As autumn came in it was clear that there just aren’t that many butterflies around. That’s a lot of time to be sitting around waiting for them to reappear. Unless I went looking for eggs, caterpillars or chrysalids I’d need something else to to do.
What looks like a butterfly but isn’t a butterfly? Well it’s a moth. I’d been sent an email advertising a course at the Warwickshire Wildlife Trust called Winged Splendour that covered butterflies and moths. 10 weeks on a Monday evening hearing about various aspects of Lepidoptera.
The course was great it covered:
- differences between moths and butterflies
- identification of species
- habitats
- lifecycles
- survival techniques
The best parts of the sessions are the start and finish: David (the course leader) brings in a selection of moths that had been caught the previous night and they get passed around so that you can have a good old look a them. David talks about the moths and gives you various details about them. At the end of each session the moth trap gets brought in to see what was caught that evening (with mixed success). It turns out that hornets sometimes get caught in traps!
So now that I’ve been on the course I’m going to be on the look out for moths as well as butterflies. In the winter you can find such imaginatively named moths as the Winter moth, the December moth, and the November moth.
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