Sunday, 17 April 2022

Grimsbury Reservoir :: 14 April 2022

I was finishing breakfast when the Banbury Birders WhatsApp Group alerted me to a message from Gareth Blockley to say that he'd found a pair of common redstarts at Grimsbury Reservoir. I was due to start gardening and so now was an opportune time to exit and visit the reservoir!

I arrived to meet Gareth and Adrian Tysoe coming the other way. They updated me with the location of the redstarts and mentioned that there was also a common sandpiper and whitethroat which have evaded my year list so far - whitethroats just starting to appear across the country. I thanked them and quickly made my way to the redstart’s location noting that the common sandpiper was currently not on the pontoon as advertised. I scanned the hedge line along the ditch beyond the cow field. It took a few minutes, but I soon found the male bird - never did see the female. I took some record shots as that is all it could be given the distance - 115-120m!

Common redstart
Common redstart

I scanned back along the water's edge and the pontoon and noticed that the common sand was showing and so walked back to get a photo of that. Now I returned and watched the redstart again, then onto the north end to see if I could locate the whitethroat.

Common sandpiper
Common sandpiper

I could hear the whitethroat singing but couldn't see it, until at last it appeared at the top of a small tree. I raised my camera and just at that moment the bird dropped down into the brambles and was lost from view. I waited for a few minutes until it could be heard singing again but from deep in the brambles. I moved around and located where it was and had a reasonable line of sight to take a photo. Not bad - three new species for the year list.

Whitethroat

It really was time to make my way home but, on the way, I could hear a willow warbler singing from the top of a tree on the other side of the river - no point in a photo as it would be a silhouette and a small dot at that distance. A fourth new species though. I got home to find my wife already in the garden and starting the attack on the weed- and grass-ridden vegetable plot; time to join in.

Wednesday, 13 April 2022

WkWT Brandon Marsh :: 11 April 2022

With the Easter School break upon us I have taken a few days off and went to Brandon Marsh for a walk and some lunch - there may also have been a plan to do a spot of birding given reports that a pair of greenshanks had arrived on site.

The greenshanks were reportedly showing from the East Marsh hide with a handful of redshank flitting between the East Marsh and Teal Pool. We immediately made for the East Marsh hide and enroute Charlotte picked out a jay perched in a tree - I shuffled until I could take a photo through a gap in the branches - largely getting a clear view.

Jay

As we sat down, it was clear where one of the greenshanks was showing was as that is where people were currently facing. We got on the bird straight away as it walked away from us and round the corner of the closest island. It paraded to and fro, eventually coming close enough for a photo. In one of my photos, and with the breeze behind, it looked as if it were modelling on a fashion cat walk. The other greenshank was on the main scrape off to our left and eventually associated with two little ringed and a single ringed plover.

Greenshank
Greenshank
Greenshank little ringed plover ringed plover

We had joined three birders, two chaps - one wife: Alan Boddington and Alec Cuthbertson - I didn't catch Alec's wife's name. Swallows were spotted far to our right and a marsh harrier far ahead, towards the osprey nest platform. Despite the distance I took a couple of photos for the record. It is most unusual to see this species at Brandon so well worth the visit just for this.

Marsh harrier
Marsh harrier

The reeds to the left are where I saw my first ever bittern and delivered again when I saw a couple of Cetti's warblers cross the channel after a bout of calling. There were up to thirteen shelduck which is also a sight I've not encountered there myself. We watched for the marsh harrier and as we waited I scanned the islands, banks and reeds picking out first one and then eventually six common snipe.

Common snipe

The greenshank continued to march around but didn't get any closer - the garganey apparently sleeping behind the islands didn't even manage to put in an appearance. A water rail popped out from the reeds to our left and almost immediately a redshank landed dead-centre between the left and right reeds, flushing the rail back into cover. It was only a couple of minutes and the bird re-emerged and was joined by a second. Rather than stroll or trot across the mud, they took to the wing and shot across. As I'd already the camera raised taking photos, I managed to shap a few frames and hoped to catch them in flight. After about five minutes one popped out on our right but was on the wing and back out of sight before I could react.

Water rail
Water rail
Water rail
Water rail

We decided not to wait for the garganey any longer and headed along the paths to the Ted Jury hide, hoping that the marsh harrier would be more visible from there. It didn't show and eventually we packed up there and headed back to the Visitor's Centre for an ice-cream. I know how to show my wife a good time!

