path/ Mill Hill Cutting
A Common
Lizard, Lacerta
vivipara basked on some broken Chestnut
fencing on the Pixie Path, north Shoreham.
25 March 2022
Blackthorn
near
Slonk Hill Farm
14
July 2021
Positively
the largest dragonfly I have ever
seen flew over the top of Chanctonbury Drive, north Shoreham. It was probably
an Emperor Dragonfly, Anax
imperator .
It patrolled to and fro under the shelter of the trees above the lawn/meadow
and disturbed a Speckled Wood Butterfly,
but would not settle.
5 August 2020
Chalkhill
Blue on Carline
Thistle
Mill
Hill Cutting
There were at least ten male Chalkhill Blues fluttering over the southern bank of the Mill Hill Cutting on a sunny afternoon.
21
July 2020
A
very brief detour to the Rough Hawkbit
covered southern bank of the Slonk Hill Cutting in the late afternoon disturbed
a fresh male Common Blue Butterfly,
a definite Ringlet
and a Meadow Brown.
The Common Spotted Orchids
had gone to seed.
Common Broomrapes
The small Common Broomrapes seen in Frampton's Field yesterday were so faraway I returned with a long lens, but I still found them difficult to focus on amongst the ungrazed vegetation. On the southern bank of the Mill Hill Cutting I trampled some Cotoneaster, and found hundreds more Common Spotted Orchids.
Common Spotted Orchids
7 June
2020
On
a cloudy day, the PIxie Path hosted a few
very small Pyramidal Orchids,
a budding Goatsbeard
and two unfamiliar Wild Iris.
The
southern bank of Mill Hill Cutting hosted over a hundred Common
Spotted Orchids and wish at least ten
Southern
Marsh Orchids, this was more of the latter
I had ever seen before.
Lastly,
there were some very small Common Broomrape
seen in Frampton's Field from a distance (with Keith
Wilson) under a rain
cloud. These were the first for several years
and the first ever seen in that field.
Wild
Flower Report
Illustrated
Orchid Report
29
May 2020
My
first of the year orchid
was a Common Spotted Orchid
on the Slonk Hill Cutting (south),
7 May 2020
Speckled Wood Holly Blue
Under
a hazy blue sky, there was rather minimal
flying insect activity on the southern bank at the eastern end of the Slonk
Hill Cutting. As the vehicles droned by, I spotted a few queen Buff-tailed
Bumblebees, a Red
Admiral, a Small
Heath Butterfly, a Large
Red Damselfly and a Holly
Blue Butterfly in about thirty minutes.
Later, at Buckingham Cutting (south) two Speckled
Wood Butterflies and familiar hoverflies
appeared in the shade of the linear copse.
Adur
Butterfly List 2020
Horseshoe Vetch on the A27 Shoreham (Slonk Hill North) Cutting
23
April 2020
With
scarcely a cloud in the hazy blue sky, the sunshine made
the butterflies very lively. At the very top of Chanctonbury Drive, two
pairs of sparring Speckled Woods
immediately appeared. Almost simultaneously on the Pixie Path side of the
road to Mill Hill, my first three
of the year
Holly Blues looked
brilliant and restless over the Ivy.
6 July 2019
Ringlet
Butterfly
Buckingham
Cutting (south)
4 July
2019
There
were about eight restless Ringlet Butterflies,
four Meadow Browns,
two Large Whites
and a restless Marbled White over
the road verges at Buckingham Cutting (south). There was a single Kidney
Vetch plant
but no Small Blue Butterflies.
Pyramidal
Orchids were frequently in flower but
the occasional Common Spotted Orchids
were mostly finished. There was no Giant Hogweed or even Common Hogweed.
24 June 2019
Meadow
Brown
Butterfly,
Cotoneaster Tree
Meadow
Brown
Butterflies,
Common Spotted Orchid, Marbled
Whites Butterfly
Slonk
Hill Embankment (south)
It was cloudy and the overcast southern road verge of Slonk Hill was shaded by the trees. What remained of the open grass meadow was scattered with Ox-eye Daisies, Common Spotted Orchids and Rough Hawkbits. There were no purple flowers for the few active Marbled Whites Butterflies to visit. Male Meadow Brown Butterflies were frequently disturbed and I also caught a fleeting glimpse of a probable Painted Lady (it could have been a Wall Brown as the under wing was cryptically camouflaged) for a second. Bramble and Cotoneaster were flowering as was Lady's Mantle with leaves that still retained droplets of the morning rain. No Ringlet Butterflies were seen.
11 June 2019
Slonk Hill Cutting
After
the morning rain, I visited the road verges
at Buckingham Cutting (south) and Slonk Hill Cutting (south central) in
the late afternoon, which are only garden-sized areas,
The
above montage deserves some addition information:
The
Meadow
Brown
Butterfly
still seemed a bit sodden and
was one of three seen.
There
was over fifty Common Spotted Orchids but
not the hundreds seen in other years.
Cuckoo
Spit was seen on Bramble in the
shade.
Ox-eye
Daisy was prevalent and the illustrated
one hosted a miniature Crab Spider,
an ambush predator.
Horseshoe
Vetch was very late flowering
on the north-facing southern road verges at Buckingham Cutting (south).
There
was no Kidney Vetch
or Small Blue Butterflies.
3 June 2019
Bee Orchid, Southern Marsh Orchid, Common Spotted Orchids
22
May 2019
The
hoverfly
Volucella
bombylans var. plumata was
spotted on a new looking wooden fence at the top of The Drive, north Shoreham.
There were two Holly Blue Butterflies
over Buckingham Cutting (south), landing on the Cotoneaster.
19 May 2019
Horseshoe Vetch on the A27 Shoreham (Slonk Hill North) Cutting
6 September 2018
Privet,
Dogwood,
Blackberry
Holly,
Hawthorn, Wayfaring, Cotoneaster
Berries
by the Pixie Path
4 September 2018
Nipplewort,
Yellow Wort, Ivy
Pineapple
Weed*, Hawkbit
PIxie
Path/Mill Hill Cutting near Mill Hill (* Lower Car Park)
There
were no butterflies
seen on Mill Hill Cutting (SW). Two large Slow
Worms were coiled up under a discarded
piece of plastic litter. The smaller golden coloured (a juvenile) of the
two was accurately estimated at 18 cm long.
The
Ivy
flowers
were attractive to common species of hoverflies,
wasps
and an Ivy
Bee,
Colletes
hederae. Two spikes of Yellow
Wort had their flowers open under the
cloudy
sky. The
Hawthorn
berries were red and the Holly
berries were orange adjoining the Pixie
Path.
30
July 2018
Chalkhill Blue
It felt cool in the late afternoon when five Chalkhill Blues disturbed on Buckingham Cutting (south) under a cloudy sky.
The
sunshine made it difficult to photograph over a hundred Common
Spotted Orchids and about eight Southern
Marsh Orchids on the southern bank of
Mill Hill Cutting. The Pyramidal Orchids
were just emerging on the north edge of Frampton's Field.
Adur
Orchids
25
August 2017
It
was a pleasant autumn day with the sun casting strong shadows in the late
afternoon. A Speckled
Wood and
two Holly
Blues were
seen at Buckingham Cutting (south). Nothing
special about these half expected finds, but the surprising thing was one
of the Holly Blues
was extremely tiny and no bigger than a Small
Blue high up in the hedgerow. White
butterflies were frequently in town and outskirts
seen with one Small White
but the others unidentified as they were restless and seen at too great
a distance to discern their features. On the Pixie Path by Frampton's Field,
Old Shoreham, I spotted eight fair condition Meadow
Browns
and
two more Holly Blues,
with one smaller than usual.
