Welcome

Hello and welcome to my moth Blog. I now reside in a small village in East Cambridgeshire called Fordham. My Blog's aim is to promote and encourage others to participate in the wonderful hobby that is Moth-trapping.
Moth records are vital for building a picture of our ecosystem around us, as they really are the bottom of the food chain. They are an excellent early indicator of how healthy a habitat is. I openly encourage people to share their findings via social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter & Instagram.
So why do we do it? well for some people it is to get an insight into the world of Moths, for others it is to build a list of species much like 'Twitching' in the Bird world. The reason I do it....you just never know what you might find when you open up that trap! I hope to show what different species inhabit Cambridgeshire and neighbouring counties.
On this Blog you will find up-to-date records and pictures.
I run a trap regularly in my garden and also enjoy doing field trips to various localities over several different counties.
Please also check out the links in the sidebar to the right for other people's Blogs and informative Websites.
Thanks for looking and happy Mothing!

KEY

NFY = New Species For The Year
NFG = New Species For The Garden
NEW! = New Species For My Records

Any Species highlighted in RED signifies a totally new species for my records.

If you have any questions or enquiries then please feel free to email me, I have now removed commenting as the bots were starting to appear
Contact Email : bensale@rocketmail.com

My Latest Notables and Rarities

Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Cool start to flaming June

Flaming June is the old fashioned traditional saying for the first usually hot and dry month of the year, this doesn't apply to the start of June '26, but it's massively early days yet... it'll come good, it always does.

Moths took a huge nosedive and some nights there were less than 30 species.

But on the flip side, and being June, there is always some interest to be admired.

On the 2nd day of the month, the moth gods delivered just 2 new species for the year, both lovely macro moths though.

They were..

Common Emerald, well it's green, what more is there to like? and a particularly fresh example too.

Lobster Moth, never common here but usually annual, this one however was a lovely melanic variety which was a first for me.

Two nights off followed (Cold, windy and wet) and lights were back on come Friday night.

 
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 358 species 
 
02/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Common Emerald 1 [NFY]
Lobster Moth 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
No new species recorded
 
Parapoynx stratiotata

Broad-barred White

Common Emerald

Coxcomb Prominent

Epinotia bilunana

Lobster Moth

 
 
 

June

Trying to play catchup now as the weather goes a bit meh.

Temperatures are well down on a typical early June, and literally as soon as the month started, we got pretty rubbish weather, nights were still fairly mild but rain was always a presence.

The first night of the month yielded a fair array of species, with the warmth micros were still doing very well (They really hate cool and windy night).

9 new species made the list.

Best moths included the tiny and sadly damaged Leek Moth (Acrolepiopsis assectella), not common here, the ying & yang of the moth world, Broad-barred White and Varied Coronet, with similar markings but in reverse.

Piniphila bifasciana was a little cracker, a regular pine feeder species, and a very pale year first Heart & Club was nice. 

Things slowed down a bit, but It's still June, so there is always something worth photographing. 
 
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 356 species 
 
01/06/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Broad-barred White 1 [NFY] 
Heart & Club 1 [NFY]
Purple Bar 1 [NFY]
Small Clouded Brindle 1 [NFY]
Varied Coronet 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
Acrolepiopsis assectella 1 [NFY]
Archips crataegana 1 [NFY]
Piniphila bifasciana 1 [NFY]
Spilonota ocellana 1 [NFY]
 
Acrolepiopsis assectella

Archips crataegana

Broad-barred White and Varied Coronet

Heart & Club

Piniphila bifasciana

Purple Bar

Small Clouded Brindle

Spilonota ocellana

 

Monday, 8 June 2026

Ditton Park Wood - Field Trip - 30th May

I made my first trip to a rather large wood in the far east of Cambs, a mixed woodland with some interesting flora.
Last year there was areas of woodland that was felled, now the light pools in amongst new areas and low-growing flora is flourishing, certainly a win in my book. Variety certainly is a good thing for wildlife.
 
A warm and humid day looked perfect for a session, and as I was setting up I was confident, even the local farmer popped by to offer me a cup of steaming hot tea, wishing me luck and bidding me farewell.
 
4 traps were setup in anticipation, moths started to come in, but variety was a little disappointing, and then the wind got up. Not the lovely southerly warmth we had recently, but a cool east breeze, ARGH! 2 traps were in direct firing line from the elements.
 
I decided to pack up two of the traps at midnight, the other two weren't far behind unfortunately, as the moths stopped flying. 
 
Getting in the car, the thermometer still read 14 degrees, but it felt much cooler.
 
