Monday, 29 August 2016

Monday 29th August - Bank Holiday weekend

Started on Friday with an early morning walk on Blackdown from 6.45am-10am Weather was decent and turned out to be hot. What started quiet turned out a reasonable amount of activity. 25+ Chiffchaffs were in a few small groups and at least 3 Willow Warbler. 2 Stonechat and 1 Dartford Warbler were the local contingent otherwise it was largely other migrants with 1 Tree Pipit, 2 Whitethroat, 5+ Spotted Flycatchers, 1 Redstart, 1 Hobby and a few Swallows made for an interesting morning.

Sunday morning I went to Pagham, the weather turned out to be awful, with strong winds and squally showers and a drop of 10c in the temperature from previous days. I started at the North Wall breach pool at high tide. There was a good gathering of waders roosting on the pool with 40 + Black-tailed Godwit, 80+ Redshank. 10 Greenshank, 2 Spotted Redshank, 10 Dunlin, 5 Little Stint, 3 Snipe and 2 Common Sandpipers I'd hoped to find the Curlew Sandpipers which had been reported for a few days but they went missing while I was there, probably cowering from the wind. A Kingfisher was briefly on one of the posts and it wasn't really weather for passerines but a single Yellow Wagtail was at the back of the pool and a Reed Warbler made a dash for cover.  The harbour had a few roosting Grey Plover, Curlew, Knot and Ringed Plover and a single Yellow-legged Gull amongst the larger Gulls. I had a quick look on the Ferry Pool and around the visitor centre but there was very little there although a distant Redstart was beyond the Ferry Pool on the back fence line under cover of the Hawthorns. Church Norton was equally windy, and a couple of Wheatears were being blown around the beach, as the tide dropped a few waders started to move to feed, with more Dunlin and Ringed Plover, Turnstone, Black-Tailed Godwit and Grey Plover. A handful of Sandwich and Common Terns were feeding in the channels and several Sand Martins flew through. It was better to be out than not, but the forecasters had another shocker as the weather certainly was unexpected hard work.

Gary, Jenny and the boys stayed on Sunday night, so Gary and I went to Blackdown for an early morning walk on Monday morning. The list was very similar to Friday with 3 Tree Pipits, 1 Redstart ( a smart male this time), 20+ Chiffchaffs, Stonechat, 3+ Spotted Flycatchers, Grey Wagtail and Siskin.



maybe one day a big pine.

Spotted Flycatcher
Spotted Flycatcher

Redstart
Little Stint at Pagham breach Pool
Little Egret

Sunday, 21 August 2016

Sunday 14th August - High summer

Fine weather and how school summer holidays should be remembered. just a weekend of local bits.

I had 2 early morning walks on Blackdown, the first on Friday was rather sparse on the bird front, possibly as a result of the strong Westerly wind that was blowing, which meant that small passerines were hiding, the best birds seen were 2 Kestrels , 2 Jays, Green Woodpecker and Marsh Tit, so a poor showing.

This mornings weather was much improved and fairly still however I was hoping to experience a bit more inland migration. The same time last year was very productive but each year is different and maybe this year birds have been later breeding. I did find 3 small flocks but apart from the usual Long-tailed Tits, Goldcrests etc there were good numbers of  Chiffchaff with a few Willow Warblers but nothing more exciting. 2 Whitethroat , a Blackcap and 3 Stonechat made up the other small passerines. A single Dartford Warbler was heard and this maybe signifies that some dispersal of the groups I saw 10 days ago.

Yesterday at home I firstly heard the cries of Buzzards , however they were different calls to the normal Common Buzzard and I soon found the pair of Honey Buzzards high up circling making a right old noise and found their cause for concern as a Peregrine was circling, which was obviously worrying them. I also saw 2 Hobbys and a Sparrowhawk yesterday eveing. A few more Swallows have been moving through and the House Martin group last night seemed to have increased to around 30 birds . Other birds around the house are as before with Chiffchaff, Blackcap, Firecrest and Goldcrest all being visible with Nuthatch, Treecreeper, Green and Great-Spotted Woodpeckers

The Heather on Blackdown was in full flower - the bees arrive later in the day
Top looklng North bottom looking West
A number of young Roe Deers are around.
Firecrest in the garden came out for a preen - looking rather bedraggled at the end of the breeding season
This Hawker Dragonfly looks like its egg-laying in the pond
Common Darter

Friday, 12 August 2016

Saturday 6th - Tuesday 9th August - Norfolk

What feels like a well-earned few days break from work , Adie and I spent 4 days in Norfolk, staying in the centre of Holt in a small cottage.

