Category Archives: Insects

Meadow Brown and Dragonfly

Following on from yesterday’s post I’ll stay with the butterflies for the main part of today’s blog. The little meadow brown is one of our most common butterflies, but is often overlooked in favour of its more extravagantly robed cousins. After all, it is just a medium-sized brown butterfly that tends to keep low to the ground.

They are the ones you see on country walks, scattering away from approaching feet and settling in hedgerows. It’s easy to ignore them when a beautiful marbled white flutters by, or a dazzling peacock pauses on the path. For all that though, they are one of the mainstays of our butterfly population and, in the right circumstances, they brush up quite well.

This short sequence was taken in the garden on a patch of wild marjoram (which says something about the state of our garden, I guess).

Meadow brown butterflies

Meadow brown butterflies

Meadow brown butterflies

Along with the butterflies, we’ve also been visited by some passing dragonflies. It’s always a treat to see these in the garden, though they tend not to stay too long. This first is – I think – a migrant hawker.

Migrant hawker  dragonfly

The second one is a common darter. We had some of these breeding in the pond a couple of years ago. The video (shot in 2011) shows the birth of a dragonfly.

Common darter dragonfly

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Camera note: all shots taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Also posted in Butterfly

A Greedy Bee and Some Frisky Butterflies

A lovely sunny afternoon emerged after a dull start to the day. Ideal for spending some time in the garden; and evidently ideal for the host of insects that came out to enjoy some time in the sun.

We’re fortunate to have plenty of bees in the garden. They have a particular taste for the hibiscus bush, so much so that it is a small wonder they can even fly.

Bee on hibiscus covered in pollen

Bee on hibiscus covered in pollen

Not all of them are quite so greedy. This bee was enjoying a taste of wild marjoram.

Bee on wild marjoram

All the time the gentle buzz of bees was punctuated by the percussive chatter of grasshoppers.

Common grasshopper

As for the butterflies, I saw painted ladies, small whites, a couple of red admirals, several blues (different species), a speckled wood and numerous amorous large whites.

Speckled Wood butterfly

Speckled Wood

These are the large whites. They were darting all over the garden whilst engaging in a courtship ritual where the female rests and the male dances around her. The female’s raised abdomen is actually a ‘rejection’ posture as it makes mating impossible. This is a common feature in butterfly behaviour, and she may well have already mated.

Pair of large white butterflies in mating dance.

Pair of large white butterflies in mating dance.

Pair of large white butterflies in mating dance.

Camera note: greedy bee taken with the Canon 7D and EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM; marjoram bee, grasshopper and speckled wood taken with the EF 100mm f/2.8L macro IS USM lens; and the mating large white butterflies with the EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Also posted in Bee, Behaviour, Butterfly

Common Darter (and Shy Boy, the not so shy fox)

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Also posted in dragonfly, Foxes Tagged , , , |