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Sunday, 8 December 2013

Our hot Summer wildlife (butterflies and dragonflies)

Peacock
 Speckled wood
 Ringlet
 Gatekeeper
 White washed fritillary
 Peacock

Emperor dragonfly
 Painted lady
 Common Blue
Migrant hawker (Garden)

Saturday, 30 November 2013

Chew Valley lake 30/11/13- great birding

Herons green

  • 100+ pochards
  • 2 goosanders- male+ female
  • Tufted ducks
  • 3 mute swans
  • 10+ pied wagtails
  • A magpie
  • A great tit
  • 30+ gulls
  • 4 lapwing
  • Great crested grebe
  • 70+ cormorants going into roost
  • 2 PINK FOOTED GEESE- I have never seen these before and are very rare this far south and are very rare in the Avon/Somerset area
  • Poss  FERRIGINOUS DUCK adult male not been reported here for a few weeks.
    Pink footed geese adults
 Goosander male
 Cormorant flock

Pochard (top left) possible Ferriginous duck (right) with tufted (bottom)

Woodford lodge

  • A grey heron
  • 2 little grebes
  • Great crested grebe
  • Fieldfare
  • The BLACK THROATED DIVER juv still coming close occasionally but staying quite distant
  • Black throated diver juv
Dam

  • 7 tufted ducks
  • A pochard
  • Mallards
  • 8 great crested grebes
  • 3 goosander males
  • 4 Goldeneye- 2 males, 2 females
  • LONG TAILED DUCK- juv, never seen this species before and this was individual was feeding quite distantly
     Long tailed duck juv
  • Goldeneye females

Garden sightings 30/11/13- thrushes

A lovely sunny day had:

Flying over

  • Corvids including a very high flying jackdaw
  • Gulls
  • Chaffiches
  • Redwings
  • Fieldfare
  • Great spotted woodpecker
Trees

  • Starlings
  • Blackbird pair
  • 10+ Redwing
  • 8 fieldfare
  • 3 blue tits
  • House sparrows
  • Collard doves
  • Wood pigeons
  • Dunnock
Opposite house

  • Black headed gull
  • Common gull
  • Pied wagtail
  • House sparrows
  • Jackdaws
  • Common gull with only half a leg
My garden

  • one very inquizative robin which came only a few feet away from me
  • A blue tit went down one of the hollow poles and came back up a minute later
  • 10+ house sparrows
  • 5 jackdaws
  • Adult male blackbird
  • 5 starlings

Saturday, 23 November 2013

Severn house farm- Berkeley power station 23/11/13 sightings

On the walk I sighted

  • 5 fieldfare
  • A redwing
  • 30+ lapwing
  • 5 curlews
  • A meadow pipit flock
  • Carrion crows
  • Bull finch calling
  • Long tailed tit flock heard
  • A blackbird
  • 5 mallards
  • Gulls
  • Corvids
  • 2 wrens
  • Probable SIBERIAN CHIFFCHAFF in a reedbed. Feeding in the reeds very low down (normal for species), calls were different to normal chiffchaff's and the plumage was a lot like the Slimbridge WWT individual so a good candidate.
     Probable Siberian chiffchaff

Recent Garden highlights.

Wednesday 20th

Flying over

  • 4+ redwing flew over between 6:15- 7:35
  • 35+ redwing over Berkeley town centre
  • 3 fieldfare
  • 300+ gulls- mostly common and black headed
  • 1 peregrine ad
Friday 22nd

Flying over town centre

  • 90+ wood pigeons
  • 30+ redwing
  • 2 fieldfare
Saturday 23rd

Flying over

  • Corvids including 2 ravens
  • Starlings
  • Chaffinches
  • 60+ fieldfare- more fieldfare than redwing today over
  • 40+ redwing
  • 1 Peregrine- briefly circled gaining height distantly before scaring everything as it flew high south.
  • 1 CURLEW- A garden first. Heard calling distantly twice before it flew North and over the house.
Trees

  • 1 fieldfare- briefly
  • 1 great spotted woodpecker- adult. Sighted feeding on the bare tree before being scared by corvids but later sighted flying towards the tree over the houses but did a U turn and headed back north.
  • Common birds such as
  • Blue tit pair
  • Great tit
  • Collard doves
  • Starlings
  • Corvids
  • Chaffinches
  • Gold finches
 Great spotted woodpecker (male?)
 in nice plumage with starlings
Collard dove in garden this morning

Garden sighting highlights: Goldcrest, thrushes and a garden first...

