Welcome

Hello and welcome to my moth Blog. I now reside in a small village in East Cambridgeshire called Fordham. My Blog's aim is to promote and encourage others to participate in the wonderful hobby that is Moth-trapping.
Moth records are vital for building a picture of our ecosystem around us, as they really are the bottom of the food chain. They are an excellent early indicator of how healthy a habitat is. I openly encourage people to share their findings via social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter & Instagram.
So why do we do it? well for some people it is to get an insight into the world of Moths, for others it is to build a list of species much like 'Twitching' in the Bird world. The reason I do it....you just never know what you might find when you open up that trap! I hope to show what different species inhabit Cambridgeshire and neighbouring counties.
On this Blog you will find up-to-date records and pictures.
I run a trap regularly in my garden and also enjoy doing field trips to various localities over several different counties.
Please also check out the links in the sidebar to the right for other people's Blogs and informative Websites.
Thanks for looking and happy Mothing!

KEY

NFY = New Species For The Year
NFG = New Species For The Garden
NEW! = New Species For My Records

Any Species highlighted in RED signifies a totally new species for my records.

If you have any questions or enquiries then please feel free to email me, I have now removed commenting as the bots were starting to appear
Contact Email : bensale@rocketmail.com

My Latest Notables and Rarities

Saturday, 20 June 2026

So warm, so humid

Well what a heatwave we are experiencing currently.
After those warm two weeks at the end of May, it wasn't long before we were back into even higher temperatures here in the east.
Friday was another warm day in excess of 31 degrees here, and with nighttime lows of 18.3c the trap was pretty busy with species and numbers, with over 20 Leopard Moths once more, and 40+ Common Footman.
The micros have really excelled here, with huge variety.
 
During the daytime several Red-belted and Currant Clearwings came to different lures, I haven't gone all out with lures this year, favouring trying unusual lures rather than the standard clearwing ones.
I've still got TAB and SAL out though, for Dusky and Sallow Clearwing.
 
Back to the overnight catch and wowzers, it was pretty mental.
 
I'll list the highlights briefly below.
 
Small Marbled - A garden first and one I've not seen for 15 years! Back in 2011 I took the 2nd & 3rd Hertfordshire county records. How I managed to find it I do not know. I went through my trap at 3:30, back to bed at 4am and then up again at 6:30, sweeping the dead flies from the patio I saw a tiny pale moth and blow me down, a little Small Marbled!
 
Coleophora albidella/anatipennella - Another garden first species, one of two that I could narrow it down to, a beautiful white Coleophora species that actually behaved itself and was quite photogenic.
 
Nemapogon ruricolella - An uncommon visitor here, usually to the Clearwing lures, but this alighted at my actinic trap. A fairly distinct moth, separated from variatella by it's ochreous ground colour and buff head (white in variatella) it is also a little bigger than the similar cloacella. 
 
Coleophora violacea - After a spate of this species to pheremone lures in 2022, I saw none until Thursday night when out of the blue, I netted one. A distinct dark green species with black antennae that feature white tips. 
 
A fantastic time to be recording moths, but It's blooming tiring! 
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 448 species 
 
18/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Brown-tail 1 [NFY]
Dun-bar 1 [NFY]
Scalloped Oak 1 [NFY]
Small Marbled 1 [NFG]
Currant Clearwing 2 (To TIP lure)
Red-belted Clearwing 4 (1 to SAL & 3 to LOR lure)


Micro Moths

Acleris forsskaleana 1 [NFY]
Acrobasis repandana 1 [NFY]
Catoptria pinella 1 [NFY]
Coleophora albidella/anatipennella 1 [NFY]
Coleophora vestianella 1 [NFY]
Coleophora violacea 1 [NFY] (netted)
Cydia nigricana 2 [NFY] (netted)
Ectoedemia hannoverella/turbidella 1 [NFY]
Lozotaeniodes formosana 2 [NFY]
Nemapogon ruricolella 1 [NFY]
Oegoconia sp 2 [NFY]
Paraswammerdamia nebulella 1 [NFY]
Tinea columbariella 2 [NFY]
Zeiraphera isertana 1 [NFY]
 
Acleris forsskaleana

Acrobasis repandana

Brown-tail

Coleophora albidella/anatipennella

Coleophora vestianella

Dun-bar

Ectoedemia hannoverella/turbidella

Lozotaeniodes formosana

Nemapogon ruricolella

Small Marbled

Zeiraphera isertana

 
 
 

Thursday, 18 June 2026

Still going as strong as a stallion

Things are certainly well above average currently in my garden, and no doubt in other people's gardens as well.
The numbers of species is quite something, and although most species are coming in in 1's and 3's there are a few exceptions.
 
