Sunday, March 29, 2026

Spring of 1976...

Fifty years ago, the great butterfly season of 1976 was brewing. I was there, big time: having had the previous eight summers wrecked by the examination system*, I took a self-funded sabbatical, and butterflyed on over a hundred days between mid-April and early September – playing cricket on most of the others. This was low budget stuff, my main form of transport was a three-speed bicycle – and the tarmac melted. I was living near Selborne in East Hampshire, a top butterfly hotspot, but thought nothing of cycling to Chiddingfold Forest. Crucially, I kept detailed diaries.

The previous summer had been hot and dry, and 1974 had been reasonable too. Butterfly populations were on a high. Truly great butterfly summers are the second or, better, third in a sequence of hot summers. ’76 was the third. Incidentally, we have not had a hot summer sequence this century...

The 1976 butterfly season did not begin unduly early, like modern seasons. Here’s some first and last dates, from the Selborne & Alice Holt Forest district:-


Orange Tip                     April 16th        June 12th

Speckled Wood              April 19th            -

Green-veined White       April 20th       June 18th

Dingy Skipper                 May 6th         June 22nd

Duke of Burgundy          May 7th          June 10th

Pearl-bordered Frit         May 6th          June 6th  

Small Pearl-bordered      May 23rd       June 24th

 

Those are typical start and end dates for central southern England from that era. Butterflies, that summer, didn’t start emerging early until the start of June. Then, Large Skipper commenced on June 1st and Meadow Brown on the 2nd (my earliest Meadow Brown of the 20th century).

The Holly Blue was staging one of its periodic revivals, having been scarce since 1970. The Pearl-bordered Fritillary had an astounding year, with colonies in most young conifer plantations (there were at least ten colonies in Alice Holt Forest that summer, and the butterfly truly abounded in Chiddingfold Forest). 

But Butterfly of the Spring / early Summer 1976 was the Wall Brown, which was almost omni-present – not just on the downs and grassy heaths, but in open woodland rides, along road verges and on garden banks. My diaries record some 250 Wall Browns, between May 10th and June 18th, but I didn’t diarise roadside and garden sightings. I saw over 50 in Lodge Inclosure of Alice Holt Forest on May 23rd. This abundance occurred after a massive 3rd brood during the sublime autumn of 1975, blowing a hole in the theory that a 3rd brood depletes populations and is responsible for the current decline. Common Blue and Small Copper were comparably numerous.


The spring weather wasn’t too extreme. April was dry and merely pleasant, and May started and ended rather poorly, though it included a couple of strong anticyclones. The heat and the drought were to come later. This meant that spring butterflies were not unduly stressed, laid a lot of eggs, and had lengthy flight seasons. It was also a great time for larval development. All the while, the Purple Emperor season was brewing...

Next Time: June & July '76.


*Rant: why oh why didn’t we reset the academic year during the Covid pandemic, so that exams take place in the autumn, and we allow our young folk to experience spring and early summer? Rant over.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Ministerial Statement

Here is a Ministerial Statement on the State of the Nation's Caterpillars (Rhopalocera):-

'Led, as ever, by His Imperial Majesty, the Emperor of the Woods,  the High Spirit of the Midsummer Trees, The One of Whom the Nightingale Sings - to cite a few of His numerous epithets - the larvae of some of our butterflies are unusually advanced.'

'Purple Emperor larvae had commenced feeding in Savernake Forest, Wilts, by March 18th, equalling or narrowly beating the record set in 2019 and 2020.' 

'Moreover, the sallow foliage is now unprecedently advanced, following a mild winter (our last cold spell was at the start of January) and the mid-March anticyclone.  Sallow blossom is currently at peak.'   

'Also in the woods, some White Admiral larvae are already feeding, some Pearl-bordered Fritillary larvae have reached their final instar, and if you want something utterly barking, look at the advanced state of White-letter Hairstreak larvae - they're likely to be on the wing in early May.'

'At this range, unless the weather deteriorates, the Purple Emperor is likely to be out by early June, breaking the long-established record set in 1893. Numbers could be astoundingly high, as larvae have come through the winter well.'  


Some Emperor larvae have been feeding by 'bud biting', like this (Savernake 18th March 2026):- 


Most, though, are lined up alongside sallow buds, waiting for leaf buds to loosen, or sepals to darken and open, so they can commence feeding. They are well greened up, like this:-


Watch this space, and get very worked up...


 

Sunday, March 15, 2026

The New £20 Note...

We are pleased to announce the new Royal Mint £20 note, with an Emperor as Monarch...



Meanwhile, Purple Emperor larvae are getting ready to start feeding. Many are greening up next to flower or leaf buds. Their first meals will be on loosening buds, by 'bud-biting', or on darkening sepals (they wont feed on very pale, 'anaemic' sepals). 


In general, Emperor larvae are decidedly advanced - as is the spring of 2026. It is quite possible that a few larvae have already had their first post-hibernation meals in the warm South East.  

That's remarkable, as it was only a couple of years ago that the first-ever March meals were detected, at the very end of the month. Now we're heading for a mid-March feeding start. 

We may be heading for a Very Early Flight Season... Watch this space.