(6th) Dark Arches
(7th) nil
(8th) Blastobasis lacticolella, Celypha striana, Eudonia lacustrata
(9th) Brachmia blandella, Clepsis consimilana, Epinotia abbreviana, Crambus perlella, Dwarf Cream Wave,
July Highflyer, Barred Straw, Brown Silver-line, Dingy Shears, Dusky Brocade
Clepsis consimilana, Westcott 9th June |
Epinotia abbreviana, Westcott 9th June |
July Highflyer, Westcott 9th June |
Dusky Brocade, Westcott 9th June |
Of the four illustrated above, two are again my earliest ever garden sightings, Epinotia abbreviana beating 14th June in 2017 and July Highflyer beating 13th June in 2011 & 2014. The Dusky Brocade was a fairly cryptic specimen and that's another quite common species which can easily cause ID problems.
Last night's Brown Silver-line is an odd one. I used to get it irregularly up to 2014 but it has been an annual visitor since then and last year I had five. It is supposed to feed only on bracken, but there is no bracken around here so it must surely be using something else too. I wonder what? The other unusual thing last night was a Privet Hawk-moth which was just a set of wings on the patio, typical of a bat casualty, but that seems like rather a large meal even for our nightly squadron of Brown Long-eareds! We do also have quite a few Tawny Owls locally and I wonder if they might occasionally take larger moths?
Dave Wilton
Westcott, Bucks
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