Saturday 16th

Tree

  • 1 Goldcrest- 1st of Autumn
  • 3 blackbirds- Normal adult male and female plus a new 1st winter individual which only stayed for a few minutes.
Flying over

  • 100+  Fieldfare/redwing
  • 50+ wood pigeons- notable increase of these birds with several hundreds in the large flocks.
Sunday 17th

Trees

  • 3+ redwing
  • 5 fieldfares
  • Goldfinches
  • House sparrows
Flying over

  • Meadow pipit
  • 50+ redwing/fieldfare
  • 2 LESSER REDPOLL flew over north calling and this is the first record of this species over the garden as well as a first for me.

Sunday, 17 November 2013

BLACK THROATED DIVER, Goldeneye, Goosanders and more... Chew valley Lake 17/11/13

Herons green

  • Male Goldeneye
  • Cormorants
  • 5 Goosanders
  • Teal
  • Mallards
  • Gadwall
  • Tufted duck
  • 5 little egrets
  • Grey heron
  • Peregrine
  • 5+ great crested grebes
  • No sign of Ferriginous duck
Picnic site 1

Goldeneye Male
  • 2 Male goldeneyes
  • Mallards
  • Meadow pipit
  • 8 cormorants
  • 5+ great crested grebes
  • No sign of Long tailed duck
Villice

  • Tufted ducks
  • A variety of distant ducks
  • 3 green sandpipers
  • No sign of Lesser scaup
Woodford lodge

  • BLACK THROATED DIVER juv
  • Cormorants
 
       
Black throated diver almost came as close as the Great northern diver did last week.
Bottom pic shows the diver "Snorkelling" as he's looking for fish.
 

Sunday, 10 November 2013

GREAT NORTHERN DIVER at SARA Sharpness

I went down to SARA as I heard a report saying a great northern diver has floated past SARA early this morning and had actually flown onto the Old dock where it was showing very well.
 

The Great Northern diver came up to 10m away from me.

Sightings:

  • 1 GREAT NORTHERN DIER
  • 1 nuthatch calling
  • 1 bull finch calling
  • 50+ black headed gulls
  • 2 coots
  • A robin

Saturday, 9 November 2013

PURPLE SANDPIER and SIBERIAN CHIFFCHAFF (Slimbridge WWT 9/11/13 sightings)

I went to Slimbridge as yesterday I received some exciting news. A 1st winter purple sandpiper had been found feeding extremely close to the observatory on the Rushy and was later roosted there as well. Luckily my monthly Slimbridge club is on the 2nd Saturday of the month so I was able to have a look if I could see this rare wader. They usually winter on the East and South coasts of Britain but a very small wintering population (2-7) winter down at Battery Point, Somerset. I Gloucestershire, the closest we get is one which  is usually found at Severn beach. For Slimbridge this is the 4th site record so this makes it even more special.
A Siberian chiffchaff was also sighted there today with a Scandinavian chiffchaff and the normal race which we get in Britain showing extremely well on the decoy boardwalk and from the Eco garden which was very nice to see. This would be my first confirmed record of this species as on a walk which I did in the Spring in Berkeley saw a look a like of the bird which I saw today. They are surprisingly tame and feed a bit on the ground so watching this bird fly around was very nice.
There was an American green winged teal but I decided not to look for it.
Firstly, I didn't have my binoculars.
Secondly they look identical to the European teal except from the American green winged teal has a vertical white stripe going down it's body.
Thirdly, there was 1500 teal, a garganey and this 1st winter American green winged teal meaning it would littrally be impossible to spot.
 