Chalkhill Blues on Cotoneaster
On
Mill Hill Hill Cutting (SW) there were no butterflies
to spot for a few minutes but after twenty or so minutes, I managed to
discover five separate female Chalkhill
Blues
laying eggs amongst the Horseshoe Vetch. They were joined by three males,
one instantly recognisable and the other two badly worn. Quite often the
female
Chalkhill Blues landed on Cotoneaster.
Adur
Butterfly List 2017
1
August 2017
Cucumber Spider, Araniella cucurbitina, on the top of Chanctonbury Drive, north Shoreham. Adur Spiders My
first of the year Southern Hawker (dragonfly)
was spotted at the top of Chanctonbury Drive, north Shoreham, together
with a Holly Blue
and Speckled Wood Butterflies.
|
30 July 2017
Silver
Y Moth, Wall Brown
Chalkhill
Blues
With
a constant breeze (Force
6) under a cloudy sky, it was not a time
to go outside the boundaries of Shoreham. So
I didn't, I just made a quick cycle up Mill Hill Road to the outskirts
of north Shoreham spotting a Large White
Butterfly at the top of Chanctonbury Drive
and a Holly Blue
and a faded Wall Brown
on the Pixie Path. I climbed over the prostrate chestnut fencing to make
my way to the Mill Hill Cutting (SW) where I spotted my first female Chalkhill
Blue of the year amongst about a dozen
males
and
a Silver Y Moth.
22 July 2017
Hogweeds
compared
Buckingham
Cutting (south)
4 July 2017
Meadow
Brown,
Melilot, Wayfaring Tree
Perforate
St. John's Wort, Bumblebees
on
Greater
Knapweed,
Ringlet
Butterfly
Buckingham
Cutting (south)
26 June 2017
Ringlet
Butterfly, Pyramidal Orchids with
Hedge
Bedstraw
Marbled
White Butterfly, Meadow Vetchling,
Pyramidal Orchid
Buckingham
Cutting (south)
On
the southern bank of Buckingham Cutting,
frequent butterflies were all lively and
unsettled, with half a dozen or more each of Ringlets,
Marbled
Whites and Meadow
Browns in the afternoon. (There were no
Small
Blues,
Speckled
Woods or other butterflies seen on Buckingham
Cutting.) Pyramidal Orchids
were in flower replacing the fading
Spotted
Orchids. Perforated
St. John's Wort was beginning to flower.
Adur
Butterfly List 2017
15
June 2017
On
another breezy afternoon, there was a Meadow
Brown
on
the southern bank of Slonk Hill Cutting and a Burnet
Companion Moth on Buckingham Cutting and
that was all of special interest. The first KIdney
Vetch was seen with two flowers
on Buckingham Cutting.
Black
Medick, Spotted Orchids, Kidney
Vetch, Pyramidal Orchid
Burnet
Companion Moth, Yellow
Rattle, Wayfaring
Slonk
Hill Cutting and Buckingham Cutting (south)
Salad
Burnet, Meadow Vetchling, Beetle
Cryptocephalus,
Burnet
Moth caterpillar
Holly
Blue on Greater
Bird's Foot Trefoil x2, Restharrow, Small
Blue Butterfly
Buckingham
Cutting (south)
Two
Speckled
Woods courted at the top of Buckingham
Park in the shade of the trees. In a humid afternoon on the southern bank
of Buckingham Cutting with tricky bright
light I struggled to take any pictures.
Holly
Blues were fluttering around the Bramble
and the was even one on the roadside meadow. My first Small
Blue Butterfly of the year would settle
on my camera strap and enticed on to my finger, but it would not transfer
to a Greater Bird's Foot Trefoil
(in the absence of any Kidney Vetch).
My first of the year Marbled White
was lively and when it did settle on a Red
Clover, it was immediately chased off by a
Meadow
Brown.
My second Large White Butterfly
of the year fluttered by.
Spotted
Orchids were common and beginning to turn
brown and the occasional Pyramidal Orchid
was budding or showing their first flowers.
My first Restharrow
and yellow Meadow Vetchling
of the year were noted in the roadside meadow.
13
June 2017
At
last the breeze was gentle (Force
3) on a sunny humid day. On
the approaches to Mill Hill, I recorded
a few Speckled Woods,
a few Holly Blue Butterflies;
and a Meadow Brown
on Mill Hill Cutting (SW). At the top
of Chanctonbury Drive I spotted what was probably my first Large
White Butterfly
of the year.
Adur
Butterfly Report
Speckled
Wood, Holly Blue on
Wayfaring
Pyramidal
Orchid, Southern Marsh Orchid, Common Spotted Orchid
Mill
Hill Cutting
On
the southern side of Mill Hill Cutting
there were over a hundred Common Spotted
Orchids with a handful of both Southern
Marsh Orchids and
Pyramidal
Orchids.
Wild
Flower Report
2 May 2017
Common
Vetch, Vicia
sativa
Ants
were
attracted to the nectar
produced by this common legume
in a mutualistic
arrangement whereby the ants
discourage insect herbivores
on the plant
Buckingham
Cutting (southern verge)
9 March 2017
In
the weak but welcome first sunshine of the year a Red
Admiral pipped a Comma
as my first butterfly
of the year by about five seconds. Both butterflies made their appearance
at the top of Chanctonbury Drive (Dovecote Estate) amongst the undergrowth
beneath the trees (SE of the bridge ot Mill
Hill). This semi-wild area hosted flowering
Sweet Violets which were visited by my
first
Honey Bee
and my first of the small hoverflies
of 2017.
The
sun came out and the air temperature measured 14°
C at its highest at 4:00
pm.
22
October 2016
A
dead Mole
was discovered under the copse between the top of the Drive and Buckingham
Cutting (south).
23
September 2016
Sunshine shined weakly in the afternoon. Six Red Admirals led the way with five probable (seen at a distance only) Small Whites on the outskirts of town. The photographed Red Admiral was seen (one of two) on Ivy next to the Footpath 3140 that goes past Frampton's Field where it joins The Street. |
6
September 2016
There
was a very autumnal look to the downs with wild flowers
going to seed and the first berries. Large
Whites, Small Whites, and definite Green-veined
Whites were all identified in five minutes
at the top of Chanctonbury Drive, north Shoreham with amorous Speckled
Woods. There were no butterflies
at all on Mill Hill Cutting (SW) despite the weak sunshine. There was a
Slow
Worm under under a discarded piece of
plastic litter. A Southern Hawker (dragonfly)
cruised
over the Pixie Path (NW of Frampton's Field) where I recorded a Holly
Blue amongst the Ivy
and Holly, Ten
minutes later, a Red Admiral settled
on the chestnut fencing right in front of me.
22 August 2016
Mill Hill Cutting (SW)
On
a breezy warm day I cycled straight to Mill Hill Cutting (SW) where three
large Slow Worms
were coiled up under a discarded piece of plastic litter. There were occasional
butterflies
fluttering around: three male Common Blues,
three male, three male Chalkhill Blues,
and a brown female of undetermined identity, illustrated above. Two common
species of grasshopper hopped around.
A
spider
had made a funnel-shaped web
amongst the Cotoneaster.
it did not seem to be occupied by any spiders
or spiderlings.
It is most likely to be the home of the Labyrinth
Spider, Agelena
labyrinthica.
On
the Pixie Path I noted occasional Large
White Butterflies and one Meadow
Brown.
3 August 2016
Chalkhill Blue
On
the Pixie Path there was a Small Skipper
to add to the list and a Yellow Shell Moth
which hid in a Wayfaring Tree.
On
Mill Hill Cutting (south) nine Chalkhill
Blues were in active flight, and one female
was spotted crawling over the Cotoneaster and Horseshoe Vetch leaves. Three
male Common Blues
danced in the breeze. One large Slow Worm
hid
under a large piece of cardboard.
29
July 2016
On
a cloudy and breezy afternoon inimical for butterflies
I cycled to the Mill Hill Cutting (SW) via the Pixie Path (from the west).
