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Wildlife (20)
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Richard Jones (25)

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Garden butterflies

By Richard Jones on 30/04/2008 12:51:00

That warm Saturday (April 26th) brought out the first butterflies of the year: holly blue, small tortoiseshell and speckled wood. They're all common garden species, but I always get a thrill when I see any of them.The female holly blue


Speckled wood butterflies

By Richard Jones on 28/04/2010 11:45:27

, the feather or flower balls swung on strings by Polynesian dancers. For nearly three minutes, they circled round and round each other, always keeping about 10-15 cm apart, as if they were connected by some invisible, but unbreakable, thread.It's difficult


Butterfly chrysalis

By Richard Jones on 06/01/2010 13:59:27

snails, or perhaps a dew-encrusted millipede huddled down into the thatch. What I saw, was a succulent plump emerald gem - the chrysalis of a speckled wood butterfly.It took me some while to recognize exactly which butterfly species it belonged to


Birds and butterflies

By Richard Jones on 20/07/2007 10:57:49

When the swifts first returned on May 2nd there were only three or four of them. Last year we had a huge gang of about 15, wheeling in the sky and screaming down the street at top speed, just above the lamp-posts. I always take these wonderfully


Butterflies in the garden

By Richard Jones on 14/04/2010 08:53:07

As usual, during the Easter holiday break, we find ourselves watching garden wildlife in sunnier climes -- in the Isle of Wight. At St Lawrence, on the southern tip of the Island, not only are we significantly nearer the equator than East Dulwich, but the land tips steeply down t...


First butterflies of the year

By Richard Jones on 22/04/2009 10:03:56

At last, a butterfly in my garden. Now I know from comments on previous blogs that others have already seen lots this year. There's a tendency to brag about them, I think. But my garden was empty of butterflies until Saturday. Then, like buses


Butterflies: meadow browns and gatekeepers

By Richard Jones on 23/07/2008 12:27:00

We have a tiny patch of long grass in our garden, less than a couple of square metres. It's mostly the exceedingly common Yorkshire fog (Holcus lanatus) and false oat (Arrhenatherum elatius). Nevertheless, it's attracting several butterflies


Grasshoppers, butterflies and wolf spiders

By Richard Jones on 17/08/2011 16:57:29

wilderness.The evening air is alive with the sewing machine whirr of grasshoppers and bush-crickets, and the distant piping of field crickets sweeps in from far-off grassy knolls and rocky outcrops. And in the morning we are engulfed in wildlife.Butterflies


The painted lady

By Richard Jones on 31/08/2007 10:57:49

of North Africa and Southern Europe, it migrates north each year with the good weather, establishes new breeding colonies and the local offspring move north again. It reaches the UK most years, and sometimes in spectacular numbers; 2005 and 2006 were good


Distinctive angles

By Richard Jones on 06/09/2007 18:09:49

mad turns and wild spirals it landed at breakneck speed in a neighbouring tree.'Butterfly' he announced. The division between butterflies and moths is wholly artificial so I couldn't fault his identification: a beautiful scale-winged creature flying


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