Grizzled skipper

Pyrus malvae

About

The grizzled skipper is the smallest of our skippers and the earliest to appear in spring. It has a fast, darting flight pattern, so is easiest to see in the early morning when it basks on bare ground in the sunshine. Grizzled skippers require short, mixed vegetation that is usually created by grazing on chalk grassland or in woodland clearings. The caterpillars feed on a variety of plants, including wild strawberry, bramble, agrimony, salad burnet and creeping cinquefoil.

How to identify

The grizzled skipper has dark brown wings with an intricate, white chequerboard pattern. The wings have white fringes, with dark lines running through them. The dingy skipper is similar, but is larger and has duller wings.

Did you know?

Although the grizzled skipper prefers unimproved chalk grassland and woodland rides, it has recently spread on to old industrial sites, such as mineral workings, spoil heaps, railway lines and even rubbish tips!