On the small chalk bank I observed one Peacock
Butterfly that settled for an instant,
a Large White
and eight male Chalkhill Blue Butterflies
in almost constant flight. Two large Slow
Worms hid under a large piece of cardboard.
On the Pixie Path (northern section ) I added one Red
Admiral, occasional Meadow
Browns, a few Gatekeepers,
one Small Skipper,
one male Chalkhill Blue,
and one male Common Blue.
A Shaded Broad-bar Moth,
Scotopteryx
chenopodiata, was also spotted on
the path.
Mill
Hill Cutting (SW)
Greater
Knapweed (discs
in Frampton's Field NW), Spotted Orchid,
Chalkhill
Blue Butterfly
Slow
Worms, Peacock Butterfly
Red
Admiral, Common Lizard, Volucella
zonaria
hoverfly
Hoverfly
Volucella
bombylans var. bombylans
On
Buckingham Cutting (south) there were two Speckled
Wood Butterflies in the shade and on the
open verge there were a few Meadow Browns,
a few Gatekeepers,
and at least one Small/Essex Skipper and
at least one Red
Admiral and
at least one 6-spotted
Burnet Moth. Large
Whites and
Small
Whites were present in the sunshine. The
first impressive Volucella zonaria
hoverfly
of the year was seen on Buckingham Cutting (south). The bumblebee mimic
hoverfly
Volucella
bombylans var. bombylans was
seen in the same area a minute later. An olive green Common
Lizard, Zootoca
vivipara, rested on the Cotoneaster, but
skitted slowly into immediate cover and disappeared with my shadow.
Adur
Lizards
15
July 2016
On a cloudy cool day, there were about ten fresh Red Admirals, a Marbled White and a Gatekeeper on the Pixie Path 3138 (northern section). On the Mill Hill Cutting (south) I discovered a Slow Worm at least 25 cm long, as big as I had ever seen one. It was under a large piece of discarded cardboard.
12 July 2016
Early
in the afternoon I detoured to Buckingham Cutting (south) and added another
Meadow
Brown, two or three Marbled
Whites, one Red
Admiral, one Small
Skipper,
and at least one slow flying Ringlet.
Adur
Butterfly List 2016
4 July 2016
South
side of the Bridge to Mill Hill
Feverfew,
Purple
Toadflax,
Agrimony
Honeysuckle
1 July
2016
Still
cloudy and overcast and too breezy for the
open downs, I still made a detour to Buckingham Cutting (south) where the
Giant
Hogweed had grown much higher than a person towering at least three
metres above the path. It did not seem to
be a week since I last visited but that was because of the intervening
thunderstorms and rain. The orchids
and other plants in flower did not seem
to have changed all that much in a week. Restharrow
was now flowering. Self-heal
grew tall in the tall vegetation. A few small Perforate
St. John's Wort were budding.
Buckingham Cutting (south)
I stayed long enough for a few butterflies to be disturbed. The first a lively Meadow Brown of several males only, followed by a languid flight of the first of a handful of Ringlets of both genders, followed by the lively flight of about the same number Marbled Whites and lastly two Small Blues.
22
June 2016
Still
cloudy and wet from the over night rain, but
still worth a detour to the Slonk Hill Cutting (south bank) where the hundreds
Spotted
Orchids were not so abundant as usual
years and were already joined by a few budding
Pyramidal
Orchids. The languid fluttering of my
first Ringlet Butterfly
of the year was soon followed by a more energetic first and fresh male
Meadow
Brown. A flash of blue was identified
as a Holly Blue Butterfly.
Spiders
had spun at least thirty large webs over the ground vegetation including
the Cotoneaster.
There were two species of yellow Dandelion/Hawkbit-type
(Cichorioid Daisies) flower
amongst the orchids,
grasses, Lady's Mantle and Salad
Burnet. One of the two was Rough
Hawkbit.
Adur
Hawkbits
Slonk
Hill & Buckingham Cutting (south)
Holly
Blue Butterfly, Spotted
Orchids
Kidney
Vetch
Ringlet
Butterfly, Common
Poppies
The linear copse path to Buckingham Cutting (south) was overgrown and just about passable (from the east). There were more orchids on this small patch of roadside verge with Red Clovers, Yellow Rattle, Ox-eye Daisies, Greater Bird's Foot Trefoil, Kidney Vetch, Hedge Bedstraw etc. The tiny butterfly was a Small Blue.
4 June
2016
As
an afterthought I looked out the meadow-like road verge at Buckingham
Cutting (south) where the first Common
Spotted Orchids were budding and showing
their first flowers. After a little bit of exploring my eyes keyed into
my first Small Blue Butterflies
of the year. This small garden-sized area also hosted my first Yellow
Rattle in flower and two species of small
green beetles: the common Thick-legged
Flower Beetle, Oedemera
nobilis, and the equally common Cryptocephalus,
as well as a Common Blue Damselfly.
Adur
Butterfly List 2016
Small Blue Butterfly Common Blue Damselfly
19 May 2016
Mill
Hill Cutting (SW)
Milkwort,
Wayfaring,
Milkwort
Cotoneaster
Marsh
Marigold,
Milkwort
NB:
The Marsh Marigold
was from my garden. I looked for the usual Southern
Marsh Orchids on the road cutting on the south
side of the Mil Hill Gap without success only finding evidence of human
vegetation clearance and discarded rubbish.
4 May 2016 A rustle amongst the Cotoneaster on the meadow of Buckingham Cutting (south) was a Common Lizard, Zootoca vivipara, in the weak sunshine. |
|
31 March 2016
The sun shined briefly and my first Comma Butterfly of the year made a fleeting appearance at the southern end of the Waterworks Road, Old Shoreham, followed by a Peacock Butterfly over Frampton's Field (south-west). Alas a dead Fox lay at the entrance to the Waterworks Road by the main Steyning Road. Blackthorn, one Bluebell, Green Alkanet and Alexanders were in flower on the Waterworks Road verges with Lesser Celandine on the Steyning Road verges. Adur Adur Butterfly List 2016
13
March 2016
A Fox in the afternoon on Footpath 3138 from Old Shoreham to MIll Hill (west boundary of Frampton's Field, divided into Horse runs) in its usual position half way up on the north-south part of the footpath. |
11
March 2016
In
the fading light of the late afternoon, I spotted the silhouette of a small
bird in a budding Elm tree
on the footpath by Frampton's Field, Old Shoreham, near where the footpath
meets The Street. It turned out to be the first
Goldcrest
I have seen locally for several years.
Adur
Trees 2016 Elm
1
October 2015
Blue
sky and sunshine (> 17.3 °C)
throughout with a Light Breeze (gusting to Force
6) prompted
an early afternoon visit to Mill Hill.
Under a disconnected prone strip of chestnut fencing next to the Pixie
Path and adult and a juvenile Slow Worm
lay
in a nest of red/brown flying ants.
Both of the legless lizards were quickly disturbed but returned to their
position an hour later. Four Common Darters
were
seen over the north-west corner of the Pixie Path.
Ants
location: OS grid ref: TQ212065 I-spot:
Temnothorax
nylanderi is
suggested. The Meadow Ant,
Lasius
flavus is arguably more likely.
|
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23
September 2015
Cloudy
but at least it was not raining and anything
fluttering in the breeze was more likely to be a fallen leaf as
the equinox passes and the days become even shorter. I
disturbed four or five Red Admirals
in a single Ivy
bush on the Pixie Path, north Shoreham. The Pixie Path hosted a Small
Robber Fly, Machimus atricapillus,
three Common
Darters (dragonfly)
and a larger dragonfly.
As they all appeared simultaneously so I did not get a chance to chase
the larger dragonfly to find out what is was. I fancied it to be a Migrant
Hawker rather than the more usual Southern
Hawker.