Leopard Moth, now that I've had a full count around the garden are now up to 23 for last night, and Common Footman have exceeded that with 31!
 
The noctuids were still out in full force as well, with Dark Arches, Heart & Club and Turnip Moth the commonest. 
 
Species new for the year included a lovely Blackneck, the always knackered look of a Brown Scallop and talking of knackered, the Clouded-bordered Brindle wasn't much cop either!
V-Moth was another lovely moth, a rather localised speciality here and I usually get 1 or 2 per year. 
 
Plenty of micros once more, they were certain0ly a massive challenge to photograph this evening in the high 20's heat.
 
More of the same for possibly the next 7 days, quite remarkable for the middle of June.
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 430 species 
 
17/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Blackneck 1 [NFY]
Brown Scallop 1 [NFY]
Clouded-bordered Brindle 1 [NFY]
V-Moth 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths

Cosmopterix scribaiella 2 [NFY]
Cydalima perspectalis 2 [NFY]
Ectoedemia heringella 3 [NFY]
Elophila nymphaeata 1 [NFY]
Grapholita tenebrosana 1 [NFY]
monochroa lucidella 1 [NFY] 
Pyralis farinalis 1 [NFY]
Coleophora sp 1 [TBC]
 
V-Moth

Blackneck

Brown Scallop

Cosmopterix scribaiella

Cydalima perspectalis

Elophila nymphaeata

Pyralis farinalis

 

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

The busy period

Peak mothing from now by the looks of it, and it doesn't get much better than this.

With no less than 71 species logged last night, including 22 species that were new for the year, and a bonus 23rd in the shape of a visiting Hummingbird Hawk-moth feeding from our Verbana  during late afternoon.

The tiny (but luckily) distinctive Elachista utonella, is new for the garden and moth sp no.937, the 2nd new species of Elachista to recorded this year. 

Two of the new macros I did not record last year (Ruddy Carpet and Single-dotted Wave). 

Micros certainly picked up with the muggy overnight conditions and included some rather scarce species such as Homoeosoma nebulella, Recurvaria nanella & Vitula biviella.

More of the same each night now I reckon, we'll see what new species turn up over the next few nights. 

 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 419 species 
 
16/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Dark Umber 1 [NFY]
Hummingbird Hawk-moth 1 [NFY] (daytime)
Lesser Yellow Underwing 4 [NFY]
Mottled Beauty 1 [NFY]
Ruddy Carpet 1 [NFY]
Single-dotted Wave 1 [NFY]
Southern Wainscot 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
Amblyptilia acanthadactyla 1 [NFY]
Anania perlucidalis 1 [NFY]
Argyresthia albistria 1 [NFY]
Batia lunaris 2 [NFY]
Elachista utonella 1 [NFG]
Endotricha flammealis 1 [NFY]
Epiblema foenella 1 [NFY]
Epinotia abbreviana 1 [NFY]
Ethmia dodecea 1 [NFY]
Gypsonoma aceriana 1 [NFY]
Homoeosoma nebulella 1 [NFY]
Marasmarcha lunaedactyla 1 [NFY]
Mompha ochraceella 2 [NFY]
Niditinea fuscella/striolella sp 1 [NFY]
Recurvaria nanella 1 [NFY]
Vitula biviella 1 [NFY]
 
Anania perlucidalis

Argyresthia albistria

Dark Umber

Elachista utonella

Epinotia abbreviana

Ethmia dodecea

Gypsonoma aceriana

Homoeosoma nebulella

Southern Wainscot

Vitula biviella

 
 
 
 

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Quick post before a busy period?

Last night was milder but there were less species, but plenty of moths.

Undoubtedly the highlight was a second Striped Hawk-moth for the year, sitting proudly on the outside of the trap this morning at 4am, I was up late and some moths succumbed to the jaws of the local Blackbird!

Other migrants included a Silver Y, Small Mottled Willow, 5x Plutella xylostella and a fresh Clancy's Rustic.

Swallow-tailed Moth was the sole new macro for the year, backed up by 3 new micros.  

Some real muggy nights approaching, should be pretty darn good! 

