I was joined by Leslie Gardiner, fellow village moth enthusisast and extremely knowledgeable birder at Cranwich Camp in Norfolk last Monday night.
The day had been sweltering, with highs of 27 degrees and a low of around 15 degrees.
We did a bit of dusk netting and added a few species, some in good numbers (Clepsis consimilana, Bucculatrix frangutella & Anania hortulata) and then set about getting the lights in position and ready to go.
We setup 4 lights in close proximity, the furthest around 50 metres away from base camp, a low walking effort with the impending thought of work the next day, I didn't want to overdo it!
In the end we recorded just over 200 species over the 4 hours we ran the lights for.
I think Leslie got around 10 new species for himself, Festoon for me was the highlight, a moth i've only seen once before in Essex previously.
Other standout species included an absolutely pristine Purple Clay, backed up by Beautiful Golden Y, Bordered Sallow, Rosy Marbled, Grey Arches, Red-necked Footman & Marbled Brown, all species that aren't on my garden list.
It was also nice to tap into a smidgen of migrant activity, with Silver Y, Plutella xylostella and 4 superb Four-spotted Footman, all males.
Onto the micros and highlights included a scale perfect Agonopterix assimilella, the pretty Eupoecilia angustana and the scarcer of the Pandemis, Pandemis cinnamomeana (with it's characteristic white head, although only in the males).
A trip well worth doing and I will hope to return next month.