On the prone chestnut fencing of the Pixie Path, there were about twenty Common Lizards, Lacerta vivipara, seen in various different places. |
8 September
2015
Highlight
of a grey and cloudy day
was another family of two adults and five full-sized juvenile Common
Lizards, Lacerta
vivipara, on the prone chestnut fencing,
20 metres to the west of where a family of lizards
was seen a week previously. I looked at the location where I found the
lizards before and uncovered an ants
nest and spotted a very small Slow Worm,
which was the first I had seen this year.
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At
the top of Chanctonbury Drive (SE of Mill Hill
Nature Reserve) a Holly Blue fluttered
by and four Speckled Woods
were quite lively with a Large White and
a Red Admiral on
the edge of the trees.
The
Pixie
Path (north) hosted two Small
Whites, three Holly
Blues, a Speckled
Wood, a Meadow
Brown,
and last but not least a fresh Comma Butterfly.
Other insects of note were a Southern Hawker
(dragonfly), a Common
Darter (dragonfly), a Small
Robber Fly, Machimus atricapillus and
occasional hoverflies.
Adur
Butterfly Day List
Juvenile
Common
Lizard,
Lacerta
vivipara
Pixie
Path, north Shoreham
I first
spotted an adult Common Lizard, Lacerta
vivipara, on the Ivy
at the top of the Pixie Path 3138 to Mill Hill,
followed after a few minutes by five much darker juveniles as shown in
the photograph above.
Adur
Lizards
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On
a cloudy day a Southern
Hawker (dragonfly)
patrolled over the Pixie Path. A dozen
Holly
Blue Butterflies were on the Ivy
on the road (northern) side of the Pixie Path. They were quite lively whereas
most of the other butterflies
were hiding. Ten Speckled Woods fluttered
amongst the Hawthorn
berries (Haws). There
were a pair of worn Chalkhill Blues
on Mill Hill Cutting (SW) and there may have been more but I did not loiter
around to look for them. I also spotted a Rhingia
hoverfly
on the Ivy and the rarely seen hoverfly Dasysyrphys
albostriatus.
Adur
Butterfly Day List
20
August 2015
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Circumstances restricted me to Shoreham town and outskirts in the afternoon sunshine which was favourable for twelve species of butterflies in the town and immediate outskirts (south of the A27). Adding the northern part of the Pixie Path 3138 and Frampton's Field added a handful each of Gatekeeper and Meadow Browns, two to four Wall Browns, occasional Common Blues and frequent Holly Blues and at least eight fresh dark Speckled Woods. The southern bank of the Mill Hill Cutting added fifteen lively Chalkhill Blues of which ten were faded females, but there was at least one very fresh male. Hawthorn, Wayfaring Tree and Brambles were beginning to berry.
NB: I am not sure of some of the Chalkhill Blues were females or males that have lost their blue sheen? Almost all of them were like the photographs above.
On
a passage cycle journey I made a quick decision to detour to the southern
bank of the Mill Hill Cutting via Pixie Path 3138
(from the south) where 12 Holly Blues
were the most prevalent butterfly
on the path, with a few Gatekeepers and
Meadow
Browns,
a Speckled Wood,
Red Admiral and
one Wall Brown.
Clambering over the chestnut fencing and Ivy
onto the crumbly chalk road verges stabilised with Cotoneaster,
a male Common Blue was
seen immediately, the first of 9, and almost simultaneously the first of
frequent Chalkhill Blues
fluttering around on an overcast day. In a garden-sized patch an estimated
24 (20+4) were seen in 20 minutes with 15 males seen flying around at the
same time. They were in various condition, from pristine to good and some
a bit worn, and included four females which the males had difficulty in
finding.
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Chalkhill Blues
13 August 2015
After the thunder and rain, a few butterflies came out in the afternoon: on Buckingham Cutting (south) I saw a few each of Holly Blues, Common Blues, Brown Argus, one or two Small Blues, one Red Admiral and a Silver Y Moth. Hoverflies, of least four species, plus a Digger Wasp Ectemnius sp. and other flies, visited the Hogweed.
Digger Wasp Ectemnius sp.
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Hoverflies visited the Common Hogweed, Heracleum sphondylium. There was a Volucella zonaria hoverfly in the shade. A Small White Butterfly was spotted over the Dovecote Estate.
16
July 2015
Most
of the large Giant Hogweed Heracleum
mantegazzianum, plants had been hacked
down but there were young growths next to the remnants of the 25 mm diameter
hollow stems.
These small plants look very much like the Common Hogweed, Heracleum
sphondylium, which is coming into flower.
(Giant Hogweed flowers from late May.)
Information
File on Giant Hogweed
Poison
Garden: Hogweeds
7 July 2015
Within
the Shoreham town boundaries the tally of butterflies
were about ten Ringlets
around Slonk Hill Farm Road (three north of the Bridge, and seven on the
southern bank), with a few Small Whites
and a few Large Whites
seen in Shoreham town. On Buckingham Cutting (south) I added a handful
of Small Blues,
a Small Skipper and
half a dozen Meadow
Browns
all
seen immediately and a Comma
and
Gatekeeper added after ten minutes. There
was a Speckled Wood
at the top of Buckingham Park.
Adur
Butterfly List 2015
24 June 2015
Orchids on Mill Hill Cutting
17 June 2015
On a sunny day, I cycled along the linear copse path from Slonk Hill Drive to Buckingham Cutting (south) where I spotted a Speckled Wood Butterfly in the shade, and at Buckingham Cutting a dozen or so Small Blue Butterflies were fluttering around the Kidney Vetch now flowering. After a few minutes I managed to disturb a male Common Blue Butterfly, two unsettled Burnet Companion Moths and as I was about to leave after over five minutes a Cinnabar Moth flew rapidly out of the Cotoneaster. There were frequent small moths in the meadow-like road verge.
6 June
2015
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A Holly Blue Butterfly was spotted in Buckingham Park. A few more Common Spotted Orchids appeared in flower on the southern back of Buckingham Cutting, north Shoreham where there were the first signs of flowering Kidney Vetch. Butterflies present were a male Common Blue, a Speckled Wood and a pair of Red Admirals. The breeze was making spotting anything a little tricky. I caught a glimpse of my first definite Burnet Companion Moth of the year.
Such were the frustrations of the wind, that I was about to leave when I glimpsed the gentle fluttering of my first Small Blue Butterfly of the year. I chased it around and when it settled on the patch of Cotoneaster, I noted my first two Common Lizards of the year scrambling around the red berries and green leaves. I had never seen them amongst Cotoneaster before. A tiny spider Agalenatea redii had produced so many web threads on Salad Burnet that it almost obscured this predator and I had to brush them away before getting a poor photograph.
2 June 2015
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Buckingham Cutting (south)
18
September 2014
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15 August 2014
By
the time I decided to visit the road verges of the Mill Hill Cutting (SW)
it was decidedly cool and a breeze has started. The pathway route was completely
overgrown and impassable so I clambered over the chestnut fencing and rusty
barbed wire. It was worth it for a dozen Chalkhill
Blues
simultaneously
in flight with fresh males, worn males and a few very faded and worn females,
as well as a solitary Common
Blue
female.
This was all in an area scarcely larger than a town back garden. On the
Pixie Path there were two Red Admirals
rising from the Ivy, a Large White
and a Speckled Wood.
Also a Robber Fly, Machimus
atricapillus, which are easily overlooked,
landed on the chestnut fencing, on which it could be seen clearly. Wayfaring
and Cotoneaster
were in berry.
Adur
Butterfly Report
8 August
2014
It
felt like autumn with a cooling
breeze and berries
on the bushes. The road verges on the southern side of the A27
opposite
Slonk Hill were devoid of anything of interest, no butterflies
and the only thing that moved were active grasshoppers
and a Silver Y Moth.
