Williamson's Weekly Notes August 19 2009

YOU will, I am sure, remember the swarms of painted lady butterflies which entered this country on May 25.

A friend said that while standing on Portsdown Hill the haze southwards resembled diesel smoke from liners and ferries. Another saw the same phenomenon on Dover cliffs. Pundits reckoned five million flew in from the south, a vast irruption emanating in the Atlas mountains.

I noticed while on farmland fields near Petworth that many butterflies had lost the colours on their wings and were flying without identification marks. I could almost see through their wings, although I suppose they resembled pieces of varnish paper giving them a most unusual appearance.