Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Storm

Last Thursday night and into the early hours of Friday morning, ir rained heavily enough to cause the local burns to flood, if only for a few hours before the thirsty soil sponged up the precious water. The rain was very welcome but the accompanying vicious lightning and thunder was not, the strikes putting out the lights and knocking out much of the village’s broadband for several hours. Our broadband seems to have been one of several in the community affected for we lost our router, and the 4G network here is so poor that we were unable to use it unless we sat in one of the better spots - which in our case was the balcony. Hence, with apologies, the sudden lack of posts on this blog.

The rain, about 24mm of it, has done wonders for the garden, and our resident rabbits - yes, we now have rabbits rather than a solitary rabbit - have been making the most of it. We now have a larger rabbit, presumably the mother, and….


….two smaller ones, presumably her teenage children.  The family seems to have made a home in the marsh grass surrounding our small pond.


Life isn’t easy for our rabbits. They are constantly being stalked by two cats which belong to the house below us, though I’m not sure that either cat is big enough to kill a rabbit, even a juvenile.


Since the storm we’ve been under the influence of a west to south-westerly airstream bringing occasional but not heavy showers. In the sunny intervals a few butterflies have been out. There are plenty of speckled woods in Speckled Wood and we have more painted ladies than any other species: on this morning’s walk I counted four in a distance of less than a mile.


Otherwise, we have the occasional individual of a species - for example a fritillary and a small copper - but the total number of butterflies coming into our garden, full as it is of the sort of flowering plants which butterflies love, totals less than six in the last three days.


I keep saying how worried I am. This lack of butterflies is unnatural.

2 comments:

  1. Sorry to hear about the storm and router issues. Glad you are okay though apart from that as I had noticed you'd not posted for a few days.

    You might have seen this re. butterfly numbers:
    https://jncc.gov.uk/our-work/official-statistic-on-abundance-of-uk-butterflies/

    Though I suppose re. population for 2026 are still a year-in-progress...

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  2. Thank you for the comment and the link to the statistics. The reported butterfly numbers don't really match what we're seeing locally, as almost all species seem to be declining with the one exception of the speckled wood and, this year, the sudden influx of painted ladies. Jon.

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