The shaded woody areas turned out to be better but with just a Green-veined
White Butterfly, a Holly
Blue and finally a small yellow and black
Digger
Wasp Ectemnius sp.
Adur
Bees & Wasps 2014
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On a slightly cooler summer's day, a short detour to the outskirts of north Shoreham (top of The Drive & Buckingham Cutting south verge) was rewarded with a little more than expected: twenty Common Blue Butterflies (including courting couplets), at least one Brown Argus for the first time this year (only discovered after examining the underwing spots on photographs), two Small Blues (not seen yesterday), twenty plus Speckled Woods (including the ones at the north of Buckingham Park), an handful of Holly Blues, one Gatekeeper, one Meadow Brown, one Small Skipper, occasional Large Whites, a Brimstone Butterfly and a 6-spotted Burnet Moth. The second of two Southern Hawkers landed in front of me. This dragonfly is an avid butterfly predator as was a Hornet Robber Fly that looked ominous.
23
July 2014
On
the
warmest day of the year at 27.6°C
(so far) I did not venture out to leave the Shoreham
town boundaries and by late afternoon (5:00
pm) the breeze had cooled off the sunshine.
The road verge at Buckingham Cutting (south) was empty of any butterflies
at first but within five minutes, I saw two Gatekeepers,
one Green-veined White,
one Small White,
one Large White,
a few Speckled Woods,
two Holly Blues,
a Silver Y Moth,
a Red Admiral
and I finally disturbed a roosting Small
Blue Butterfly. There was a Volucella
zonaria hoverfly
on Buckingham Cutting (south).
26
June 2014
Road
verges can often be productive in wild flora
and fauna, and the road verge on south side of the road south of Buckingham
Barn is conveniently located within the Shoreham town boundaries. On an
overcast afternoon, the butterflies
were not very lively, but two Meadow Brown
Butterflies were seen immediately followed
a minute or so later by a settled Large
Skipper and a restless Marbled
White.
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Then
nothing for quarter of an hour until I glimpsed a bright Red
Admiral over the Brambles
to the south of the path. I was pleased to spot the Large
Skipper as I only see a handful very year,
but more surprised by my earliest ever Gatekeeper
in
the long grass and dense vegetation. I had to chase it around to confirm
its identity as a fresh male specimen. This
was a first record
of a Gatekeeper
in Sussex this year. A Silver
Y Moth was similarly elusive in the meadow-like
vegetation.
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
Adur
Butterfly List 2014
Buckingham Cutting (south)
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Kidney Vetch |
Buckingham Cutting (south)
I cycled
the narrow path through the linear copse up to the road embankment opposite
Buckingham Barn where the verge had a more colourful flower
display in whites (Ox-eye Daisies, Hedge
Bedstraw, Bramble), yellows (Kidney
Vetch, Greater Bird's Foot Trefoil, Yellow Rattle)
and purples (Spotted Orchid, Pyramidal
Orchid, Greater Knapweed). The flowers
attracted two Meadow Brown
Butterflies, six more Ringlet
Butterflies, a courting pair of Small
Blues (there were probably more), two
restless Marbled Whites and
my first Burnet Moth of
the year. It was in its familiar whirring flight so I could not counts
its spots. As I was leaving I spotted by first of the year of the most
impressive of hoverflies
Volucella zonaria.
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
Adur
Butterfly List 2014
19
June 2014
On
a hazy day I took a detour up the overgrown Pixie Path (FP 3138)
where I spotted a Yellow Shell Moth,
followed by a courting pair of Comma Butterflies
and a courting pair of Small Tortoiseshells.
A Meadow Brown
was seen in the long grass of Frampton's Field.
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Orchids
Three species of orchid were seen on the Mill Hill Cutting SE bank: Common Spotted Orchid, Pyramidal Orchid and Southern Marsh Orchid.
2 June
2014
A
bit later than in most years, I discovered my first Small
Blue Butterflies of the year on my first
visit to the southern road bank opposite Buckingham Barn, north Shoreham.
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These
tiny butterflies
were hiding in the tall vegetation in the late afternoon, but after four
minutes I spotted the first pair of about ten butterflies basking on some
green leaves. Kidney Vetch
was beginning to flower nearby (caterpillar
plant of the Small Blues)
with a spiky display of Common Spotted
Orchids and a first glimpse of the yellow
flowers of Yellow Rattle.
A Pyramidal Orchid
was budding.
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
Adur
Butterfly List 2014
Adur
Orchids
29
October 2013
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23
October 2013
After the over night rain deluge, the weather cleared and there was even a enough warmth for the surviving butterflies to be discovered in the breeze. A flighty Red Admiral was seen over the Waterworks Road, Old Shoreham and a resting Comma on the Pixie Path. |
24
September 2013
A flock/parliament of over twenty Rooks descended on Frampton's Field, a horse pasture halfway up the downs from Old Shoreham. 29
August 2013
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26
August 2013
Loaded
Elderberry
bushes drooped over the path through the Waterworks
Road to Mill Hill Cutting (SW) produced Large
Whites (frequently seen everywhere) a
Red
Admiral and a dozen or so Common
Blues.
Mill
Hill Cutting immediately produced half a dozen male Chalkhill
Blues in flight in a total of 12 males
seen in two minutes, and I disturbed simultaneously a surprising 13 female
Chalkhill
Blues in amongst the Horseshoe Vetch, Hippocrepis
comosa, leaves. The females
were all seen in an area of four square metres and
this is an unprecedented density locally for the females.
The Pixie Path on the west-east section (running parallel with the A27)
hosted three Wall Browns,
a few Speckled Woods,
a few Meadow
Browns and Holly
Blues.
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23
August 2013
Warm
and humid and overcast and the summer weather has not broken yet. I
made a rather unusual trip on the outskirts
of Shoreham, the full length of the footpath surrounding Frampton's Field,
starting at the The Street entrance and ending at the top of Mill Hill
Road without crossing the bridge over the A27.
Large
Whites were the most widespread of the
butterflies
found in Shoreham town, but this route added
occasional
Holly Blues by the Ivy, a Red
Admiral basking on the wooden footpath
sign by the Butterfly Copse (juxta the Waterworks
Road), a Peacock
Butterfly on the Buddleia,
a few Meadow
Browns on and around the path, frequent
Common Blues
on
the path and in Frampton's Field, a
Small
Tortoiseshell with a bite out of its wing,
and a few Speckled Woods
at the top of the Pixie Path by the hedge.
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Chalkhill Blues
At
the north-west corner of Frampton's Field it was possible to fight my way
through the Brambles on
the route of the old footpath to Mill Hill
on to an area which I have names Mill Hill Cutting (SW) where a Small
White Butterfly opened and then closed
its wings. In an area of about twenty square metres of bare chalk bank
covered with clumps of Horseshoe Vetch, Cotoneaster
and the leaves of Mouse-eared Hawkweed, there was a fabulous showing of
too many Chalkhill
Blues
to
count accurately as I lost count at thirty, but estimated to be forty including
ten females (I
gave up counting these at seven) plus occasional Common
Blues
of
both genders to confuse the count. This count
extrapolates to 800 Chalkhill
Blues
per acre which is the maximum density expected in a good year (and not
seen on Mill Hill since 2003).
Most of the Chalkhill
Blues
were rather worn and tattered with a few with just minor damage. The pairs
were courting and the females
were laying eggs. There were also frequent Silver
Y Moths.
Adur
Butterfly List 2013
22
August 2013
A
partly tattered Small Blue Butterfly
from Buckingham Cutting (south) was added to the list of the previous
day, but despite having a close look at
the Common
Blues,
I could not add a Brown
Argus
to the list. They were all female Common Blues.
The list within the boundaries of Shoreham added Large
Whites, Small Whites, Meadow
Brown 1,
Gatekeeper 1, Holly
Blues,
Speckled
Woods only.
