A 3 night break is a rarity for me, a 3 night break in June is unheard of! The conditions have been downright terrible, but we certainly were spoilt at the end of May.
Micro Moths
Musotima nitidalis
L-album Wainscot
Feathered Ranunculus
Agonopterix nervosa
Blossom Underwing
Beautiful Marbled
Lampronia fuscatella
Gravitarmata margarotana
Perittia obscurepunctella
Black-spotted Chestnut
Cydia pactolana
A 3 night break is a rarity for me, a 3 night break in June is unheard of! The conditions have been downright terrible, but we certainly were spoilt at the end of May.
With the jet stream sitting firmly over the central belt of the country currently, we are continuously being buffeted by storm after storm, it's been tough for lepidoptera and the moth trap has been very sparse.
Field trips are currently on hold, but there is a sign that things will be picking up next week, fingers crossed.
A few nights off then we spin forward to the 5th of June, a warmish night but still dipping to 12 degrees, it was just about doable, unfortunately with the cloud cover came rain on and off all night.
Despite the cooler conditions, 8 new species was more than I expected.
A lovely female Ghost Moth was nice to see, although very active straight out of the fridge. Short-cloaked Moth was also nice and not common here with maybe 1 a year.
Micros included the uncommon Elachista freyerella and the increasing in abundance, Pyrausta despicata.
Flaming June is the old fashioned traditional saying for the first usually hot and dry month of the year, this doesn't apply to the start of June '26, but it's massively early days yet... it'll come good, it always does.
Moths took a huge nosedive and some nights there were less than 30 species.
But on the flip side, and being June, there is always some interest to be admired.
On the 2nd day of the month, the moth gods delivered just 2 new species for the year, both lovely macro moths though.
They were..
Common Emerald, well it's green, what more is there to like? and a particularly fresh example too.
Lobster Moth, never common here but usually annual, this one however was a lovely melanic variety which was a first for me.
Two nights off followed (Cold, windy and wet) and lights were back on come Friday night.
Trying to play catchup now as the weather goes a bit meh.
Temperatures are well down on a typical early June, and literally as soon as the month started, we got pretty rubbish weather, nights were still fairly mild but rain was always a presence.
The first night of the month yielded a fair array of species, with the warmth micros were still doing very well (They really hate cool and windy night).
9 new species made the list.
Best moths included the tiny and sadly damaged Leek Moth (Acrolepiopsis assectella), not common here, the ying & yang of the moth world, Broad-barred White and Varied Coronet, with similar markings but in reverse.
Piniphila bifasciana was a little cracker, a regular pine feeder species, and a very pale year first Heart & Club was nice.
| Acrolepiopsis assectella |
| Archips crataegana |
| Broad-barred White and Varied Coronet |
| Heart & Club |
| Piniphila bifasciana |
| Purple Bar |
| Small Clouded Brindle |
| Spilonota ocellana |
Macro Moths
Beautiful Golden-Y 7
Beautiful Hook-tip
Blood-vein
Blotched Emerald
Brimstone Moth
Brown Rustic
Brown Silver-line
Buff Ermine
Buff-tip
Burnished Brass
Clouded Border
Clouded Silver
Common Emerald
Common Marbled Carpet
Common Pug
Common Swift
Common Wainscot
Common Wave
Cream Wave
Dark Sword-grass
Elephant Hawk-moth
Figure of Eighty
Flame Shoulder
Gold Swift
Green Carpet
Green Pug
Green Silver-lines
Grey Dagger
Grey Pug
Grey Pug
Heart & Dart
Iron Prominent
Large Yellow Underwing
Latticed Heath
Light Emerald
Maiden's Blush
Marbled Minor
Marbled White-spot
Middle-barred Minor
Mottled Beauty
Mottled Rustic
Oak Hook-tip
Oak Nycteoline
Orange Footman
Pale Oak Beauty
Pale Prominent
Pale Tussock
Pebble Prominent
Pinion-streaked Snout
Poplar Grey
Poplar Hawk-moth
Poplar Lutestring
Riband Wave
Sallow Kitten
Scorched Wing
Setaceous Hebrew Character
Silver-ground Carpet
Single-dotted Wave
Sloe Pug
Small Dotted Buff
Small Elephant Hawk-moth
Small Mottled Willow
Small Phoenix
Snout
Spectacle
Spruce Carpet
Straw Dot
Treble Lines
Treble-bar
Turnip Moth
White Ermine
White-point
Willow Beauty
Yellow Shell
Micro Moths
Agapeta hamanaLast Sunday night I recorded 52 species of moths which was still very good for late May here.
It was nice to end May with a huge healthy list of species for the year, and we've still got peak mothing to come in June and July!