 1st winter PURPLE SANDPIPER
 

SIBERIAN CHIFFCHAFF
Other sightings
  • 40+ curlew over
  • 50+ black tailed godwits over
  • 30+ pochards
  • 30+ pintail
  • 30+ lapwing
  • 1 cormorant
  • 4 bewick swans
  • 40+ greylag geese
  • Ferriginous/Pochard hybrid
  • 1 chiffchaff
  • Siberian chiffchaff
  • Purple sandpiper

Thursday, 7 November 2013

BEWICK SWANS 7/11/13 gaden sightings

Not much sighted this week but the highlights have been:

  • 10+ mallards on the flooded fields
  • 4 little egrets together on the flooded fields
  • 2 redwing over on the 3/11/13
  • 1 redwing over on the 5/11/13
  • 30+ redwing over on the 6/11/13 (10+, 5 and a flock of 15 over the nearby school)
7/11/13 garden sightings

  • 300+ gull- most black headed with common gulls flying away from the flooded fields.
  • 10+ redwing flew over
  • A garden wren.
  • 1 cormorant
  • 2 BEWICK SWANS- one very high individual came over the house at around 16:00 from the south and started circling over the houses before flying high NE. Then, a second individual flew over from the South, circled once and flew even higher NE. I told James Lees about this as he works at Slimbridge WWT and he told me they were Bewicks and that he'd seen them as well which was very good. This Is the 1st record of mine over the house so this is very good.
     

     

     
    One of the very high Bewick swans which flew over and circled today.
     

Tuesday, 29 October 2013

Slimbridge WWT sightings- Humbug's back

After a few days in France I arrived back at home at 2am in the morning and started checking any interesting sightings which I may have missed due to Britain faced with remnants of a hurricane from the America.


My Slimbridge Sightings
 
 

  • 30+ teal
  • 100+ wigeon
  • 10+ pintail
  • 20+ pochard
  • 20 white fronted geese
  • 50+ Feral banacle geese
  • A few migrant chaffinches (all females)
  • 10+ probable migrant great tits
  • 5 cormorants
  • A mistle thrush
  • 100+ lapwing
  • 10+ curlew
  • A buzzard
  • 1 POCHARD+ FERRUGINOUS DUCK hybrid
  • 8 COMMON CRANES- 7 from the GCP (Great Crane Project and the wild individual)
  • 1 BEWICK SWAN- Humbug has arrived, yet again, first to Slimbridge this year. 2 bewicks arrived firstly at Blagdon Lake and 7 landed on Northwick Warth as they had overshot Slimbridge. The 7 stayed at the warth for less than an hour before flying to Chew Valley Lake where they stayed for a few days. After, they flew to Slimbridge on the 27th but have disappeared leaving Humbug. Where have they gone? They may come to roost at Slimbridge but I haven't seen any reports of them around. Humbug is special as she has been the first Bewick Swan to arrive back at Slimbridge  for three years now and luckily for me I saw her today and last year. In fact, she was the first Bewick swan to arrive in Britain last year. 

Humbug 2012 (Above)
                                                                                                                                                       


29/10/13 Mega rare birds in Britain today.

  • Lesser Kestrel- Devon
  • Whites thrush- Scilly
  • American Robin- Scilly
  • Cape May Warbler (Second ever for Britain)- Shetland
  • Hermit thrush- Cornwall
  • Yellow rumped warbler (Myrtle warbler)- Galway
  • Laughing dove (4th ever for Britain)- Highland
Birds I missed nearby:
  • 3 leach's petrels- Severn beach
  • 1 storm petrel- Severn beach
  • Great skua- Severn Beach
  • Gannet- Severn beach
  • Gannet- SARA/ Sharpness
  • Guillemot- Weston Super Mere

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

20/10/13 -A whole year of my blog.

Throughout this summer, and the year, I have been awful at putting my sightings on and my photos which I have taken as, in my opinion, the year was full of records.
  • The Berkeley Park- Scott Law (mostly in the Spring but a little in the Autumn) proved great for migrating warblers with Whitethroats, chiffchaffs, willow warblers, blackcaps, reed warblers, lesser whitethroats, sedge warblers, garden warblers and even the very secretive grasshopper warbler being sighted with some great photo opportunities. Also a pair of Spotted flycatchers bred and this was a first for me and great to see.
  • An amazing morning in the summer with excellent weather proved great for swifts as we had roughly 40 in one huge flock at one point.
  • Hobby's scored high with 3 being sighted hunting together very quickly over our house in the summer.
  • The same goes with buzzards as on the 19/5/13 we had 11 on the thermols and even a red kite.

