Sunday 14th June 2026.
The nice weather carried on into today and I was up and at the garden at bang on 5am this morning. It seems the ‘body clock’ will not shut down for when those first rays of light come beaming through the crack in the curtain, I simply have to get up. A cup of coffee later and I am counting and recording another morning's worth of lovely Moths!
After chatting to my mates about the lack of Swifts over the house and in fact, Southsea in general, I was amazed to see a flock of 9 birds screaming low over my house yesterday evening and there were plenty more Swifts around early this morning, circling high over the house and calling to one another. Obviously, the week's poor weather had them searching for food many miles away and probably only coming back here to service their partners at their nesting sites.
My Moth Box:
This morning produced the second highest total of Moths for the week with a total of 59 moths of 35 species. There were good numbers of both macro and micro Moths of which there were four more species that were new for the year. This included the rare Plumed Fan-foot (a species that only recently have become annual to my garden) and the micro moths Marbled Orchard Tortrix (Hedya nubiferana), Gold Triangle (Hypsopygia costalis) and Common Masoner (Blastobasis adustella).
Other notable Moths this morning included my second Lychnis of the year; a Clancy’s Rustic (second for the year) and my second, but first for the garden this year, a Broad-barred White. A Small Magpie Moth was my first for the garden, but my second for the year after seeing one at Cowplain Marsh.





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