In truth there are endless places to go, but if you want to photograph orchids and butterflies, especially the Duke of Burgundy, then this was a perfect day.
And the mile long walk to the site along the woodland gallop would test my knee good and proper.
It would have been an easy trip out, were it not for the cyclists.
That is being over-dramatic, but hundreds of the lycra-clad barrelling down what Tony would call "six-foot sixers" are coming the other way. There was a 50 mile ride round Kent, we saw signs on Bridge, and I wondered where else they would go.




He had, but being his first time he wasn't sure of where else to go. So, I take him to the leck, where the displaying males gather. We find two more, but on the ground. I get a shot or two, but then head off as the reserve is also stunning for Lady Orchids, and has other species too.

At the far end there is another area for Dukes. We are the only ones here, and we quickly see ten, twenty Dukes of the wing, basking or fighting. I get shots of a couple who were in shrub, displaying.

Very close.
Back at the end nearest the car park, there is a dozen folks, all looking round, not my scene, so I go back up the steps and meeting back up with Jools we walk back to the car.
On the way, the gallop where open to the sun, was full of butterflies, and I get shots of a female Green veined white, a female Orange Tip, a Peacock and several Brimstones too.

The skies cloud over and it gets cool, so sitting inside watching 22 men run around chasing a ball isn't as mad an option as you'd think.
We have carbonara for lunch, with warmed up focaccia and wine, which made us snoozy for the afternoon's footy.
And the games didn't help, at least the first one. As Brighton and Villa played a dull game of who can send each other to sleep. But later, Liverpool ran rings round Spurs to lead 4-0 on the hour, then made changes, got lazy and Spurs pulled two goals back.
By then it was half six, and the day nearly gone.
1 comment:
Now this is a true story, without a hint of exaggeration. I was reading your previous page and looked up Sutton Valence and noticed the nearby Gravelly Bottom Road. I thought that looked interesting, so I GSV'd it and can you believe it - it is six-foot-sixer and I could imagine riding my bicycle down it (by myself, not with 99 other cyclists) and further coincidence, before reading this page, I told one of my co-workers - "hey look at this cool road I found AND it is what we call a six-foot-sixer!"
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