Clapton 19/10/13 sightings + probable FIRECREST

A small rain cloud came up the Severn but luckily went across to Wales. When I went up the sea wall and started heading towards Berkeley Power station I saw an unusual flock of roughly 10-15 lapwing. I looked back and saw lots of corvids and gulls fly up from a field near enough where the WRYNECK had been sighted but he had gone a day after I last went there.
2 grey herons flew along the shore and 3 curlew flew from the mud in different directions calling. I heard a buzzard calling and saw it dive down at another bird of prey which I couldn't identify. Was it another buzzard or the Female MARSH HARRIER which was sighted at Berkeley Pill just the other side of the Power station a day ago.
A little egret was on the shallow pools on the saltmarsh and I looked over to a ploughed field  where a linnet and a meadow pipit flew over. A chaffinch, I think, flew along the bushes but it wasn't until I stopped that a WHETEAR was in the field. Although a very common Autumn migrant and me sighting about 9 here, including a Greenland whetear, it was only a surprise as it's getting quite late for then.
2 skylarks flew across the field chasing each other and with a black headed gull and carrion crow both landing on the same field there was quite a bit to see.  
Suddenly, I heard thunder and as I looked behind me a HUGE thunderstorm was heading my way and it had just hit Oldbury Power Station which isn't that far away. I ran as fast as I could and when I got in line with the clouds the rain came down like hail. It was so strong and powerful. The rain was so powerful a flock of Canada geese flew onto the river from the field which had all the gulls and corvids.
I still had a bit to go so I ran a bit more before going down the sea wall, having to push a gate which was broken, dodge some cows who had their heads down and jump in the car. I was socked. We drove home and I jumped straight into the house but luckily, after a lot of thunder and lightning, a call came from the trees which coincidentally I  was listening to before we went out. It was a FIRECREST. Sadly I had only heard it once and a check of the trees proved there was no sign of this great bird. This would only be the Garden's and my second ever firecrest with one being sighted from the garden briefly in the berry/apple tree last year.

19/10/13 garden sightings

Not very much sighted between the 13th and the 19th from the garden and around except 24 redwing in Berkeley on the 14th and the 15th and a cormorant, 10+ gold finches and a FIELDFARE over on the 18th.

19/10/13 garden highlights flying over

  • 11 pied wagtails
  • 2 grey wagtails
  • 10 gold finches
  • 2 cormorants
  • 5 skylarks
  • A buzzard
  • Song thrush
  • 6 meadow pipits
  • 2 Fieldfare
  • 100+ redwing
  • 1 SWALLOW- latish individual over but have seen later.
Garden

  • 1 jackdaws
  • 3 house sparrows

Berkeley road (Prince of Wales hotel) near Berkeley 17/10/13 sightings

Birds sighted:

  1. 2 bull finches
  2. 4 blue tits
  3. 7-10 long tailed tits
  4. 1 goldcrest
  5. 1 jay
  6. 1 mistle thrush
  7. 10+ chaffinches
  8. 1 Chiffchaff
  9. 1 meadow pipit
  10. Wood pigeons
  11. Common gulls
  12. Herring gulls
  13. Black headed gulls
  14. 5 pied wagtails
  15. 5 redwing
  16. Sparrowhawk
  17. Buzzard heard
  18. 2 SWALLOWS
  19. 2 HOUSE MARTINS- my latest ever sighting as they flew high east. Latest Glos date is 3/11 so determined to see the latest

All birds sighted from garden

Birds

  1. Blue tit
  2. Great tit
  3. Long tailed tit
  4. Coal tit
  5. Willow warbler
  6. Chiffchaff
  7. Blackcap
  8. Brambling
  9. Chaffinch
  10. Linnet
  11. Gold finch
  12. Green finch
  13. Grey heron
  14. Little egret
  15. Cormorant
  16. Mallard
  17. Canada goose
  18. Dunlin
  19. Lapwing
  20. Redshank
  21. Buzzard
  22. Sparrowhawk
  23. Hobby
  24. Marsh harrier
  25. Kestrel
  26. Perigrene
  27. Red kite
  28. Blackbird
  29. Song thrush
  30. Mistle thrush
  31. Redwing
  32. Fieldfare
  33. Robin
  34. Wren
  35. House sparrow
  36. Dunnock
  37. House martin
  38. Swift
  39. Swallow
  40. Sand martin
  41. Starling
  42. Magpie
  43. Carrion crow
  44. Jackdaw
  45. Rook
  46. Raven
  47. Jay
  48. Feral pigeon
  49. Collard dove
  50. Wood pigeon
  51. Stock dove
  52. Goldcrest
  53. Firecrest
  54. Common gull
  55. Black headed gull
  56. Herring gull
  57. Great black backed gull
  58. Lesser black backed gull
  59. Yellow legged gull
  60. Mediterranean gull
  61. Meadow pipit
  62. Skylark
  63. Pied wagtail
  64. Grey wagtail
  65. White wagtail
  66. Great spotted woodpecker
  67. Green woodpecker
67 species up to 22/10/13.