Tuesday, 12 April 2022

A red-letter weekend (firecrest & merlin) :: 08 - 10 April 2022

I rose early on Friday to make sure that I took my chance to see the first yellow wagtail visiting Banbury Ornithological Society's Balscote Quarry. It had been reported the day before, but I didn't have a chance to visit before heading home after work. I pulled up in the layby to find Steve Holliday already in residence - conducting a survey. We chatted but neither of us could find the yellow wag in the bowl or in the field behind. A pair of jays flew to the far corner, and I missed the chance for an in-flight photo (a specialism of another BQR regular Wally Warburton) - it wasn't long before they reappeared, one landing on the ground in the feeder area, and the other in the trees beyond. When finished feeding off it flew, passing right in front of the viewing area - I took a photo, well it would have been rude not to.

Jay
Jay
Jay
Jay

Steve picked out a call to our left, the first visit from a blackcap this spring. The linnets were in full song and one landed and showed beautifully on blossom - too attractive to ignore. Below we could see four snipe, a pair of lapwing, and only one of the four little grebes reportedly be on-site. A meadow pipit dropped onto the doughnut in front but stayed only a couple of minutes, interestingly performing a display as it left.

Linnet

Time was marching on so I packed up and prepared to go to work, stopping to see if I could locate the bobwhite quail calling in the hedgerow, and for a last look for the yellow wag.

After work I made a detour back to Balscote Quarry as Mike Prentice had reported that the yellow wag was visible again - presumably it had been roosting elsewhere in the morning, perhaps with the pied wagtails. I didn't stop long but was pleased to see my bird in the field behind, feeding with linnets and yellowhammers. The bobwhite quail did the decent think and waddled out into the open in the feeder area to give me views - silent this time.

Yellow wagtail
Bobwhite quail
Bobwhite quail

On Saturday morning I met up as usual with Kevin Heath - we met at the Esso station on the Oxford Road to find that the pumps were all coned off and no fuel available. I'm sure I'd manage with what I had (gulp - hopefully). We set off, arriving at our destination in Buckinghamshire to try and find firecrests; putting on our boots we could see red-legged partridge on one hillside, and a pair of jays on the other.

We set off slowly strolling, and listening for our bird - the regular calls from song thrush, chiffchaff and others filled the air. It took a short while, but goldcrests started to appear and we hoped we might be getting closer. We kept strolling on and were now approaching a kilometer from where we'd started - further than we'd though we'd be from where the cars were parked- we stopped and searched around and had a flyby raven, buzzard and sparrowhawk. We stopped when we heard an encouraging call, just then a small group passed us and we scanned the trees behind. It took a couple of minutes but then there it was, a firecrest. Kev's ears strike again. It was only a couple of minutes and we struck lucky with a pair flying across the footpath and landing in a shorter tree to our left. They sang then fed vigorously in this and the next tree, and in the brambles below. This was a lifer for Kev and boy did he have a show - the birds gave us a few minutes of their time and I managed to get some photos (rather high ISO but that can be fixed) - I'm not sure I've taken so many photos in a short space of time and perhaps it was because they were flitting so quickly from place to place.

Firecrest
Firecrest
Firecrest
Firecrest
Firecrest
Firecrest
Firecrest
Firecrest

We walked on to let them be and added jays, siskins, treecreepers and more to our day list, but to be honest we were just buzzing from our firecrest encounter. On the return we heard increasing numbers of siskins and had the firecrests as we passed in the opposite direction - we didn't stop so as to limit any further disturbance. Definitely a red-letter day for us.

We made it back to Banbury and dropped into Grimsbury Reservoir but found nothing of note - it would have taken something special to live up to earlier though.

Later in the afternoon I decided to go and fill up with petrol, deciding to continue on to see if I could find the long-staying cattle egret at Enslow. Adrian Sparrowhawk had reported them to be in their usual spot earlier in the day, saying "If anyone wants to go and see em it’s really easy, just 59 yards down the road from the old pub, easy to spot." This wouldn't take long. I got out of the car to find that the sheep had been moved and the cattle egret with them - not what I had planned. I called Kev to check I'd understood but he confirmed I was looking in the right place. Damn! I marched along the canal to see if I could locate if the sheep were just down the other end of the field, but couldn't see anything so marched back to the car. I decided dinnertime was approaching and so jumped into the car and scanned the fields as I crossed the main bridge as I left Enslow - four cattle egret were feeding right in from of the treeline outside the Whitehill Satellite Earth Station. The dishes transmit and receive telephone conversations to communications satellites in orbit about the Earth. The satellites relay the signals to similar ground stations around the globe. It is operated by Mercury Communications as part of their telephone network in Britain. I turned down the track, stopped outside the gate, and rattled off a few photos - I hadn't dipped after all. I made it home before dinner was on the table.

