Sunday, 29 September 2013

Sunday 29th September - Autumn fruits

An early rise, but stayed local and went to Blackdown around 7am, shortly after sun up. It was still quite windy perhaps an ENE and a thick blanket of cloud. I headed out from the car park with bins and camera and quickly realised I'd left my SD card in the laptop ! - So ended up carrying the camera for 3 hours for the hell of it, not that I missed any real opportunities. After 5 minutes, a rustle in a Holly bush and a familiar 'chacking' produced a Ring Ouzel, which burst out of the Holly and flew over the gully and landed in a distant pine. A great start to the morning. The theme of hirundine movement from yesterday continued with a steady trickle for over an hour, the majority being House Martins (132) and Swallows (124) and I would only have seen a small proportion of the total of those flying through. Meadow Pipits were also moving although I only counted 8. A young birch copse held a Firecrest and there were calling Chiffchaff everywhere , well into double figures. A single Redwing, flew north calling and several Song Thrushes did the same. Other birds seen were 2 Kestrel, 1 Buzzard, 2 Bullfinch, Goldcrest and a Great Spotted Woodpecker. Although slightly disappointed I didn't get another view of the Ring Ouzel, it was clear there is a bumper crop of Rowan berries this Autumn and Blackdown is covered in Rowan trees, the Whitebeams look bare, but I imagine over the next few weeks there might be a thrush bonanza.

I headed home for a coffee, and the cloud lifted a little. Last year was so wet and generally a failure for most fruit crops. I had no Plums and very few edible Apples and could hardly find a Holly berry, the Sweet Chestnuts had a dismal crop and there were few acorns. What a contrast this year. There are 2 Rowans in the Gully at home,several Sweet Chestnuts and lots of Oak, and all are full of fruit. The 3 Mistle Thrushes I saw yesterday appear to have taken up territory around the 2 Rowans (which is great but it means no hope for a Ring Ouzel or other rare thrush at home as they will defend this vigorously). I disturbed the 2 young Roe Deer that appear daily in the fields. There is also a Yew, full of berries in the gully, which is slightly obscured by other trees, but after a brief watch 2 Blackbirds had been hiding within, feasting on the berries. Blackbirds are one of the more visible thrushes and I'm not sure whether this time of year makes a difference, but their approach to this Yew Tree was like being seen near a seedy strip joint, as they were trying their best to remain undetected and almost embarrassed by eating the berries (no doubt intoxicating).


One of 2 young Roe Deer inhabiting the house fields.

Rowan berry cluster - just right for wandering thrushes to feast on.
Rowan in the field, bursting with ripe fruit

Sweet Chestnuts are laden with fruit
My plums are bulging !
Ornamental Crab apples , full of fruit
Viburnum Opulus (Guelder Rose) fruits loved by Bullfinches in Winter when they're beyond ripe 

Saturday 28th September - Home

A repeating agenda of dropping off and picking up for school sports, so I had a couple of hours in between at home - from around 8.30 to 10.30, with an overcast sky, low cloud and a brisk Easterly, it was still  mild enough to sit outside. The theme was movement of hirundines, with a large number of mainly House Martins. I counted 95 birds heading East with 35 Swallows. There were more birds around but I was being too careful not to double count as they spent some time hawking for food before passing through. There was also a decent number of Meadow Pipits (35N).  For the morning watch I recorded 29 species, the remaining were :-

Jackdaw
Magpie
Raven 1 (twice)
Carrion Crow
Great Spotted Woodpecker 1
Green Woodpecker 1
Mistle Thrush 3
Robin 3
Dunnock
Wren 2
Coal Tit
Long-tailed Tit 5
Marsh Tit 1
Great Tit
Blue Tit
Nuthatch 2
Chaffinch (8N)
Pied Wagtail 2
Chiffchaff 3
Blackcap 1
Siskin 1
Greenfinch 5
Goldfinch 2
Sparrowhawk 2 female
Starling
Woodpigeon
Stock Dove

Monday, 23 September 2013

22 September - Heading South


September is the time for migrants. Large numbers of birds heading South with the added excitement of finding the unusual or rare species thrown in for the lucky few and at the end of the month this is mixed with birds returning the other way for Winter.