Sunday, 13 October 2013

13/10/13 Migration mad for THRUSHES and FINCHES

A drizzly cloudy day with a northern wind again brought quite a few species all flying into the wind.
I got up at 8:15 and watched the migrants fly through before it started raining and the migration came to a halt before a few others flew over.

In the garden

  • 7 jackdaws
  • An adult male and an adult female blackbird
Trees

  • 2 great tits
  • A blue tit
  • The two blackbirds
  • Corvids
  • Collard doves
  • A chaffinch
  • Corvids
Opposite houses

  • Feral pigeons
  • 2 lesser black backed gulls
  • 2 common gulls
  • 5 black headed gulls
  • Corvids
  • Collard doves
  • Wood pigeons
Vis Mig Flying over

  • 350+ gulls- mostly migrating common gulls mixed in with black headed gulls, herring gulls and lesser black backed gulls
  • Wood pigeons
  • Strangely quite a few collard doves which I didn't think migrated. This has been happening for a week and we've had roughly 20 flying over with only about 7 today.
  • 4 cormorants
  • A skylark- calling
  • 12 pied wagtails
  • 10 green finches- calling, making "jup" type call and weren't like the chaffinches.
  • 6 chaffinches
  • 5 meadow pipits
  • 122 GOLD FINCHES- great count with numbers ranging from 1- 20+ all flying around the area.
  • 7 FIELDFARES-flying over with the redwings (3,4)
  • 1421+ REDWINGS- flying over with massive flocks ranging from 6-60+ with about 1000+ sighted before it rained in the hour and a half and only a few sightings when it was rainy.

Saturday, 12 October 2013

My 12/10/13 Slimbridge WWT sightings. REDWING CENTRAL.

When getting to Slimbridge WWT at around 10:00 the mass of redwing was apparent as over a hundred birds flew over as soon as I got out of the car and went to the entrance.
Then, while I was waiting with a warden he said that there had already been 1000s of redwing flying over since 8:00. At least 400+ flew over when we headed off to a hide where we were making a fence out of willow for the small garden birds which feed at the feeders.

My Sightings
Vis Mis flying over (10:00- 12:30)

  • 30+ meadow pipits
  • 20+ pied wagtails although at least 70 were sighted between 8:00 and 12:00
  • 5 skylarks
  • 5 grey wagtails
  • 1 mistle thrush
  • 7 Golden plover- flew north together
  • 1000+ REDWING
  • 6 Siskens- 2 individuals alone and 4 with a redwing flock
  • 1 Snipe- in with a redwing flock
A Look around the hides

  • 100+ feral barnacle geese
  • The White fronted geese
  • 100+ wigeons
  • 30+ teals
  • 20+ pintails
  • 5 shovelers
  • Morhens
  • Greylag geese
  • 10+ shelducks
  • Corvids
  • Long tailed tits
  • Great tits
  • Blue tits
  • Chaffinches
Afternoon vis mis between 13:30- 14:00

  • 800+ REDWING- including 2 or 3 flocks of 100
  • 10 FIELDFARES- together in a flock of redwing
  • 1 Snipe- few alone south quite slowly.

The Wardens sightings

  • An amazing total of 17,180 Redwing between 8:00 and 12:00 before it came out sunny when the migrating redwings would fly thousands of metres high up compared to when it was rainy with low cloud as they were sighted much lower. Also a few song thrushes, 300+ fieldfares and around 50+ siskins.

12/10/13 Garden Sightings. INFLUX OF REDWING CONTINUES.

