Great Autmn, to date

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Posted by Moonraker on October 14, 2011, 10:29 am
 
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For some reason there seems lots of ladybirds around. Also a few flutter
byes, mainly red admirals. As there are very few flowers still around I
was wondering what they were living on. Puzzle solved, I was down the
garden near my pear tress, there they were feeding on the rotten
windfalls, I did not know that that was a food source for them..
--
Residing on low ground in North Staffordshire


Posted by Sue on October 14, 2011, 10:58 am
 

Red Admirals can get quite sloshed on fermenting windfall fruit; they
love it. Have seen one or two but any others are probably all in someone
else's orchard. :)

I've been invaded by hosts of ladybirds all summer which is probably why
we've barely seen an aphid around. Now they're hiding everywhere and
each time I prune a shrub or cut back a perennial they emerge in droves.
They particulary seem to congregate in the euonymus that climbs up the
back wall of our garage - probably as it faces south and will be a warm
and sheltered place to hibernate.

--
Sue


Posted by echinosum on October 14, 2011, 12:01 pm
 
Moonraker;939443 Wrote:

There were huge numbers of hibernating ladybirds I kept on running into
last winter, they seemed to be everywhere, outdoors and indoors.  I
suspect a lot of them are this introduced Harlequin Ladybird, which
seems to be very variable in appearance.  Though still nothing to
compare the great ladybird plagues that I remember from the past. One
year in the mid-90s there were so many ladybirds in places that you
couldn't walk along the street without crunching many with every
footstep. In 1976 they were very numerous, and got so thirsty in the
drought they took to biting people.


The butterflies have been very good this year.  I was in central Europe
in August and I couldn't believe how many there were there.
Unfortunately also a plague of wasps.




--
echinosum