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Common Blues
Silver
Y Moths were frequently seen in the undergrowth
on the verges of the A27
at Buckingham Cutting (south) and Slonk Hill Cutting (south).
14
August 2013
I
walked Path 3138 through the Waterworks
Road and up the Pixie Path recording the butterflies
in the order of first seen: Large White,
Green-veined White, Small White, Holly
Blue, Speckled
Wood, Comma,
Peacock,
Small
Tortoiseshell, and Gatekeeper,
all seen in a few minutes at the bottom of the path around the Butterfly
Copse with its Buddleia
and Stinging Nettles. Mill Hill Cutting (south) added about fifteen Chalkhill
Blues
(including
two females). Frampton's Field added occasional
Meadow
Browns
and Common Blues.
There were more Speckled Woods
and Holly Blues
at the top of the Pixie Path.
A
Wheatear
flew rapidly into the bushes.
Full
Butterfly Report
9
August 2013
Too
breezy and overcast to visit the downs,
I
did venture to the top of The Drive where there were a few Speckled
Woods, and to Buckingham Cutting (south)
where there was Common Blue
but no Small Blues
in the early evening when butterflies
should be roosting. Green-veined Whites
and
both Large Whites
and Small Whites
were identified and a Red Admiral
fluttered over. A Silver Y Moth
flew out of the meadow vegetation. A few Holly
Blues fluttered over the scrub/hedgerow,
and I disturbed a few Meadow
Browns,
but
no Ringlets,
on the meadow-like road verges opposite Slonk Hill.
7
August 2013
Under
a cloudy sky I decided on a purposeful detour
from the Waterworks Road
up the Pixie Path to Mill Hill Cutting (SW) a route
I had not taken since 27
July 2013. I soon recorded a definite
Green-veined
White and a definite Small
White Butterfly, the first of two Holly
Blues (not recorded the previous
day) and inevitable Gatekeepers and
Large
Whites before I fought my way though the
Brambles to the north-facing southern bank of the A27
verge which is Mill Hill Cutting (SW). Despite being overcast eight male
Chalkhill
Blues were seen immediately flying simultaneously.
As conditions were good for photography, I stayed around in this garden-sized
area and at one time I estimated fairly accurately that their were thirty
males and two female
Chalkhill Blues.
The males did
not seem to be chasing the females as much as quarrelling with each other.
They used the few newly flowering Carline
Thistle as nectar sources, but there were
more butterflies
than these plants. Silver Y Moths
hid amongst the Cotoneaster.
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Advertising
its arrival with a distinctive
call,
a Green Woodpecker arrowed its way across Frampton's Field from
north to south. It flew at low level less than a metre above the long grass
as the horse pasture had now in a large part become a meadow. So it was
surprising I did not see any Meadow Brown
Butterflies,
but one flying Six-spotted
Burnet Moth and a Peacock
Butterfly over Frampton's Field. A Hornet
Robber Fly, Asilus
crabroniformis, landed on the path
in front of me, shortly followed by a second brood Wall
Brown Butterfly that appeared very briefly.
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At
top of the Pixie Path bordered by the hedge, there was a handful of
Speckled
Woods. Worker bumblebees
were active amongst the Bramble flowers
with the first blackberries ripening.
The bumblebees were frequent Red-tailed
Bumblebees,
Bombus lapidarius,
slightly less frequent Buff-tailed Bumblebees,
Bombus
terrestris, and occasional Common
Carder Bees,
Bombus
pascuorum.
Adur
Butterfly List 2013
Adur
Flies
1
August 2013
On
a warm humid day when I recorded twenty species
of
butterfly,
I saw the following species on Buckingham Cutting (south): the inevitable
Gatekeepers
and Meadow
Browns,
Marbled
Whites,
Small
Skippers, frequent Holly
Blues, frequent Speckled
Woods in the shadier spots, occasional
Large
Whites, a few Small
Whites, a handful of Common
Blues, one Small
Blue, two Peacocks
and
two
Red Admirals.
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There
was also a Green-veined White
further east later in the afternoon and the first record of a Ringlet
Butterfly in the month of August
on
the road verge meadow opposite Slonk Hill. In the shade of the trees
at the top of The Drive, north Shoreham, I noted my first two of the impressive
hoverfly
Volucella zonaria this year.
Adur
Butterfly Flight Times
Full
Butterfly Report
Butterfly
List for the Day
Mill
Hill Report
27
July 2013
I
travelled to Mill Hill via the Pixie Path
and the butterflies seen here were Speckled
Woods, the inevitable Gatekeepers
and Meadow
Browns,
Marbled
Whites,
Small
Skippers, two Holly
Blues, a Red
Admiral and occasional Large
Whites. A
dozen male Chalkhill
Blues appeared on Mill Hill Cutting (south)
before I reached Mill Hill.
Full
Butterfly Report
25
July 2013
A
half an hour passage trip along the southern bank of the A27
opposite Slonk Hill, resulted in three species of butterfly
not recorded on the day before. I only spent about
ten minutes looking for butterflies but it was enough to spot a Small
Blue Butterfly immediately on Buckingham
Cutting (south) as well as a Cinnabar Moth,
two Large Skippers
on the edges of the linear copse in an open area and lastly a Ringlet
on the top part of the roadside verge at the eastern end. The settled Large
Skipper was seen in exactly the same place
as the one at the beginning of the month. Other butterflies seen on the
brief trip included Meadow
Browns,
Gatekeepers, Speckled Browns,
one Holly
Blue, one Comma,
Large
Whites,
Small Whites and at least one
Marbled White. A few Yellow
Shell Moths were seen. Six-spotted
Burnet Moths were occasionally seen as
well as a few unidentified micro-moths. I was also fortunate enough to
spot the first of the large hoverflies
of the year. It was the attractive Volucella
inanis.
Adur
Butterfly List 2013
Adur
Skippers
Adur
Burnet Moths
15
July 2013
In
the late afternoon sunshine, I made a quick
detour to Buckingham Cutting (south) where in under a minute the first
of about ten Small Blue Butterflies
appeared on the small wild flower rich
meadow. There may have been many more of these tiny butterflies which were
dwarfed by the arrival of three Marbled
Whites. These Marbled Whites very rarely
settled, but I spent some time chasing them vainly for decent photograph.
During this time a Ringlet
and a Meadow
Brown
appeared.
I could have spent more team amongst the meadow amongst the Kidney
Vetch, Lady's Bedstraw, Cleavers,
Pyramidal
Orchids, Greater Knapweed,
Ox-eye
Daisies,
Restharrow
etc., if wasn't for the noise of the relentless traffic on the A27.
A Burnet Moth
flew over the flower tops. Amongst the Brambles, the first of two Gatekeepers
were positively seen along with a Red Admiral
and two Large
Whites. In the shade of the linear copse,
I disturbed a Yellow Shell Moth.
On
the verge to the east (Slonk Hill south), three more Ringlets
were clearly seen and another Marbled White
and
a Large White.
1 July
2013
Two
Large
Skippers either fighting or courting over
the overgrown path along the south bank of the Slonk Hill Cutting was the
highlight of a brief detour on a humid late afternoon. The notable feature
of the open road embankment were the thousands of fading Common
Spotted Orchids and the appearance of
the first
Pyramidal Orchids.
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Other
butterflies
on passage journey included a faded Red
Admiral in the shade of Buckingham Cutting
(south) and about twenty Small Blues actually
seen amongst the flowering
Kidney Vetch
on the open road verge with many more hidden, and a Large
White, plus a large fawn Blackneck
Moth,
Lygephila
pastinum.
