Friday, 19 June 2026

QECP briefly

In to Petersfield for chores and then a brief stop at QECP where, by now, it was pretty windy so what few butterflies and moths that were on the wing were instantly blown away. Burnet Companion was best of these.

The nicest sightings today were six Scarlet Tiger Moths all sat quietly on leaves in the shades of the high level return path.

Bombus vestalis, Amblyteles armatorius, several Broad-bodied Chasers and Emperors

Pretty thin at SC

The 'front garden' is but a shadow of itself this year but hopefully things might improve.

A nice long chat with a volunteer who pointed out a single Pyramidal Orchid; funny after yesterday's thousands!!

A bumblebee mimic hoverfly got away - too quick to see if it was V. bombylans or a Criorhina spp.

A single Fritillary spp barrelled through.

Monday, 15 June 2026

SHP







 










Above Cheilosia spp (proxima or thereabouts) Meligethes flower beetles a Siphona spp and Epistrophe grossulariae.

Marbled White, Pipiza austriaca, Nomada fabricius and my first Hummingbird Hawkmoth of the year in the Well Head garden which performed brilliantly until I reached for my camera whereupon it rocketed off.

Heard-only Firecrest, Goldcrest, Tree Creeper, Marsh Tit and both Woodpeckers.

Saturday, 13 June 2026

Pagham moths

 












A brief walk to the Ferry Pool Hide produced 25 Avocet of which 6 or more were chicks. Also 30 or so Black-tailed Godwit.

A staff member is due to send out a moth list. EDIT And here it is!!

Treble Lines, Marbled Minor, Poplar Hawk Moth,Large Yellow Underwing, Poplar Grey, Garden Grass Veneer, Tawny Marbled Minor, Bright Line Brown Eye, Heart and Dart, Heart and Club, Smoky Wainscot, Snout, Dark Arches, Riband Wave, Cinnabar, Common Swift, Uncertain, Treble Brown Spot, Nutmeg, Small Mottled Willow, Large Straw, Diamond Back Moth, Rusty Dot Pearl, Garden Pebble, Bramble Shoot moth, Peach Blossom, Elephant Hawk Moth, Buff Tip, Langmaid's Yellow Underwing, Angle Shades, Privet Hawkmoth, Burnished Brass, Blood-vein, Dingy Shears, Scorched Wing, Buff Ermine, Mottled Rustic, Common Wainscot, Evergestis limbata, Flame, Dioryctria abietella, Scrobipalpa costella, Gypsonoma sociana, Agapeta hamana, Cochylis atricapitana, Cochylis moliculana, Homoeosoma sinuella, Acrobasis marmorea, Epiblema grandevana, Elachista abifrontella, Crambus lathoniellus, Crambus pascuella, Pandemis heparana.

Above, bycatch ichneumon spp (Netelia melanura via Jaswinder on FB) and Dioryctria spp, Blood-vein and Scorched Wing

Small Mottled Willow (now Beet Armyworm!!), Pandemis heparana, Gypsonoma sociana, the above Dioryctria abietella and Homoeosoma sinuella were species I've not caught before.

Five of the above micros would have been new moths - but with three traps, two 'moth experts', half a dozen RSPB staff and twenty visitors all packed into the building adjacent to reception it was hard to keep up with everything!  Hopefully an autumn rerun of this event and maybe the same at WWT might produced some different moths. 

Wednesday, 10 June 2026

WWT moths

Arrived in Arundel about 09:15 and was pleased to see and hear a few House Martins over Queens Street.

A little later at the pub carpark both adult Peregrines were on their usual perch and very noisy with the female plucking some prey.

Whilst queuing on the entrance bridge a number of  Four-spotted Chasers were ovipositing, a similar number of male Black-tailed Skimmers were sitting on warm patches of ground and a few Red-eyed Damselflies were on floating vegetation.












The moth event run by Suzy and Hannah was under the usual gazebo and attended by about fifteen people. A total of about seventy moths of twenty-five plus species.

Shears and Mottled Rustic were species I've never caught and Variegated Golden Tortix and Grey Pug were species I've only caught once, both in 2024, the former at No3 and latter at No8. Some wainscots seemed to be Smoky and Common. A few expected 'crowd pleasers' were missing, namely Elephant Hawkmoth and Buff-tip.

List below in part.

Other inverts were thin on the ground with an Osmia spp probably leiana just too quick for me.

Bird-wise a single Little Egret was feeding at least one young and both Marsh Harriers were active with the female continually being chased around a long way up by a very irate Oystercatcher. On leaving the male was sparring with a Buzzard.

No kites nor Cattle Egrets today.















Friday, 5 June 2026

GWH membership renewal

 
































(Nephrotoma flavescens, Chrysotoxum bicinctum, Pipizella spp, Pegomya spp, Ectophasia crassipennis, Stem borer spp, Clover Melitta, Painted Lady, Pyramidal Orchid, White Helleborine, Enoplognatha ovata/latimana)

Weather hardly ideal for a walk here but at least it was quiet - until the coach load of school kids turned up!!

A Raven was calling from the usual tree and visible distantly but  single Swift was the only other bird.

Hoverflies

Eristalis pertinax, Chrysotoxum bicinctum, Meliscaeva auricollis,Cheilosia spp, Cheilosia pagana, Eupeodes spp male, Eupeodes luniger female, Syrphus spp, Myathropa florea, Volucella bombylans, Sphaerophoria spp, Episyrphus balteatus, Pipizella spp, Platycheirus albamanus (FB recorded)

Moths

Eucosma hohenwartiana, Crambus lathionellus, Chrysoteuchea culmella all kicked up from grass. Yellow-banded Longhorn near pond. The first above thanks to BS(FB Micros)

Butterflies

Pretty poor with just Common Blue, Painted Lady, Red Admiral, White spp, Large Skipper and Meadow Brown.

Other stuff

See above - The Clover Melitta (above) confirmed by CL and MM.

Dioctria atricapilla (Violet Black-legged Robberfly)

Andrena spp bicolor?

With it being fairly dim in the corner by the wishing well, and not putting on my reading glasses,  I didn't realise that the Enoplognatha spp was even a spider until I downloaded the photo!!