With the redwings still flooding up the river our house got some decent numbers and even to make it more great we had a few fieldfares mixed in as well. They were all flying into the wind and calling a lot o each other.

Trees

  • 2 blue tits
  • House sparrows
  • 2 robins
  • A blackbird heard
  • 1 wren- new individual
  • Collard doves
  • Gold finches
  • 8 REDWING- (5,3) including a 1st winter individual showing great plumage.
Opposite house

  • 1 lesser black backed gull
  • 2 pied wagtails
  • Feral pigeons
  • 30+ starlings
  • Collard doves
  • Wood pigeons
Flying over (non migrants)

  • Corvids- 2 magpies, carrion crows, jackdaws and rooks
  • Black headed gulls
  • Starlings
Vis Mis flying over (visible migration)

  • 20+ gold finches
  • 200+ common gulls
  • 10+ pied wagtails
  • 2 grey wagtails
  • 6 meadow pipits
  • 591 REDWINGS- 308 sighted in the morning with flocks ranging from 2- 40+ with most of the flocks being large.
  • 5 FIELDFARE- 1st of the Autumn with the Redwing flocks.
  • A few wood pigeons.

11/10/13 sightings. An Influx of REDWING.

With a change in wind direction from the north now there have been a lot of redwing but fewer fieldfare pouring into the Old Avon Area and Gloucestershire area with  9000 being sighted at Slimbridge WWT and thousands being sighted at Weston Super Mere- Aust cliff and another 14500 sighed downriver from Slimbridge around Aust.


My Redwing sightings

  • 2 REDWING- over Dursley
  • 3 REDWING- Over Cam Woodfields church
  • 35 REDWING- Over Berkeley- (30+ and 5)
  • 6 REDWING- flew over the house

Other rarer Migrants in the area

  • 2 Snow buntings flew over Aust Warth (the 1st of the autumn for Severnside)
  • 2 Jack snipe at Aust Warth with snipe
  • 2 Ring ouzels at Aust Cliff

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Clapton (South of Severn house Farm) 8/10/13 sightings- WRYNECK Still

With the WRYNECK still being down at Severn house farm on the seawall for it's third day now. I went to see it as I didn't get a good photo last time. On the fifteen minute drive down a very low flying raven was calling as we passed the Deer park and a wood pigeon was on one of the wires. When we got there, there was a lot of gulls feeding on the low tide and 3 grey herons squabbling over the best feeding places.
When we started walking down the sea wall going south I couldn't see the Wryneck until a small bird popped up on the fence. Although it wasn't the wryneck it was a Chat species. It was either a whinchat or a stonechat but with the sun right in our faces indentifying it was difficult so we walked on further. Even further than where the bird was reported on Sunday.
Suddenly we heard a meadow pipit on the lower bit of the sea wall and noticed there was two of them. I tried to get the opposite side of them to get a decent photo but when I got passed them another bird shot out from feeding and flew to where the two meadow pipits were. After taking a photo of a bird which walked differently from the pipits I said "WRYNECK." It was feeding with the pipits but then the pipits flew south and another bird shot out from the group of  birds and luckily it was a Whetear. She flew north.
The wryneck was surprised by our presence and flew onto a post. Then, as if it was a miracle, it came back down and started feeding on the lower part of the sea wall only about 2 metres away from us. We fell silent and watched as he came closer and closer until he was staring right into our faces. The cameras made noises as many photos were taken of this magical bird.
Two other birdwatchers arrived and the WRYNECK flew between the fence and landed in a few plants hidden from everyone. As a result, we walked back and heard a curlew, saw a black tailed godwit feeding distantly out on the estuary and even a redshank which were all nice to see. The chat species, or a new one, landed on the post on the fence. I was a Stone chat. I haven't ever seen one down here  before and it looked quite nice. Then, two whetears landed on the sea wall and watched us as we walked closer before flying down to the muddy rocks to feed.
The sun was shining and another three birdwatchers arrived at the scene bringing the total up to seven including us. It was fantastic and we shared our photos when we got back home. Surprisingly, his house is on the opposite side of Berkeley and on the roofs of the houses on his road I counted a total of eight pied wagtails all feeding in different places.

 What's that with the meadow pipit (infront)
 On the fence


 WRYNECK feeding extremely close
Whetear (male I think)


Sunday, 6 October 2013

6/10/13 garden sightings.