Adur
Orchids
Adur
Moths
Adur
Butterfly List 2013
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
27
June 2013
A Green-veined White Butterfly flew over Frampton's Field. On Mill Hill Cutting (SW) there were three orchid species flowering and shown below. At least one clump of Horseshoe Vetch, Hippocrepis comosa, was still in flower in a sheltered part of the south-west area of Mill Hill Cutting south, west of the broken fence. I encountered a Fox on the way up the Pixie Path from the south during the middle of the day. It crouched down and then predictably disappeared as I got my camera out. |
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Mill Hill Cutting (SW)
16
June 2013
A
sudden spell of sunshine in the late afternoon
was unexpected after the morning
rain.
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New
wild plants spotted in flower may have
been missed before because of the poor weather and other commitments. They
included Yellow Rattle
and Kidney Vetch.
The latter is the caterpillar food plant of the Small
Blue Butterfly and in excess of a hundred
of these tiny butterflies were seen fluttering around the southern bank
of Buckingham Cutting. This was an encouraging but not an unprecedented
estimate. I also managed to spot four of my first Common
Blue
Butterflies
of
the year .A
Red Admiral was
also spotted. Horseshoe Vetch,
Hippocrepis
comosa, was still flowering abundantly
but it showed signs of being past its peak. A
Pyramidal
Orchid was budding. Greater
Bird's Foot Trefoil
was one of the plants
visited by both the Small Blues
and Common
Blue
Butterflies.
The female also visited a Common
Spotted Orchid.
Full
Butterfly Report
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
Buckingham Cutting (south)
14
June 2013
A
sudden spell of sunshine after midday
was unexpected after the recent poor weather. There
were flowers seen for the first time
this year including about seven Southern
Marsh Orchids, Dactylorhiza
praetermissa, on
the Mill Hill Cutting (south) and the first
Common
Spotted Orchids in the same area. Horseshoe
Vetch,
Hippocrepis comosa,
was still flowering abundantly but it showed signs of being past its peak.
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My first definite Wall Brown Butterfly of the year was seen on the Pixie Path 3138 to Mill Hill. It was the first of three in the same area, two which ended up courting. I had already noted a few Holly Blues and as I fought my through the overgrown entrance to the footpath. I spotted a Large Red Damselfly out of the corner of my eye.
5 June
2013
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Milkwort
Mill
Hill Cutting (south)
31
May 2013
The
first local Small Blue Butterfly of
the year was spotted and photographed on the north
side of the A27 near Shoreham. The first local
Brown
Argus
and
Common Blue
of the year were also recorded.
21
May 2013
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19
May 2013
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Buckingham Cutting (south)
1 May
2013
The
sun came out
and with it the bumblebees
and a few hoverflies.
A Small Tortoiseshell
settled on Footpath 3138 Pixie
Path to Mill Hill where my first Common
Lizard Lacerta
vivipara, of the year skittered
into cover. At the top by the bridge over the A27
I spotted my first Brimstone Butterflyof
the year.
Butterfly
List 2013
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
10 October 2012
Cochlicella acuta on the Pixie Path
There were hundreds of these tower-like pulmonate gastropod shells Cochlicella acuta in a small area of seeding Sow Thistles on the northern part of the Pixie Path.
4
October 2012
On
the fourth day of the month the rain had stopped and it was worthwhile
taking the camera out. There were still frequent
butterflies
of six species blown about in the breeze with
the leaves, well over a dozen Red Admirals
visited
the Ivy on the Pixie Path to Mill Hill.
These Red Admirals
seemed to have moved up the path from the rather faded Ivy in the Butterfly
Copse. At least one Comma Butterfly
flew out of the Ivy.
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A Southern
Hawker dragonfly
flew over the Pixie Path and Frampton's Field.
Full
Butterfly Report
17
September 2012
I
was able to count the butterflies
on the Ivy bush illustrated below and the figure came to 14 definite
Red
Admirals, possibly 18, with 7 more in
the area within fluttering distance, plus four
Comma
Butterflies seen at he same time and one
more over the Waterworks Road,
plus one Large Whitein
the Butterfly Copse and two nearby. There were also a few Common
Darters (dragonfly).
It was still too breezy for decent photographs with the whole Ivy bush
swaying in the wind. The vanessid
butterflies were easily disturbed by shadows of passing people and the
persistence of hoverflies
and bumblebees.
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When
the sun came out both Red Admirals
and Large Whites
were seen on on the outskirts of Shoreham with two Specked
Woods in the shade.
Adur
Butterfly & Moth List 2012
15September 2012 On a sunny day, a large Ivy bush in the Butterfly Copse next to the Waterworks Road was covered in flying insects, frequent hoverflies, and about thirty butterflies of which an estimated 25 were Red Admirals and five Comma Butterflies were counted. A Speckled Wood was seen in the nearby Waterworks Road, Old Shoreham. A Large White Butterfly visited the Buddleia in the same copse. Occasional Common Darters (dragonflies) were noted. Photograph: the hoverfly Volucella zonaria.
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Butterfly Copse
7
September 2012
The
first photograph (below) is Holly Blue,
taken on Ivy with great difficulties because of the Ivy was constantly
swaying in the breeze.
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At least two brown butterflies (illustrated above) were disturbed on Mill Hill Cutting (SE) in the afternoon. I suspect that they are the same species and might even be the same butterflies seen 24 days earlier in the same area. I identified the butterflies as Chalkhill Blues back then. The current two were considerably worn and slightly damaged. Study of the underwing spots was unable to confirm the species as the Adonis Blue is almost identical.
30
August 2012
As
the month draws towards it end with the first chill of autumn in the morning.
By late afternoon the sun very occasionally shone through a gap in the
Cumulus
clouds with a bit of a northerly (NNW)
breeze (Force 4
gusting to Force 6) and conditions were inimical
for butterflies.
I made a detour passage trip up the Pixie Path around 4:00
pm and I would have been surprised to see
anything of note in unpromising conditions. A handful
of Meadow
Browns
were
seen on the western edge of Frampton's Field, Old Shoreham, and when
the sun pierced the clouds for about a minute half
a dozen male Common
Blues were
seen on Ragwort flowers,
but fluttered off and did not return when the clouds obscured the sunshine
again. I paused by the Ivy on the Pixie Path but there were no other butterflies
active in the cool conditions (17.7
°C). Fighting
through the Bramble thorns to get to the Mill
Hill Cutting (SE) I was surprised to instantly see a male Adonis
Blue. The sun came out for two minutes and
it even opened up its wings. This is the first
time I have seen an Adonis Blue
in this location and in the boundaries of Shoreham (south of the A27).
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It
was the only butterfly species seen on this small area of chalk bank and
the last but one seen as the weather became breezier and inclement, andquickly
became dark under some rain clouds. The last
butterfly was a Red Admiral
struggling to fly against the wind and blown away. Grasshoppers
were active in grass and herbs next to the west-east northern section of
the Pixie Path and there was a Common Lizard
seen basking on the chestnut fencing at the top of the Pixie Path.
Adur
Lizards
22
August 2012
On
the outskirts of Shoreham, a variety of brown butterflies
were in prominence of display. Speckled
Woods were frequently seen with 30+ on
a detour passage through the Pixie Path. This far exceeded expectations
on
a cool (18.9
°C) breezy (Force
5 to 6) and
humid afternoon under an intermittently cloudy
(Cumulus
+ vapour
trails) sky.
Mill Hill Cutting is a continuation of Footpath
3138. The footpath has been diverted (1971)
to go over the bridge to Mill Hill.
Five
separate and quite distinct brown butterflies were quite prominent on the
garden-sized area of Mill Hill Cutting on the chalk bank covered in the
leaves of Cotoneaster, Horseshoe Vetch, Mouse-eared Hawkweed and other
herbs. Three were seen simultaneously and recognised not to include two
much tattier specimens. All these were thought to be female Chalkhill
Blues, even the one that was smaller than
the others. They were accompanied by at least one Meadow
Brown
and
more than one Common
Blue,
a female and a male respectively. Looking like many of fallen leaves blown
about, its static position on the path revealed a closed Red
Admiral, one of a handful seen. More Meadow
Browns were seen over the Pixie Path and one
Gatekeeper
in a good condition. All the whites, even the smaller ones turned out to
be Large Whites.