We left fairly early and stopped at Welney WWT on the way. Sunny and bright but quite windy, a recent lack of rain meant water levels were low. A few Yellow Wagtails were around the Car Park area and the wet scrape to the south of the visitor centre held Lapwing , some Ruff and Redshank although viewing straight into the sun they were largely silhouettes. On entering the Main hide some birding occupants were pointing out a Wood Sandpiper in the pool at the back of the scrape. So I put the scope up and scanned around the Green Sandpipers present, but I could only see Green Sandpipers , I fear they may have alighted on a rather speckled juvenile Green Sandpiper. Adie meanwhile was doing her best to take a picture of the House Martins hawking just in front of the hide. A Common Sandpiper and a few eclipse Teal were also present.

View at Welney from the footbridge down the channel.
The view south was largely into the sun

Grazing herd from the main hide

Adie managed this respectable picture of a House Martin.
We carried on to the Norfolk coast and arrived at Titchwell around lunchtime so before walking out to the marsh we ate at the visitor centre. Being a sunny Saturday in August, there were lots of people, but the birds were still there. 3 Marsh Harriers were on the Saltmarsh and the Fresh Marsh had good numbers of waders with lots more Ruff, a Little Stint, Little Ringed Plover , 4 Dunlin and plenty of Black-tailed Godwit amongst the numerous Avocets, some of the Godwit being Icelandic race. We carried on to the beach although the tide was well out a single Common Scoter drifted passed on the sea. It was a bit too windy to have hope of any passerines other than a brief Reed Warbler. A Bearded Tit was heard 'pinging' but remained hidden.

Back to the car and late afternoon along the coast road and found our cottage, settled in and watched some Olympics.

Over the reedbed at Titchwell
Reed Warbler
Ruff
Black-tailed Godwit
Lapwing
Little Ringed Plover

Sunday morning we visited Cley, we parked at the East Bank and walked up towards the sea wall. It was dry but very windy. There was little new activity with just a small number of Ringed Plover and 4 Dunlin on Arnolds Marsh and a large group of roosting Sandwich Terns. A few Common and Sandwich Terns passed by at the sea, so we walked back to the car with Adie finding a Bearded Tit in the reeds, despite the wind,

A walk out to the main hides from the visitor centre was still hampered by wind. Several Swallows were moving over the reserve, There were a small number of waders on the scrape with more Ruff, Dunlin, Redshank and a single , Greenshank, with the local Avocets. A Marsh Harrier was briefly seen and the roosting Gulls held 2 Yellow-legged Gulls..

Time for a quick snack at the Cley reserve cafĂ© before moving to Blakeney for Adie's favourite activity, Crabbing, despite the falling tide we caught about 30 crabs.

Returned to Holt late afternoon.

Lookig towards the hides in the centre of the reserve at Cley.
Moorhen
On Monday morning we had booked a trip to see the Blakeney Seals from Morston Quay. The weather was warm, overcast and threatening drizzle and still with a strong wind.  There was a bit of Spray on the way out, but there were a good number of Common Seals on the point with some Grey Seals in the sea. Sandwich Terns still had chicks, which is quite late in the season, but they'd been disrupted by the cold start to the Spring. On the way back into the harbour a Spoonbill flew over Morston marshes.


Common Seal
Common Seals
Grey Seal

Sandwich Terns and chicks amongst the seals - Seals look quite clumsy, posing a danger of flattening the tern chicks.
Sandwich Tern
Distant Spoonbill
In the afternoon I went to Cley beach and looked over the sea from Coastguards, dodging a rain shower under the shelter. A summer plumage Red-throated Diver was close on the sea, and Ringed Plover, Knot, Curlew and Black-tailed Godwit all flew past. A single Greenshank flew up from the reserve where the old hide used to be but there was little else to be seen from the bank in the wind.

On Tuesday morning we drove to Snettisham, hoping to catch the high tide. Our timing was good but the tide was not a particularly high one so many of the waders were able to stay well out on the mud flats, although we did see good numbers. There would have been 10's of thousands of Oystercatcher and Knot with large numbers of Bar-tailed Godwit, Black-tailed Godwit, Redshank, Ringed Plover, Dunlin. A few Sanderling and Turnstone and I counted at least 9 Little Stints. The movement generally went with the tide but a Marsh Harrier that flew over spooked the large groups of birds a couple of times giving rise to a huge spectacle.

Other birds included Whitethroat, Lesser Whitethroat, Blackcap, Yellow Wagtail, Pied Wagtail, Linnet, Greenfinch, Goldfinch. The weather warmed up nicely with slightly less wind than the previous days. An afternoon was spent looking around some towns on the way back to Holt and back home on Wednesday with 90 species of bird seen over the 4 days.

mudflats at Snettisham
some of the Black-tailed Godwit roost
Wader spectacle
A bit distant but still impressive