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Country diary: A butterfly haven of orange tips and holly blues | Sara Hudston
environment

Country diary: A butterfly haven of orange tips and holly blues | Sara Hudston

The Guardian Environment · May 6, 2026, 4:33 AM

Why this matters: environmental and climate reporting with long-term consequences.

Powerstock Common, Dorset: I’m hopeful that the mixed habitats here and bright weather will bring them out in their droves – and I’m not disappointed. The recent pulse of warm, sunny weather has encouraged butterflies to fly in large numbers in Dorset. They were everywhere when I visited Powerstock Common: the moment I opened the car door, a brimstone fluttered sulphur-yellow over the parking area, lifted on a stream of blackcap song.Bright as butter in the sunshine, it’s possible that brimstones are the species that inspired the word “butterfly”. When this one settled on a hazel, its underwings merged green among the new leaves, the colours indicating it was a male. Females are much paler, sometimes almost white. Both sexes have a pair of browny-orange spots on their wings, which are foxed like the page edges of an old book. Continue reading...

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