Holly
Blues (10+) fluttered around the Brambles
and Ivy with the first blackberries
appearing. Three separate sightings of the spectacular hoverfly
Volucella zonaria, were noted in and
around the Pixie Path.
Full
Butterfly Report
17
August 2012
On
a sunny and very humid day the butterflies
were out and seen in the early afternoon. Frequent Speckled
Wood Butterflies, one Red
Admiral, occasional Common
Blues,
one
Brimstone Butterfly,
occasional Holly Blues,
a few Small Blues,
frequent Meadow
Browns,
one Large White,
and one Silver Y Moth all
appeared within ten minutes in and around the southern bank of Buckingham
Cutting. It was tricky to separate the few Small
Blues from the Common
Blues until I got a good look of them when
they settled. The large hoverfly
Volucella inanis flew from the flowers
of Bramble to
Wild
Parsnip to Yarrow
in quick succession.
Butterfly
Report
9
August 2012
The
mist hung around until midday,
but breeze died down and the rain held off on a humid day.
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A
Red
Admiral was quick to show under the shade
of the linear wood at the top of The Drive in north Shoreham. As the path
opened out on the southern bank of Buckingham Cutting, a Small
Blue Butterfly was spotted immediately
amongst the dead heads and the occasional flower
on the patch of Kidney Vetch.
It was the first of about a dozen and they may be more as the females
searched
out the flower heads to lay their eggs. Meadow
Browns
were
also frequently seen on the cutting meadows which had not been mown by
the highway authorities. One Gatekeeper
was spotted amongst the Bramble and there were at least two Holly
Blues and two Large
Whites fluttering above. Further to east
I disturbed a Shaded Broad-bar Moth,
Scotopteryx
chenopodiata. I also discovered a Speckled Bush Cricket,
Leptophyes
punctatissima, on a Kidney Vetch
but it disappeared when I changed the lens for a photograph. A white Crab
Spider was spotted amongst the flowers
of Hemp Agrimony.
Apples
appeared on a tree and there were a few Blackberries.
Adur
Butterfly & Moth List 2012
Adur
Grasshoppers & Crickets
31
July 2012
At
the expected peak period for the Chalkhill
Blue Butterflies I
felt obliged to check out Mill Hill although
the conditions were far from ideal with overcast
skies and a very irritating breeze (Force
5) and cool (> 18.6
°C). The
first male Chalkhill
Blue left the Pixie Path at the southern end,
almost in Old Shoreham, which was an encouraging sign. However, when visiting
Mill
Hill Cutting when for a few minutes, there were twenty male Chalkhill
Blue Butterflies fluttering around but most
of the butterflies
were roosting under a cloudy sky, not being warm enough for them to venture
out. On one seeded Hawkbit
there were four tattered males resting and the actual numbers must have
been at least double those in flight. Mouse-eared hawkbit was evident by
their leaves. The other hawkbit
with dandelion-like leaves were either Rough
Hawkbit or Autumnal
Hawkbit, or both. There was a Large
White Butterfly on the Waterworks
Road and a Red
Admiral in the Butterfly Copse. A few
Gatekeepers
were seen around the Ivy and one in Frampton's Field.
Full
Butterfly Report
29
July 2012
Too
cool (17.5 °C
) for butterflies to be in flight
(a Gatekeeper
was observed hiding in the Ivy) and too breezy
(Force 5 gusting
to Force 6) for flower
photography, with
black clouds that filled the sky over Mill
Hill and to the north, I
nevertheless ventured out to the outskirts of Old Shoreham where there
was a few inevitable Large
Whites blown
about in the mid-to-late
afternoon Moderate
Breeze, a handful
of Gatekeepers were
disturbed and three Red Admirals
advertised their presence.
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A trip up the Pixie Path led to a brief visit to Mill Hill Cutting when for a few minutes the sun shone through a gap in the clouds. In this large garden plot sized habitat, the Cotoneaster-covered chalk bank was covered in fluttering blue butterflies, too intermingled to count, but at least 25 blue male Chalkhill Blues were seen in flight simultaneously and one female was spotted. Most of Chalkhill Blues were fresh but there were at least two worn and faded males. They were accompanied by two Small Skippers and a solitary fresh male Common Blue Butterfly. I dislodged a Yellow Shell Moth.
12
July 2012
The
rain held off under an overcast sky. I made
a brief detour to the southern bank of the Slonk Hill Cutting, where immediately
the first of a few Marbled White Butterflies
fluttered around the fading Common Spotted
Orchids.
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Then
the first of a few Meadow Browns
appeared, but it was a few minutes before I saw my first Ringlet
Butterflies of the year. Over dozen of
these butterflies flew languidly amongst
the
orchids
in the meadow-like embankment; the longer I stayed the more that appeared.
Pyramidal
Orchids were frequently seen in almost
full flower but there did not seem to
be as many as them as usual. Yellow Wort
was present with their flowers opened just before midday.
Butterfly
Report
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
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A flash
of red and my first Cinnabar Moth of
the year flitted into some Cotoneaster
on Spotted Orchid
swathed southern bank of the Slonk Hill Cutting
and completely disappeared. Later in the late afternoon, my first Meadow
Brown
Butterfly of the year also made an appearance
fluttering strongly over the southern bank of the Buckingham Cutting.
Full
Butterfly & Moth Report
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates (Worksheet)
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13
June 2012
After
a period of awful weather a break in the gales and heavy rain was a day
to get out. A Speckled
Wood was so familiar at the top of The
Drive, north Shoreham, that I almost did not note it. There was Large
White and a courting pair of Red
Admirals as well. On the southern bank
of Buckingham Cutting, at least twenty tiny Small
Blue Butterflies fluttered around the
Kidney
Vetch in the afternoon. Pyramidal
Orchids were budding and one was beginning
to flower
on Buckingham Cutting (south).
Adur
Orchids
Adur
Butterfly List 2012
1 June
2012
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Small Blue Butterflies
Dawn
was sunny but the sky filled with clouds before
midday
and
the
butterflies
went into hiding. It needed a careful look to spot the first of the tiny
Small
Blue Butterflies this year, amongst the
flowering
Kidney Vetch on the southern bank of the
Buckingham Cutting, where the Spotted Orchids
were beginning to flower.
Adur
Butterfly Flight Times
Adur
Butterflies: First Dates
Full
Butterfly Report
Adur
Orchids
18
May 2012
Horseshoe Vetch,Hippocrepis comosa, flowering on the northern (south-facing) bank of the Slonk Hill Cutting. Despite being less than a mile away from Mill Hill, this area has not been colonised by a single Chalkhill Blue Butterfly. It does support a handful (perhaps more) of Adonis Blue Butterflies and the bank supports or hosts all the common species of butterfly seen in Shoreham and the downs nearby. The weather for the whole of the Horseshoe Vetch flowering period has been extremely poor with rain almost every day. |
26
March 2012
At
the top of the Pixie Path (by the hedge, the only part visited) the bright
yellow of my first Brimstone Butterfly
of
the year was unmissable as the first of the Peacock
Butterflies fluttered around. On my return
from a full visit to Mill Hill I
noted my first Speckled Wood Butterfly
of the year at the top of Chanctonbury Drive.
Adur
Butterfly List 2012
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20
March 2012
There
was just a single Primrose
growing wild on the edge of the Pixie Path (hedge section at the top) but
plenty of them growing on grass verges on the chalky parts of town (Mill
Hill Drive/Erringham Road). A Red-tailed
Bumblebee,
Bombus lapidarius,
lay upside down on the path.
Adur
Bumblebee Reports.