Chance to enjoy the `thrill of seeing a most beautiful butterfly'
I HAVE reported other people seeing butterflies this
year, now it is my turn. But before the peacock butterflies, there was
the woolly bear two weeks ago. Then there was a brown moth, and rather
than writing down a detailed description of this insect, I dashed for
the lepidoptera books.
Of course when I returned a few minutes later; the moth
had flown.
Either I saw three peacock butterflies, or I saw one
peacock three times. It was in the last week in March, the sun was
shining, and the peacock is one of our more beautiful butterflies.
A well-known authority has described his experience of
peacock sighting as 'the thrill of seeing these most beautiful
butterflies'. And if we are lucky, we- can have this selfsame thrill,
for free.
The peacock is attracted to many species of flowering
plants, but especially the buddleia.
I have checked our buddleia, but not a sign of a flower yet, so we must
assume that he just dropped in for a visit.
It hibernates as an adult in, perhaps, a hollow tree
trunk, or in a wood pile or somewhere similar. It spends the winter
there.
The creature may well emerge on the first warm, sunny
day of spring, and chances are that this insect missed the other warm,
sunny days.
The book says it can appear as early as March, and so it
did. 'It lives as an adult all year round, excepting June and July.
Eggs are laid in April, the caterpillars are out and
about in May and June.
In later June and July the pupae are hanging around for
about a fortnight, and then emerge in all their colourful glory. Keep an
eye open for the peacock, they are out there, and you should have 'the
thrill of seeing this most beautiful butterfly'.
