I’ve been reporting all Tigers to eButterfly as “Tiger complex” These are quite a bit larger than the the Canadian Tiger Swallowtails
seen in May. Some have Canadian field marks on the ventral side: Yellow hindwing border continuous, black line nearest body on hindwing 
thick, but others look more Eastern, or a combo of both.  
On Jul 24, 2019, at 8:32 PM, Roy Pilcher <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

Amazing indeed!  

How about Canadian Tiger Swallowtail?

Cheers, Roy Pilcher


-----Original Message-----
From: Theresa Armata <[log in to unmask]>
To: VTLEPS <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wed, Jul 24, 2019 7:23 pm
Subject: [VTLEPS] A surprising encounter on a dirt road

Today on a Forest Service Road in Glastonbury. I came upon this group. 

Also in Bennington Common Wood Nymphs, Pearl Crescents, Azures are finally emerging.
Northern Broken Dashes, Some Dun skippers too.


5 Species, 7 individuals at one spot. 
<NPE TSw AtFrt Az NBD Fr325 7-24-19.jpg>

<NPE TSw AtFrt Az NBD Fr325 7-24-19.jpg>