Sunday, 29 January 2017

Sunday 29th January - Birdwatch Weekend,.

The RSPB run Big Garden Birdwatch today - It was grey and wet, yesterday would have been an easier day, but Adie had a Judo competition in High Wycombe, so we were out all day. I did this between around 8.45 and 9.45am, it felt like a slow start but gradually some birds appeared and the final total was 1 more than last year at 27. There were 4 of last years birds not seen (Buzzard, Raven, Redpoll and Wren) with 5 more seen (Great spotted Woodpecker, Carrion Crow, Goldcrest, Pied Wagtail, House Sparrow), numbers overall were similar, but there was a much larger Siskin flock last year and I have not seen any Lesser Redpolls around since the autumn. The Brambling that turned up today was the first one this Winter, although I had many more around last year.

                          2017                  2016
Buzzard                 -                         1
Pheasant                9                        1
Jackdaw                5                       12
Magpie                 1                         1
Raven                   -                         1
Woodpigeon         3                        3
Stock Dove           3                        3
Blackbird             10                       8
Song Thrush         2                        2
Robin                    3                        1
Dunnock               1                        1
Wren                     -                        1
Blue Tit                 3                       5
Great Tit                2                       2
Coal Tit                 1                       2
Marsh Tit              1                       1
Long-tailed Tit      1                       2
Chaffinch              14                   16
Goldfinch              6                       8
Siskin                    5                     20
Greenfinch            1                       5
Brambling             1                       3
Bullfinch               1                       1
Redpoll                  -                       4
Nuthatch                2                      2
Starling                  4                      1
GS Woodpecker     1                     -
Carrion Crow         2                      -
Goldcrest               1                      -
Pied Wagtail          1                      -
House Sparrow      1                      -
Species Total        27                   26

Sunday, 22 January 2017

Sunday 22nd January - Frozen Sussex

A couple of weeks of below zero temperatures is starting to take it's toll. It was again beautiful sunshine but freezing, and there was a slight frozen mist. I just went for a walk from the house this morning for a couple of hours from 9.30. (It was too cold before this) !

In many places it looked like there was snow on the ground, but it was just frost and ice. Perhaps unsurprisingly there was less birdlife than last week. A Marsh Tit was calling away on the track down past the first farm, and a Siskin flock of 30+ birds were in the alders near the first stream along with a Coal Tit. Other than several Robins and Song Thrush I was seeing very little , a Common Buzzard flew over and a Pheasant stood in the track. A Nuthatch was seen but unusually silent  on the way to the furnace pond. The pond was completely frozen I decided to walk to the far side where it is fed by a stream but completely overgrown, 2 Grey Herons flew out then there was a commotion as I approached and I disturbed around 40 Mallard, 8 Teal and 6 Mandarin that were hiding in the partly frozen undergrowth.

A Bullfinch was the only addition on the way back. Again a pleasant walk with little activity.

It looked like snow but just frost and ice
There has been no thaw for several days
Furnace pond was completely frozen
This area at the back of the pond was where the duck were hiding.
Some streams were still running but low levels of water


Saturday 21st January - Fine Winter Freeze

As low as -8c last night and promise of sunshine today but with temperatures barely above freezing. However I needed a day out !

I didn't have much of a plan before I left home around 7.45 (it had taken 15 minutes to defrost the car) and actually was still in two minds having driven as far as Midhurst as to which direction to head. First up was Fishbourne Creek.

A frozen but bright start, the tide was well on the way out biy the time I was walking along the creek and the exposed mud was glistening with a frozen ice crust.

A number of Yellowhammers were gathered around the horse paddock and the first area of tideline with a couple of Reed Bunting. On the water's edge 100+ Dunlin, Grey Plover, Oystercatcher, Black-tailed Godwit, Redshank and Turnstone worked the edges with 300+ Wigeon in the Channel and a dozen Pintail and a few Teal and surprisingly only a single figure count of Brent Geese. A Little Egret and Grey Wagtail were near the sluice and a large Black-headed Gull roost was at the northern end where there was a Spotted Redshank, small numbers of Lapwing and 5 Snipe,

Walking back a close Rock Pipit was one of several encountered and a smart Kingfisher was fishing from the sluice wall. Before heading back to the car a Water Pipit was seen close to the fence-line, there has been one around for a few weeks, a bird that is often tricky to see in West Sussex.


Tide well out on arrival
Reasonable number of birds feeding on the falling tide
Rock Pipit
Little Egret
Kingfisher
Mrs Reed Bunting
Water Pipit
The sun was now rising , but it honestly wasn't any warmer, I headed to Church Norton. The tide was well out, distant waders on mud made for awkward viewing in the bright light,  Dunlin, Curlew, Grey Plover, Ringed Plover, with 50+ Shelducks on the mud, and the usual large roost of Cormorants and Greater Black-backed Gulls.  Little Grebes were the only bird seen in the channels  and 8 Skylarks were on the spit. 5 Slavonian Grebes were distant on a choppy sea, the cold air making my eyes water trying to look through the scope..