So with the Sun also heading South, officially today the other other side of the Equator, and a very light SSW breeze and overcast weather with early mist forecast it looked promising for migrating birds to be held up on the South Coast, which is where I went. The mornings are now closing in much more noticeably with light not really up until approaching 6.45am, I saw a Tawny Owl fly across the road just before Midhurst. and a Buzzard on it's first foray of the morning just past Goodwood, in between dense patches of fog, which made me a little concerned I wouldn't be able to see anything on the coast.

Selsey was first. The tide was way out and the light was very low in still conditions but at least not foggy. 10 Med Gulls were with a selection of Herring, Black-headed, Lesser and Great-black backed Gulls, but the sea was extremely quiet with a handful of distant Gannets, Sandwich Terns, 3 Common Scoter,13 Wigeon and 24 Brent Geese were the first returning Autumn birds  . One observant birder called a Pied Flycatcher which had flown over our heads and landed in the Tamarisks , so we waited patiently for about 45 minutes for it to reappear from the bush, which it never did !, just 4 or 5 Chiffchaffs present. and a steady flow of Swallows numbered over 200 moving SW, with 4 Meadow Pipits and 2 Grey Wagtails.

I went to Church Norton, where the number of hirundines was staggering. Impossible to accurately count but an estimate of 5,000 + birds over the saltmarshes and extending both inland and out to the sea, the vast majority being Swallows but also House Martins and Sand Martins, I tried to capture the sight but failed miserably in the pictures below - Swallows are a nightmare to photgraph in flight !

The Scrub around the churchyard held 2 Spotted Flycatchers, and a large number of Blackaps and Chiffchaffs, with 1 Willow Warbler and  4 Whitethroats.  A female type Marsh Harrier flew the length of the harbour and seemed to continue straight out to sea and there were Dunlin, Redshank, Ringed Plover, Grey Plover, Turnstone, 1 Bar-tailed Godwit, Little Egret, Grey Heron on the mud-flats.

As the morning ended it appeared the activity of the smaller birds was diminishing so I headed inland to the South Downs at North Stoke. All the fields had now been either cut or ploughed, with the managed wildlife field fringes full of seed plants. There were large numbers of hirundines over the hills as far as the eye could see ( must be a mass-movement day). Small flocks of Linnets and Goldfinches were operating between the fields and obviously gathering in numbers for Winter, although I only saw 3 Yellowhammers, the build up of these passerines should prove good for Winter raptors and one field was covered in Meadow Pipits joined by 2 Wheatears. Distantly 4 Red Kites and 5 Buzzards soared, but little else was of note. So a spectacular day for movements of Swallows, but again nothing unusual to spice up the day.

Specs are not Camera dust but  Swallows
Difficult to capture  - just a few of the 000's of Swallows
..... and a few more

Saturday 21 September - Pain-in-the-Neck


I had a couple of hours this morning before doing the Saturday sports runs, so I headed up to Blackdown, which is only 10 minutes away. Catching up with Wrynecks this autumn has been a problem for me. They are reported in very small numbers, typically from late August through to late September on the move South, and this year seems to be a good year for them. I hadn't made a specific effort to see a reported bird, but a couple of times in the last few weeks I've missed seeing one at Church Norton by minutes. With a report of a bird at Blackdown from Wednesday and again Friday, I though this must be luck so I headed there at 7am.
It was overcast and a little gloomy and a bit of drizzle for a few minutes. In 2 hours wandering around I had no sniff of a Wryneck, the Saturday curse stikes again, but I was the only one looking. Plenty of Chiffchaffs were calling along with Green and Great Spotted Woodpecker, Goldcrests, Coal Tit, 3 Stonechats, 20 Meadow Pipits flew over and about the same number of Swallows, and the best bird was a Wheatear - I hadn't seen one in the wider area before, but as I don't visit Blackdown very frequently wouldn't know whether this is unusual or not - perhaps I should.


Blackdown,, looking South
Blackdown, looking North
Wheatear
Stonechat

Sunday, 15 September 2013

Sunday 15th September - Selsey and Pagham

The first autumn storm looks set to hit here later today, and in anticipation I hoped that there would be birds moving ahead of this. I headed to Selsey first thing, stopping briefly at Siddlesham Ferry pool on-route at 6.45am.  There was no wind and still a little fog lingered so I couldn't quite see the back of the pool but
10 Curlew Sandpipers (which is a good number here) were fairly close to the road with a c20 Dunlin, 7 Black-tailed Godwits and a single Greenshank flew in. I recall my first ever visit to Pagham  in the very early 80's when the Ferry pool was covered in waders and I saw my first ever Curlew Sandpipers here and since then this is the first time I've seen double figures at this site.

