I always mean to post more non-toy-soldier stuff than I do, so while there are thousands of often quite good images of insects, when I do get around to posting some, they aren't always the best, but I like a narrative, and I managed to have my first proper walk of the year the other day (24th April), and found a long hedge, at the top of a dip slope on the downs near Borden, which was facing a very warm sun, and saw loads of butterflies, not all of which were hanging around to be photographed, so missing from these shots are Orange Tips, Small Tortoiseshells, Whites and a Brimstone, but I did get these others.
There were loads of small Holly Blues, but they were actively having what is best described as an orgy, and while I took dozens of shots, most of them are rather blurry, or one of the pair is missing altogether, or I just shot holly leaves!
There's a small striped, solitary 'Digger' wasp in there somewhere!
These are the ones who tunnel into well-trodden sandy paths, or bare banks.
Not sure what these are, I need to look them up.
Some kind of fly, maybe Willow Sawflies, with notably long antennae.
I thought this was a very big version of the 'Basingstoke Orange Bums' as they were called in our family (Mum had some notion they 'came out of' Basingstoke, to compete with her honey-bees! A journey of about 8-miles), but later following it along the ground for a while, trying to get decent shots, I realised it was probably a [larger] queen, of the aforementioned, looking for a suitable nesting site. She's actually a 'Red Tailed Bumblebee'
First Hover-fly of the season, among my favourites.
Once they've had some pollen or nectar for sustenance, as the one above was, the Digger Wasps will hunt and take these as larder stock for the small broods - booooo! Raw in tooth and claw!
Standard Buff-bottom, sharing a dandelion with another solitary wasp type, possibly Oxybellus, from the silver and black striping?
Robber- or Horse-fly? I was probably lucky not to be bitten by one, while I was concentrating on other things, I often get a bite on the shoulder or back as I'm doing this, especially if I'm only in a T-shirt. There were sheep in the valley at the bottom of the dip, and these biting flies do seem to go hand-in-hand with livestock!

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