Butterfly haven? Not for much longer.

Enchanting;
Moving pictures,
Silent movers.


 

 

It doesn’t feel like 10 days ago, but the weather has changed as we edge closer to the autumn equinox.  The temperature is around 14 °C, and the Atlantic is again throwing another big weather system over these islands.  This week, I’ll probably fire up the boiler to warm the house, and outside we’ll start moving the pots into more sheltered parts of the garden. 

Thanks for visiting my blog.

 

Ashley

 

 

 

 

 

Lammas 2025



Butterflies,
Flitting from flower to flower;
Peace.

 

The end of July and the beginning of August, is the traditional festival of Lammas, a time of abundance and in the pagan calendar, seen as the beginning of autumn.  There are so many flowers in our tiny garden but this Buddleia, a dwarf variety, is a favourite.  Known as the butterfly bush or shrub, we can see why it is so called. I didn’t manage to capture on camera the other butterflies in the garden but I am working on a further linked post with some artwork which I shall publish shortly. 🤞🤞

Ashley

Beltain 2025

Describing this pagan Cross Quarter festival, it is probably best that I quote from Glennie Kindred’s book** Sacred Earth Celebrations.  She describes this period as “a celebration of the fertility and rampant potency of the life force.”  Goodness, how accurate that is!  Stepping out into our little garden, I wonder at Mother Earth’s amazing energy during these days.

(Please click on the images to view clearly) 👀

These photos show the 7ft hedge that is currently fizzing with new growth. It’s an old hedge, as it was here on our northern boundary 20 years ago when we moved in. Somewhere in there, are a couple of old unknown trees that a previous owner of the house must have chopped down, and that has allowed the ivy to flourish. Also, there is privet, holly, beech and some blackthorn. I love it, because it accommodates so much nature as a food source and a place of safety for so many insects like butterflies and bees! The downside is that it is also about 6ft in depth and as someone who cuts the hedge with a pair of shears…..well, it can be a chore. I gave up garden machinery many years ago but if I’m honest, it helps me to keep mobile. Another joy is that garden birds also use the hedge for safety and for nesting. We are currently being entertained by juvenile sparrows, a robin and several species of young tits.


The sky is filled with birdsong,
The trees and hedges, greening;
Mother Earth is bourgeoning.

Happy May Day.

Ashley

** Find out more at: http://www.glenniekindred.co.uk

Where are all the butterflies?

20240703_155601

Blooming buddleia,
At the height of summer;
No butterflies!


As a recorder of butterflies in our little garden I am happy to see that my wonderful buddleia* is enjoying some afternoon sunshine.  Unfortunately, I have not recorded any butterflies in the garden since late May.  I am advised by the County Recorder that the lack of butterflies may be due to the mild and wet winter, followed by a dull, mild and wet spring!  The weather!!!  The climate???

 My geraniums are still flowering but here are some daisies** that have burst into flower over the last few days.

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*The buddleia, Buzz Velvet Red, has shot up this year.  It was supposed to be a dwarf variety.  All buddleia usually known as ‘butterfly bush’.

**The daisies are actually Leucanthemum superbum white.  We also have them in yellow but they are just not as far forward. 

Ashley

 

Mid Autumn

Today it is overcast, grey, and now the rain has arrived; a sign of the weather to come: dull and drab!  However, yesterday, around midday, the sun shone and it was warm.  The ivy flowers, which have been closed since they appeared a few weeks ago, suddenly were open.  Open for business!

ivy flowers open

Warm sunshine,
Bright at the top of the hedge --
Movement there!
Butterflies and bees feeding there,
On the blooming ivy flowers --
A true sign of autumn.

Ivy!  Such a maligned plant in a garden, and yet it is so important for our pollinators!  

I can’t resist adding this last photo of 3 Small Tortoiseshell butterflies (Aglais urticae) on one of our dwarf Buddleia (Buzz Velvet Red).

small tortoishell x 3 on buddleia

Not long now until the Autumn Equinox!

Lammas

white-tail-bumblebee

Small Tortoiseshell - Aglais urticae on Verbena

On every flower,
A butterfly, a bee;
Summer's bounty.

Goodness!  It’s the beginning of August already and isn’t the cycle of life amazing?  All Earth’s creatures are aware of the changes in the season.

Lammas;
Gathering grain for winter,
Seeds for sowing next year.

Lammas, the Saxon name for this time of year, meaning “Loaf-mass”, or as it is called in Irish Gaelic Lughnasadh, is a celebration of the rich harvest that is beginning across these islands.  Whilst the harvest occurs people still make corn dollies or rattles and healing wands but for me I continue to whittle Ogham sticks when I find the right wood. Here are my latest: Hazel and Gorse.

hazel & gorse lammas

Hazel (Corylus avellana) is the ninth tree in the Celtic Tree Ogham.  Its straight coppiced poles have been used in many ways by humans for thousands of years.  It’s been a good companion to humanity and with that in mind I hope to make a walking stick with that extra long piece I was given.

Gorse (Ulex europaeus) is the seventeenth wood in the Ogham.  Not actually a tree, it is found mostly on moorland and rough ground where its flowers can be seen throughout the year.  It is also known as Whin or Furze.

Ashley

Summer Celebration

July garden;
A bounty of butterflies,
Sipping nectar.

Holly Blue: Celastrina argiolus.  Large White: Pieris brassicae.

Meadow Brown: Maniola jurtina.  Peacock: Aglais io.

Small Tortoiseshell: Aglais urticae.  Small White: Pieris rapae.

Today it is raining, persistently, but yesterday between the showers I recorded all of these butterflies.  Surely, a celebration of summer, Earth’s season of plenty.

Ashley