I drove to the Bill and as I got out of the car Meadow Pipits were flying over calling and I noticed a raptor very high and heading out to sea, it was probably a Marsh Harrier and I say probably as I only got a rear view and staring upwards into a birds ventrical area isn't the best view to clinch ID , annoyingly it didn't turn at all as it disappeared South , but it was Buzzard size and uniformly dark underneath and it wasn't a Buzzard. There were several Chiffchaffs in the bushes and a Sedge Warbler and the Meadow Pipits continued to fly over in small groups.

The Meadow Pipit count was well over 100 by the time I left with 1 Yellow Wagtail, 4 Pied Wagtails, 2 Wheatears on the beach and Sand Martin, House Martin and Swallow recording small numbers. A Kestrel flew in from the sea but the most unusual sighting - a Great Spotted Woodpecker bounding in across the sea from quite a distance out. Seabird action was quiet apart from Gannets with 4 Common Scoter, 1 Tufted Duck, 1 Shoveler, 1 Guillemot 1 Sandwich Tern and 3 Common Terns, no doubt the big movement will be later this afternoon !.

The Ferry pool held a Ruff on the way back but the other waders had departed.

Curlew Sandpipers 2 of the 10
2 Curlew Sandpipers and 1 Dunlin in flight

Dunlin left and Curlew Sandpiper right - with reflections
Wheatear on beach at Selsey
Turnstone on beach






Saturday 14th September - home viewing.

For the first time in a very long while at home, I sat outside this morning for just over an hour (with 2 coffees) and watched for birds. It had an autumnal feel with a slight chill and an increasing cloud build-up - but I was happy !. With all the building work at home over the last 6 months, the feeders have been partially redundant through the summer, and even though I've just filled them again I need to work out the best site for them and the birds for Winter period as I'll probably relocate from the previous hedge-line, so my viewing this morning was at the back of the barn across the field and surrounding trees.

There was a brisk West wind and increasing cloud cover from 8am, but there were enough birds around to keep me busy until I was called into action for the School sports runs. The most impressive was the large number of Swallows moving West - most low flying no more than treetop height. I recorded a steady stream of 137 until 9.15 and given that I wasn't looking across a major flyway then this probably represented a tiny fraction of the numbers moving elsewhere across the south.

In total 32 species was not bad at all. I pretty much cleaned up on corvids - the 12 magpies are a local family group which is constantly harassing anything that moves and there's  a pair of local Ravens I'm beginning to see more frequently.

Jay 2
Magpie 12
Carrion Crow
Rook 2
Raven 1
Jackdaw
Swallow 137
House Martin 6
Great Tit
Blue Tit
Coal Tit
Dunnock 1
Robin 3
Wren 1
Blackbird
Buzzard 1
Green Woodpecker 2
Great spotted Woodpecker 1
Nuthatch 2
Woodpigeon
Stock Dove
Collared Dove 3
Greenfinch 3
Chaffinch
Linnet 1
Siskin 7
Goldfinch 10
Grey Wagtail (h) 1
Bullfinch 2
Willow Warbler 1
Chiffchaff 2
Blackcap 1


to 7th September - brief Summer catch up

It really was a proper Summer, right up to the start of this month with temperatures still reaching 30c. Work overtook my ability to fully enjoy the weather, and only a couple of morning birding sessions have been managed, so a summary of these is all I'm going here but from now on to try and keep up to date.

A walk around Pagham Harbour on the bank holiday weekend Sunday had highlights of 2 Whinchats, a Redstart, 2 Lesser Whitethroat several Wheatears , 2 Common Sandpipers and  1 Greenshank.

Then 2 trips to Selsey had highlights of 9 Balearic Shearwaters (in one flock) and then on 7th, one Black Tern, 1 Little Stint and 2 Arctic Skuas.

Blackcap at home enjoying the Elder crop
Speckled Wood
Sunflowers at home
Sunflower with bee attachments