Overall the variety of species was lower than expected, but there were good numbers of common and scarcer species. 
 
Best moths included Agnoea flavifrontella, Ancylis diminutana, Telechrysis tripuncta, Poplar Lutestring & 7 Beautiful Golden-Y's.
 
I will be back when conditions improve again. 
 
30/05/26 - Ditton Park Wood - East Cambridgeshire - 1x 125w Clear MV Trap, 1x 250w Clear Robinson Trap, 1x 40w/22w Bucket Trap & 1x 160w MBT Trap

Macro Moths

Beautiful Golden-Y 7
Beautiful Hook-tip 
Blood-vein 
Blotched Emerald
Brimstone Moth 
Brown Rustic 
Brown Silver-line 
Buff Ermine 
Buff-tip 
Burnished Brass 
Clouded Border 
Clouded Silver 
Common Emerald 
Common Marbled Carpet 
Common Pug 
Common Swift 
Common Wainscot 
Common Wave
Cream Wave
Dark Sword-grass 
Elephant Hawk-moth 
Figure of Eighty 
Flame Shoulder
Gold Swift 
Green Carpet 
Green Pug 
Green Silver-lines 
Grey Dagger 
Grey Pug 
Grey Pug 
Heart & Dart
Iron Prominent 
Large Yellow Underwing 
Latticed Heath 
Light Emerald 
Maiden's Blush 
Marbled Minor 
Marbled White-spot 
Middle-barred Minor 
Mottled Beauty 
Mottled Rustic 
Oak Hook-tip 
Oak Nycteoline
Orange Footman 
Pale Oak Beauty 
Pale Prominent 
Pale Tussock 
Pebble Prominent 
Pinion-streaked Snout 
Poplar Grey 
Poplar Hawk-moth 
Poplar Lutestring
Riband Wave 
Sallow Kitten 
Scorched Wing 
Setaceous Hebrew Character 
Silver-ground Carpet 
Single-dotted Wave 
Sloe Pug 
Small Dotted Buff 
Small Elephant Hawk-moth 
Small Mottled Willow 
Small Phoenix 
Snout 
Spectacle 
Spruce Carpet 
Straw Dot 
Treble Lines 
Treble-bar 
Turnip Moth 
White Ermine 
White-point 
Willow Beauty 
Yellow Shell 

Micro Moths

Agapeta hamana 
Agnoea flavifrontella
Agriphila straminella 
Aleimma loeflingiana 
Ancylis diminutana
Apotomis capreana 
Aproaerema anthyllidella
Archips crataegana
Argyresthia spinosella 
Celypha cespitana 
Celypha lacunana 
Cochylichroa atricapitana 
Coptoptriche marginea 
Crambus lathoniellus 
Crassa unitella 
Cydia fagiglandana 
Elachista gangabella
Epermenia falciformis
Eudonia lacustrata 
Eudonia pallida 
Eulia ministrana 
Euzophera pinguis 
Evergestis forficalis 
Gypsonoma sociana 
Hedya nubiferana 
Hedya pruniana 
Lathyronympha strigana 
Monopis weaverella
Musotima nitidalis 
Nemapogon clematella
Nemapogon cloacella 
Nematopogon metaxella 
Nemophora degeerella 
Notocelia trimaculana 
Notocelia uddmanniana 
Orthotaenia undulana 2
Pandemis cerasana 
Paraswammerdamia albicapitella 
Parornix sp 
Prays fraxinella 
Ptycholoma lecheana
Scoparia ambigualis 
Scrobipalpa ocellatella 
Telechrysis tripuncta
Teleiodes luculella 
Tinea semifulvella
Tinea trinotella 
Tischeria eklebladella 
Tortrix viridana
Triaxomera parasitella

125w Clear MV Trap

Actinic LED Combo Trap

Agnoea flavifrontella

Ancylis diminutana

Archips crataegana

Beautiful Golden-Y

Blotched Emerald

Elachista gangabella

Gold Swift

Green Silver-lines

Musotima nitidalis

Orthotaenia undulana

Poplar Lutestring

Telechrysis tripuncta


Sunday, 7 June 2026

More species continue to arrive

Last Sunday night I recorded 52 species of moths which was still very good for late May here.

It was nice to end May with a huge healthy list of species for the year, and we've still got peak mothing to come in June and July! 

10 new species overnight was very good, as night time temperatures started to get lower towards the start of the new week.
 
In the daytime a single Red-belted Clearwing came to its own lure. Clearwings have been quite sparse in my garden this year, apart from Currant where I've had up to 12 per day. 
 
