It started normally enough. I was on my regular walk in my neighborhood garden when a flash of orange caught my eye. Watching for a few moments, I quickly realized several odd things about it that quickly told me it wasn't one of the usual orange butterflies I knew.
- The orange was too bright so it wasn't a tawny coaster
- The shape of the wings was too narrow and angular so it wasn't a leopard or a peacock pansy or any of the tigers
- It was fast! Really fast! And big too. The wingspan of this butterfly was really large and so that significantly reduced the number of butterflies I knew with that wingspan.
And, including those I knew which also had that wing shape and color, that left...nothing.
It was probably around this time that I realized I had no idea what this butterfly was. Now, I've been flipping through my butterfly guidebook for years and, just from seeing those pictures over and over again, I usually have an idea of what the butterfly could be even if I have never seen it outside the guidebook. The image recognition is usually there but not this time. I had not the slightest idea what it was.
Intrigued, I tried to follow this butterfly but it was a fast flyer that infrequently landed. There was no way to really follow it either. It was so fast I lost sight of it more than once. Lucky for me, it seemed to favor a particular bush near me and so I just waited there. I didn't have to wait too long either before it finally landed and, once again, my phone camera shone. The butterfly seemed to have decided it needed a rest too and I quickly snapped a few pics as it finally stayed still.
Do you see it? that flash of orange at the bottom?
And there it is!
Well thank goodness for the latest 30x zoom in the phone UI upgrade! That and Google's new image search using AI where I can just circle my screen to search. That was how I found out that this butterfly is likely a Julia Heliconian (More here!). The name confirmed my suspicions. I had certainly never seen a butterfly with this fanciful name before. It's name blows names like 'Leopard', 'Tawny Coaster', and 'Peacock Pansy' right out of the water.
It's a recent immigrant to Singapore from the Americas and was first seen in June 2021. Now that explains why I've never seen it in my guidebook. I've certainly had it for more than 4 years.
Still, that was amazing. A new butterfly! And right in my backyard!
Absolutely loving my new estate,
May