Friday, December 31, 2010

Buckton 2010


2010 was by far our best ever year at Buckton, in terms of rarity, scarcity and sheer volume of birds. The early winter saw a prolonged cold spell that delivered the largest flock of Corn Buntings in Yorkshire for many a year, with over 175 together in a mixed passerine flock totalling over a thousand birds including 35 Lapland and Snow Buntings, all attracted to specially managed farmland. The spring was quite slow but produced a stunning singing Wood Warbler on a day of a big Willow Warbler fall and later in May two fly over site ticks on the same morning, a Crane and a Black Tern (the Crane being the first of two records during the year). The summer highlight was undoubtedly breeding Barn Owls for the first ever time, taking advantage of recently provided nestboxes, birds were seen on almost all visits after May and made a welcome addition to the resident bird life. On the same front, Tree Sparrows went from strength to strength with over 140 birds ringed. The autumn was a non stop roller-coaster of birds, which at times delighted. Falls were seemingly weekly in occurrence from late August, with September being just wonderful! August produced Willow Warblers and the second ever Willow Tit. The rarity of the year in early September was the UK's 4th ever Brown Flycatcher, a stellar bird for Buckton and one that may never be bettered, well done Dave! Other goodies followed thick and fast, Barred Warbler, Wryneck, Dotterel, Great Grey Shrike and good numbers of Tree Pipits, Redstarts, Willow Warblers and chats. Then later in the month Robins arrived in scores with 149 ringed. A Little Bunting picked from the net was the rarest bird ringed during the year, late in September (not the best, that went to the Wryneck!). The autumn then turned in favour of invaders with Lapland Buntings reaching a peak of 130 individuals and two fly over Rough-legged Buzzards, other new birds at this time included four records of Richard's Pipit with two together on one date. New birds for the site ringing list included Coal Tit, Tree Pipit, Barn Owl and Wryneck. The nets were open throughout the EYRG 'ringing week' in mid October and resulted in two big days with 309 new birds on one of these. The last fall saw a Siberian Chiffchaff and a probable halimodendri Lesser Whitethroat ringed. Overall the year saw the highest ever number of new birds caught and ringed with 1650 individuals. The year produced four foreign controls, Goldcrest, Reed Warbler and Chiffchaff from Norway and a Robin from Sweden. The undoubted birding highlight was simply connecting with falls, the sheer adrenaline of prediction, travelling effort and then droves of birds arriving like magic on the cliff top fences and scrub, particularly on September 7th. Big thanks to the landowners, the Makins, the Leesons (happy retirement) and welcome to the Houghtons. Next year sees the milestone of ten years of ringing at Buckton and I see a report coming on. Finally thanks for visiting the blog and I hope 2011 brings you success, health and birds.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

8000 mile hero !





He made it ! Gary Prescott (the bikingbirder) is a real hero, this man has cycled 8000 miles since January 1st, taking in every RSPB and WWT reserve in the UK to raise awareness of climate change and raise funds for conservation on the way. He is tough, very tough but a real gentleman. Imagine having the self motivation to push yourself to these limits, sleeping in a tent, rough weather and lets face it not every reserve is on the beaten track, far from it, he even missed one out so went back. Gary's challenge has been far more than all that, its been a deep routed emotional journey.
Today he arrived at the Lodge, Sandy HQ, the last reserve, to a heroes welcome. He was greeted by a biking posse who escorted him in on the home leg. After the jubilation, he got down to the nitty-gritty, his biking 2010 list. He needs three species to beat the previous 'biking only' list set by Chris Mills, I was determined to help in anyway possible and I racked by brains to help him get Long-eared Owl but it was whilst speaking to Steve Blain we realised he needed Garganey. Bedfordshire has a wintering Gargney (for its third winter) so after fixing a puncture we were off and twenty minutes later it was his 250th species, to say he was happy was an understatement ! He deserves all he gets but maybe not the snow that set in some thirty minutes after he set off to cycle his last 60 miles back to the West Midlands. I doubt even ten foot of snow could stop Gary, he is a real life hero ! We salute you for being.

Waxing lyrical !



Village tick today, 19 thriller trillers !

Monday, December 13, 2010

Estonian Blackbird - from the archives



Found this 1st winter male Blackbird lurking in the bottom of the garden in late January 2005, amazingly it was wearing an Estonian ring (ESTONIAN MATSALV). It spent the winter with us and moved off in March presumably when it headed back east.

Robins rock !



Over the years I have caught quite a few 'eastern' looking Robins at Buckton but this one last October is by far the best marked individual with an amazing grey shawl. I have also seen birds as grey as this wintering in reedbed scrub in Bedfordshire, almost in a habitat niche similar to that favoured by Scandinavian breeding Bluethroats. There is far more to Robins than Christmas cards !

This individual frequented our garden for a couple of years, always shocking the brain, particularly when in flight despite seeing it a zillion times !

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Mongolian gems



Thick-billed Warbler, Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler ad male, Brown Shrike juv, Pine Bunting fem, Daurian Redstart - juv/1st winter male. Ever since reading the amazing accounts by Alan Kitson in British Birds (1978) I have always wanted to visit Mongolia, in 2004 that dream came true.

Mongolian gems 2





Asian Lesser Short-toed Lark - juv, Pallas's Reed Bunting ad fem, Dusky Warbler juv/1st winter, Brown Flycatcher ad, Blyth's Pipit juv/1st winter.