Cattle egret
Cattle egret
Cattle egret
Cattle egret
Cattle egret
Cattle egret

I had a leisurely Sunday morning and by afternoon I found I was free (to do what we wanna do - 'Loaded' Primal Scream). I decided to chill (not have a party) at Balscote Quarry and as I set up in the viewing area Mark Ribbons and his son appeared. We scanned and could find no evidence of the little ringed plover reported earlier but could see the yellow wagtail around the doughnut. Two sand martin were also checking out the tower, landing and peering into the holes. There were occasional snipe visible and good numbers of singing linnet. There were up to six brambling (four males) plus reed bunting and yellowhammers.

Brambling
Linnet

Mike Prentice arrived and as we caught up, the linnets feeding in the fields behind gave out an alarm call and rose as one - a raptor shot through with a number of linnet in hot pursuit; from a quick photo I thought it was a male sparrowhawk but I was corrected by Ian Lewington who helped point it out as a male merlin! Not minutes later the first BQR swallow passed over - this was to be repeated about half an hour later with the second - buses eh! A couple of pheasants faced off on the opposite bank to the viewing area and spent a good five minutes squaring up - heads up and down, looking for a weakness. In the end there was no battle, and I could rest my camera arm.

Merlin
Swallow
Pheasant

Mark Ribbons left to investigate over at Shenington Airfield - Mike Prentice relayed that he'd been visited there over the last 4/5 days and found nothing and expected that to be case today - Mark Ribbons said he was going in any case and would report back. Not 20 minutes later there was an update on the Banbury WhatsApp group to say he'd located three wheatear - Mike laughed ...

We were considering moving on when a curlew soared in and landed in the water's edge opposite. Strange to visit mid-afternoon - perhaps it had forgotten to change its watch a couple of weeks ago? It marched around a little and about five minutes later took off and set off in another direction. A strange one. An actual sparrowhawk circled the southern end of the site

Curlew
Sparrowhawk

Mike Prentice left, and I then decided to travel the short distance to Shenington to see if I could connect with Mark's wheatear - how hard could it be, the instructions were clear "In sheep field, along hedgerow near metal water container. There are some big boulders behind the water feeder, and they seem to like these.". I arrived to find Mark's car but no sign of him - there was a sheep field but the grass was too long and contained amongst others, a song thrush and a late redwing.

Redwing

I spotted sheep in a field about a mile away and had a trot over there finding skylark, linnet and yellowhammers. Worryingly I wasn't sure of the metal water container on a hedge line and so messaged Mark "Now just for a moment pretend I’m an idiot …". There was no reply but in just a few minutes I saw him and his son coming along another footpath - I greeted them and asked Mark if he could explain where I'd gone wrong - he laughed and said he'd try to give a more precise location next time but that he'd show me now. We set off along the edge of a couple of fields and through a gate, then across another field - about a kilometer travelled! However, Mark had taken us to the birds and there were the three (hold on) no four wheatears. The heat haze caused havoc, but I managed a couple of record shots. The paths here join up with some Charlotte and I have walked before and so we will probably return here soon.

Wheatear
Wheatear
Wheatear

Well that had been a fun weekend and some new birds added to the year list. Roll on my week's holiday - staycation.

Thursday, 7 April 2022

Peep-O-Day Lane, Abingdon :: 05 April 2022

Ring ouzel spend the winter in Europe then migrate to breed in the UK from March to October. Birds are usually seen in my region in the spring (and occasionally autumn) during migration and rarely at other times. Local sightings are at a premium and I often visit Linky Down, part of the Aston Rowant National Nature Reserve located at the top of the Chiltern Hills, to get my annual fix.

Over the weekend I heard that a bird (male) had been found down Peep-O-Day Lane in Abingdon, just beyond the area we'd enjoyed Pallas's warbler in a few months before. I discussed a visit before work with my birding mate, but the arrangements didn't work out - I made for the advertised location alone, just west of Peep-O-Day Lane in the field with the pylon in.

I was in position by 6.45am and scanned up and down the field - magpies, pheasant, a single lapwing, and a couple of blackbirds were all visible but not the rouzel. I reached the south-eastern corner of the field, looked back and within minutes had the bird in my bins. I shot off a few record photos before a buzzard cruised in and decided to land exactly on the spot the ring ouzel has been feeding, flushing my bird into the bushes. Five minutes passed and with the buzzard having departed the rouzel returned. Within a couple of minutes, the bird was again flushed into the bushes, but this time it seemed to go deeper and out of sight.

Happy that I'd seen the bird, I made my way back to the car checking from each vantage point on the off-chance that it was showing again - it wasn't. I listened to very vocal chiffchaff, blackcap and noted three little egrets in rather interesting looking habitat east of the lane. We should drop in here a bit more regularly.

The journey back was slower due to the rush hour getting underway, but I was already in the office by 8.15am - an efficient use of the morning.

Ring ouzel
Ring ouzel
Ring ouzel