Around midday I decided to head out of the quiet peninsula, the Ferry Pool was completely frozen and there was not one bird to be seen . I called in at  Ivy Lake, there was no sign of the Scaup or Long-tailed duck  just a good gathering of Pochard, Shoveler, Tufted Duck and Coot. The Greylag and Canada Geese had a Bar-headed Goose with them, obviously feral.

I drove in still bright sunshine  to Burpham and walked out towards the downs.

I scoped the group of Swans that could be seen in a field down by the Arun , amongst 6 Mute Swans were 22 Bewick Swans, a larger group than had been reported here. Small numbers of  Fieldfares and Redwing, joined Mistle Thrushes, Song Thrushes and Blackbirds in the sheep paddocks, but I don't think I got into double figures for either species of Winter Thrush. A large group of House Sparrows were around the farmhouse. Up beyond Peppering Farm a Hare crossed the track and Kestrel and Red Kite could be seen distantly. A ringtail Hen Harrier glided down one of the game strips until I no longer had a view through the hedge and was seen again later. There are probably not many Hen Harriers in Sussex at the moment so always good to catch up with one in Winter. A flock of  Reed Bunting didn't hold any other finches and other than  Lapwing, Common  Buzzard and more Red Kites, I saw little more than this which was a tad disappointing. A few Pheasant were the only game bird, I imagined if I'd stayed in the area longer towards late afternoon I may have seen more Partridge and maybe an Owl but I wanted to move on. On the way back to the car, a couple told me there was a Great White Egret in the valley near the railway, so I walked there and sure enough the Great White Egret was in the field behind a hedgerow. It has been in the valley for a while, but can be very mobile.

Extensive fields of the Norfolk Estate
Red Kite
Light became challenging
Next stop was Waltham Brooks. No sign of the Shrike when I was there , just a Stonechat in the open scrub. The Sewage works filter beds were working and several Chiffchaff , one Siberian Chiffchaff, Pied and Grey Wagtails were working the beds. There is no view into the beds only to the sides so you have to wait for the birds to jump up to see them. Several Teal and Wigeon were being scattered by wildfowlers guns along with a few Snipe.

Waltham Brooks
Last stop was Burton Mill, to see whether a bittern would appear going to roost at dusk.... it didn't. Just added a Water Rail to the list.

A decent day out with a few species seen.

Sunday, 15 January 2017

Sunday 15th January - Wet Weekend.

The first weekend in the UK this year for me. A cold week with snow on Thursday, that wasn't quite as prolonged or disruptive as was suggested. Saturday was cold, calm and bright, A couple of free hours in the morning before resuming the family taxi service. Some tidy up jobs outside let me assess what the birds were up to for the first time this year.

The first bird was surprisingly a smart Firecrest working its way along the holly hedge, as were 2 Goldcrest later on. Nuthatch and Great Spotted Woodpecker were early visitors to the feeders although at the moment bird numbers seem quite sparse, two each of Greenfinch, Goldfinch and Siskin and similar for Great Tit, Blue Tit and Coal Tit, with a Marsh Tit turning up later and 8 Long-tailed Tits.

Up to 7 Blackbirds, 4 Dunnocks a couple of feisty Robins and a single Song Thrush met with a couple of Stock Doves  the usual Jackdaws and up to a dozen Pheasant on the grass.

Just before 9am I decided to go for a walk to the south. The Winter landscape was expectedly bare, I encountered limited birdlife at infrequent intervals, Green Woodpecker, Mistle Thrush and Grey Heron being early ones and a calling Fieldfare I couldn't locate, there are no numbers of Winter Thrushes at all around here, I saw only 1 Redwing back in the village. They must be elsewhere in the county where there is more food still available. By the stream a flock of 30+ Siskins were feeding in the Alders and 4 Bullfinch were present. The Furnace Pond had no birds on it whatsoever but the surprise of the morning as I scanned over the large arable field towards the conifers on the edge of West Copse, as the Woodpigeons erupted from the trees a gliding raptor was easily ID'd as a Goshawk, although it didn't stay visible for long but 5 minutes later another adult appeared from the other direction and flew overt the arable field towards the same copse. Great to see these birds are still in the area and so early in the year. A single Common Buzzard was the only other raptor on the walk although as I was looking at this in the distance I did a double-take as I swore that I could see an Emu !!!! Having only just seen some real ones in the Australian outback this was the last thing I was expecting in the bleak British Winter - I think maybe someone has some in a fenced area although it was too distant to investigate. A Red Kite was seen from the house a little later completing a healthy local list for the day.

Today, Sunday - it rained all day  - enough said.

Bare Winter landscape across the large arable field.

Thursday, 5 January 2017

Friday 6th January 2017 - Happy New Year !

Writing this still in Australia. Returning to the UK on Sunday then straight back to work.

A good 2 week break over Xmas and New Year in Melbourne then Sydney. Mostly family visits, with 2 days away north of Melbourne successfully looking for Plains Wanderer. Nice to move on from 2016. A report on the trip will appear shortly after return.

Plains Wanderer - adult male 28 December 2016 - about 100kms North of Deniliquin at c11pm.