Best moth for me was a 2nd garden record of  Hellinsia carphodactyla, a rather nice Plume.
 
Pandemis heparana was odd in the fact that I recorded it before cerasana, this isn't usually the case.
 
Although the weather changed as soon as we stepped into June, there were some fairly mild nights on the cards albeit a little wet. 
 
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 347 species 
 
30/05/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Beautiful Hook-tip 1 [NFY] 
Common Footman 1 [NFY]
Dark Arches 1 [NFY]
Least Carpet 1 [NFY]
Red-belted Clearwing 1 [NFY] (To lure)
Small Waved Umber 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
Acentria ephemerella 1 [NFY]
Aglossa pinguinalis 1 [NFY]
Hellinsia carphodactyla 1 [NFY]
Pandemis heparana 1 [NFY]
Tinea semifulvella 1 [NFY] 
 
Small Waved Umber

Aglossa pinguinalis

Beautiful Hook-tip

Common Footman

Dark Arches

Hellinsia carphodactyla

Least Carpet

Pandemis heparana

Red-belted Clearwing

 

Some results from tricky micros

Popped & saw Colin Plant to show him some moths. Bad news, the hoped for British 2nd Euzopherodes vapidella turned out to be Ephestia woodiella. Positives were Elachista bedellella (2nd for cambs last seen in 1905) & Nemapogon variatella (2nd for cambs) great garden ticks!

 

Elachista bedellella

 

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Peak mothing May

The trap was still busy come last weekend, less numbers but the species were still racking up!

Two new macros, but 7 new micros, shows how much the smaller moths like these warmer and calmer conditions.

I was busy potting up some quality local species such as Sciota adelphella and Aethes beatricella, then checking all of the Ephestia spercies that were dotted around the house wall behind the trap, I noticed a smaller specimen, so quickly potted it up and got my hand lens out.
No... it can't be. Looking closely at it dorsally, the moth matches the imago of a moth I took new for Britain back in 2021, Euzopherodes vapidella.
The specimen I took came to my actinic trap where I worked at a town cemetery, the origin was never conclusive, but it was noted at the time that there were several open fresh food vendors in the area that were selling various exotic fruits.
 
Now, this area is 37 miles away from my garden. If it does turn out to be a second example of this species then I will be ecstatic to say the least.
 
I will be hopefully getting it dissected by Colin Plant this weekend. 
 
 
 
Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 335 species 
 
30/05/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Barred Yellow 1 [NFY] 
Small Square-spot 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
Aethes beatricella 1 [NFY]
Coleophora alcyonipennella/frischella 1 [NFY]
Euzophera pinguis 1 [NFY]
Neocochylis hybridella 1 [NFY]
Pterophorus pentadactyla 1 [NFY]
Sciota adelphella 1 [NFY]
Tortrix viridana 1 [NFY] 
Ephestia sp TBC
 
TBC

Aethes beatricella

Coleophora alcyonipennella/frischella

Euzophera pinguis

Neocochylis hybridella

Pterophorus pentadactyla

Sciota adelphella

Small Square-spot

 
 

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

May, the month that keeps on giving!

May, the month that keeps on giving! 

And then June came along, less said about that the better (so far, but it is still early days).

I struck lucky last Friday night with not one, but two new species for the garden!!

A splendid Striped Hawk-moth was sitting proudly on the house wall behind my trap, a species I have seen many time abroad, from Portugal through to France and all the way to Turkey.
To get one in the garden was unbelievable. 
 
As if that wasn't enough, I also scored a Phtheochroa schreibersana, not only that but it was in really good condition and much better than the one I netted along the nearby hedgerows last year.
It's a species either making a comeback, or a genuine migrant, as there has been countless people recording it this year for the first time.
 
Back up new species included a tatty Goat Moth, and both Foxglove & Toadflax Pug.
 
A rather nicely marked Large Yellow Underwing was nice to see also.
 
Things didn't slow down just yet! 

 

Moth garden list for 2026 stands at 326 species 
 
29/05/26 - Back Garden - Fordham - East Cambridgeshire - Actinic Trap
 
Macro Moths

Foxglove Pug 1 [NFY] 
Goat Moth 1 [NFY]
Striped Hawk-moth 1 [NFG]
Toadflax Pug 1 [NFY]

Micro Moths
 
Phtheochroa schreibersana 1 [NFG]
 
Striped Hawk-moth

Toadflax Pug

Foxglove Pug

Goat Moth

Large Yellow Underwing

Phtheochroa schreibersana