This year from May to early July has not only been a feast of wild flowers for me to discover and try to identify but also of so many different butterflies. My working walk into my allotment area is bordered with wild scabious which I had decided not to cut back. I was rewarded with being able to walk back and forth through butterflies resting and sometimes arguing over key flowers. It seems to be the wild scabious that they love. With its long stems it bounces up and down as you pass. It also moves gently with the butterflies and the wind and this does not make for easy photographs. A lot have been blurred. After my working walk with the wheelbarrow and scythe I walked up to the Era in the early evening.here we can check on water levels in the deposit and decide whether to pump up more before I start to water. I was flabbergasted by the flutterby of so many more butterflies up there. But then there were so many more flowers. More field scabious, but also pink centuary, and yellow curry plant and many different grasses. The Era had been a levelled out stony threshing area for grain. Possibly used back in the 1920s. We had cleared it several years ago, strimmed and scythed. However, as there were so many flowers on this area last year I decided to do nothing in September. This year I have been rewarded with more flowers and a terrific range of butterflies, albeit with photos all mainly on the scabious. Apart from the swallowtail which seems to like the bushes near the house and the cement left over from the water butt. Hopefully, it will not be a casualty of human so called progress. We hope we are nearly done with any more awful cement mixing and will have a fairly sustainable way of life and comfortable house. .









One butterfly missing from the photo shoot is the two tailed pasha . This beautiful butterfly needs the madrono, arbutus unedo, as a place for its eggs. There are plenty of these around the house but maybe this year there have been too many disturbances. There are also many more places for this bewitching butterfly and its peculiar desire for urine. One of my last photos some years ago were of it drinking my dog’s pee. And sorry can’t find that one to add to the collection. However quite pleased with the LUMIX camera and the details. But can’t get hold of the photo editing to crop it and show the eyes and delicate wings yet. Life here in the Sierra is far more comfortable with our solar power but we still haven’t solved our wifi access unless in a bar or the local library. But the library is a cool break as the heat of the summer is rising well into the mid 30s here.
This is such a thorough compilation.
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Oh thanks but I have to do the blogging quite quickly. The photos have been over a few weeks!
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Thank you for sharing your butterflies with us. For me it’s a relief to know that there are places like yours with many kinds of butterflies. Here, in the north west of England I have seen so few in my garden this summer so far.
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That’s a shame but with more wet weather in the UK and far too hot weather here all these creatures are struggling.
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Did you know that the Spanish word era developed from Latin area? The era is an area for threshing grain.
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Yes, that is the original use of our era many decades ago but now the wild flowers seem to love growing out of the small stones laid down there and the butterflies too.
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Thank you for clearing that up for me, Steve 🙂 I wondered if that wasn’t the case.
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Great work photographing these! I love how butterflies will eat and drink things like sweat and urine as well as nectar to try and get all the electrolytes. It’s a good survival strategy because there’s not much competition for their “food”.
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Thanks and agree they are versatile little creatures in terms of food.
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Great to see so many butterflies. The flowers that used to be flowing with fluttery bodies are now devoid apart from the odd solitary straggler. In my youth the fields were alive. They are deserts now. Good to know that there are places which are still havens. Great post – best wishes Opher
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Thanks but now it’s so hot there don’t seem to be as many bumble bees and that will be another story.
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Nice to see butterflies are doing so well in your part of the world… I don’t see too many here.
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There are lots of wild flowers at that time and no pesticides in the area, maybe that helps…now there are different butterflies, graylings and lots of wild carrot but very hot and dry now.
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Beautiful selection of butterflies. I never saw the Cardinal butterfly, it is very pretty. I like your butterfly haven too.
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Yes, a bit of wild but I shall try more cultivated in my rock garden and try and encourage more wild in other areas !
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The butterflies seem to like it wild and their populations will fluctuate. I’ve had a lot more this year which is encouraging… Great photos! 🙂
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Thanks. There have been a different range just recently but these don’t seem to settle and there aren’t the easy flowers for nectar or photos!
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What beautiful butterflies! I want expecting it. Sat. With. My. Mouth. Wide. Open.
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It was wonderful being with so many live. Too difficult to capture in a picture but one of life ‘s more inspiring moments!
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I love this post! Love flutterflies! 😉
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Thanks and now it’s raining here so good memories of the summer. Some clouded yellows still emerge when sunny .
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