Monday, April 26, 2010

spring sibilatrix



Made my first real spring visit to Buckton on Sunday. Conditions looked very promising with SE winds and early rain. It was immediatly obvious that an arrival had taken place with each patch of bare earth containing Wheatears and the bushes holding Willow Warblers in abundance. I picked up other migrants including Whinchat, several Yellow Wagtails, four Whitethroat, two fly-over Shelduck (scarce here) and good numbers of Swallows.

The highlight came early afternoon when stood looking at the scrape from the viewing screen I caught sound of a brief trill in the sycamores just behind me. A few moments later I heard it much clearer and it had to be a Wood Warbler in partial song. Eventually i saw a movement almost at eye level and lifting the bins revealed a bird akin to a lemon sherbet sweet (thanks Jen!). The bird remained in the same place all day and was showing well mid afternoon, although proved hard to photograph. It represented the 2nd Buckton record after a late individual on September 30th 2007.

Final day totals included 35 Wheatear and 30 Willow Warbler, thoroughly enjoyable!

swallows return


The Swallows have just returned to the stables, this male was sat around in murky conditions just after dawn, the Dunlin was present on the small vegetated pool in the main dell.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Birthday boy !


Blyth had a great 1st birthday seeing all the family including Evie and Bert.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Ten year Kitti-wait is over!



My most common missing 'migrant' species at Broom GP finally fell today when a fine adult Kittiwake spent most of the day at the site. An Arctic Tern, the first of the year in Beds was also present for a short period of time. Not been a bad week here with Garganey, Little Gull and Hen Harrier.

Monday, April 05, 2010

De-dum !

Working landscapes


The top image shows the first of several scrapes being created at Willington GP, Bedfordshire within the sheep field. This has come about through on-going liasion with the Bedford River Valley Park staff.
The bottom image shows the main cliff top ringing site at Buckton, on-going networking at this site has resulted in the landowner recently taking up a Natural England higher level farming scheme (HLS) which protects and enhances the site for wildlife. From the ringing point of view its great that the recently ploughed wild bird cover strip will now run right up the scrub, this should boost ringing numbers.