 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 396 species 
 
15/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Swallow-tailed Moth 1 [NFY]
Clancy's Rustic 1 
Silver Y 1 
Striped Hawk-moth 1
 

Micro Moths
 
Aleimma loeflingiana 1 [NFY]
Eucosma conterminana 1 [NFY]
Pexicopia malvella 1 [NFY] 
Plutella xylostella 5 
 
Swallow-tailed Moth

Aleimma loeflingiana

Eucosma conterminana

Pexicopia malvella

Scythropia crataegella

Striped Hawk-moth!

 
 

Monday, 15 June 2026

Kicking into gear, the Ermines are here

As the years have gone by, I've had huge influx’s of Ermine moths, the Yponomeuta variety. Usually a mixture of 5 possible species, a couple of them can be told apart, but the 3 that are inseparable are cagnagella, malinellus & padella.

Last night I got 3 of evonymella (Easily distinguished from the others by its multi-dotted forewings), and 1 of the triple headache cag/mal/pad as I put them down on my spreadsheet, the first of many no doubt.

There was a bit more activity and that was encouraging, especially as we head towards warmer days and nights.

Only two macro moths were new, Dwarf Cream Wave and Haworth's Pug.

The micros fared better with 8 new species for the year. 

Crambus pascuella was welcome after a year off in 2025 for reasons unknown, the odd little Carcina quercana (or Flat Cooper as it was affectionately known).

Netting at dusk yielded a year first Dichrorampha vancouverana, a real challenge to pot up from the net!

Get those traps ready!  

 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 392 species 
 
14/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Dwarf Cream Wave 1 [NFY]
Haworth's Pug 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
Carcina quercana 1 [NFY]
Crambus pascuella 1 [NFY]
Crassa unitella 1 [NFY] 
Dichrorampha vancouverana 1 [NFY]
Eucosma cana 2 [NFY]
Udea olivalis 1 [NFY]
Yponomeuta cag mal pad 1 [NFY]
Yponomeuta evonymella 3 [NFY] 
 
Yponomeuta evonymella

Carcina quercana

Crambus pascuella

Crassa unitella

Dichrorampha vancouverana

Dwarf Cream Wave

Haworth's Pug

Yponomeuta cag mal pad

 

Friday, 12 June 2026

A rare break in June?!?

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 highs of 14 degrees on Wednesday, steadily getting warmer again day by day, so my trap was back on last night.
Unfortunately although it was cloudy and mild (Minimum of 15 degrees) it was unseasonably windy and the catch up until half 11 was paltry.
Come 4.30am, it was a bit better and there were possibly 30 species present, at a push.
 
Nevertheless there were some great new species added, sadly a lot were damaged either by the wind or the months worth of rain we've had this past few days. 
 
Things will hopefully improve into next week.
 
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 382 species 
 
11/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Clancy's Rustic 1 [NFY]
Clay 1 [NFY]
Royal Mantle 1 [NFY]
Scarce Footman 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
Ancylis achatana 1 [NFY]
Gypsonoma dealbana 1 [NFY]
 
Scarce Footman

Ancylis achatana

Clancy's Rustic

Clay

Gypsonoma dealbana

Royal Mantle

 

Thursday, 11 June 2026

Despite the weather, they've still got to fly

Sunday night wasn't too bad here, the pick of the nights for at least a week and so the moths responded accordingly.
After all, the moths have to take flight to find a mate and breed, so they really are up against the clock, especially as we are now coming into the peak mothing season here in the UK. 
 
Tuesday night was worrying, just 12 moths and last night I didn't even bother.
 
Back to the 7th and there was quite a bit of interest to the trap early evening and overnight.  
 
It was originally 8 new ones for the year, pretty darn good given how average the conditions had been, but whilst photographing the moths in the garden, my son potted up a few more moths, he added a further 2 new species for the year! A Netted Pug & Light Arches.
 
Pick of the macros was a Delicate, the earliest I've recorded here by a month.
 
The best micro was pine feeding Dioryctria simplicella, a regular moth here but rather scarce nationwide.
 
And that was pretty much it up until now, the 11th! 
 
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 376 species 
 
07/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Delicate 1 [NFY]
Flame 1 [NFY]
L-album Wainscot 1 [NFY]
Light Arches 1 [NFY]
Netted Pug 1 [NFY]
Smoky Wainscot 1 [NFY] 

Micro Moths
 
Archips xylosteana 1 [NFY]
Crambus perlella 1 [NFY]
Dioryctria simplicella 1 [NFY] 
Pandemis cerasana 1 [NFY] 
 
Crambus perlella

Delicate

Dioryctria simplicella

Flame

Netted Pug

Smoky Wainscot