Not as much as yesterday but still a very nice 31 species sighted.

Trees

  • Great tit
  • Blue tit
  • 10+ house sparrows
  • Magpie
  • Corvids
  • 2 robins
  • 2 blackbirds- male and female but no continental birds just yet but they should be on their way with one being sighted yesterday with 6 blackbirds and even a RING OUZEL at Oldbury Power Station.
  • 5 gold finches
  • 1 Chiffchaff-in song for much of the morning but minimal in the afternoon and showing quite well in a few trees.
Opposite house

  • Feral pigeons
  • Corvids
Flying over

  • 5 chaffinches
  • 6 gold finches
  • starling flock
  • Common gulls
  • Black headed gulls
  • Lesser black backed gulls
  • 1 cormorant
  • Sparrowhawk
  • Buzzard
  • 2 mistle thrushes
  • 1+ Canada geese- 1 sighted but calls sounded like there was more.
  • 24 Pied wagtails (1,1,1,1,1 possibly same individual, 2, 8,9)
  • 13 meadow pipits (1,1,2,2,2,1,1,1,1,1)
  • 2 linnet
  • 2 skylarks
  • 2 REDWING- together

Clapton (Berkeley) south of Severn house farm. WRYNECK.

After seeing a report of a WRYNECK in Berkeley I looked on twitter and found out a local birder had sighted this bird at Clapton near the Berkeley Power Station. After about  10 minutes of the report I shot off down to the farm and started heading south. I accidentally scared a whetear which was also feeding along the sea wall and it flew down onto the mud of the River Severn. There was also a grey heron,  but he flew down river and rooks and jackdaws from the farm flew together looking for a good place to feed.
 Unfortunately, I scared the wryneck from the path about half the distance from the sighted place but didn't realise it was actually the bird as I've never seen one before so I thought it was just a meadow pipit. I walked on a little further an was pleasantly surprised that a common sandpiper flew from some of the mud and flew on a little further. This was quite unusual as in past years there have been winter records of these birds in the pill but this individual was probably a late migrant. I walked on until I found the birdwatcher who had sighted the bird but said that it flew into the hedge.
 Half an hour later, I was still there. The birdwatcher had long gone and another birdwatcher came who I recognised. "The Gloster Birder." After another quarter of an hour an oystercatcher was sighted and black headed gulls, a flock of 10 wigeon, a cormorant and 4 mallards a flew past with at least 15+ meadow pipits and 10+ linnets overhead.
 I walked back and saw the whetear again but then from the small bushes on the sea wall the WRYNECK flew up. He was very wary and after taking some awful shots, because of my batteries, he flew into the crop field and I ran back to the Gloster Birder and we walked up back to the spot where I saw this amazing bird. He phoned some other birdwatchers, took some digiscoping photos as the bird flew up onto the fence from the field. At this point I really had to go and as I walked closer to this great bird it flew up on to the post and flew back down south. I called to the gloster birder and he walked back down to where the bird had landed. Fortunately the bird was sighted on the last corner before going to the car and that had meant he'd amazingly flew unseen North to where I refound him. I passed two other birdwatchers and got in the car and went home. Two buzzards which I saw on the way up had gone and I felt quite relieved with what I had just seen.
This evening I went back down at about 17:00 but this time I cycled. On the way down herring gulls were feeding in a field but when I got there, there were only 50+ black headed gulls with a few common gulls. I cycled a little further down and a curlew flew from the mud,  a cormorant was drying his wings out and the sun was right in my eyes. I hadn't seen the wryneck but when I cycled back I passed a birdwatcher and sadly still didn't see the wryneck so I feared the worst and believed it had flown off.
On the way back I heard a chiffchaff in the bushes but as I passed a few fields I could hear meadow pipits and pied wagtails. When I went passed the Berkeley deer park a buzzard flew quite close and landed in some trees but the best bird I think was a coal tit calling in the little village of Ham near Berkeley. 
When I got home I sighted a few species of gulls flying over but the light was fading and to summarise the day it was very good with some excellent encounters.      

 Whetear


Awful record shots of the WRYNECK but showing extremely well with sightings down to 2 metres but due to my cameras batteries the photos came out awful.

Saturday, 5 October 2013

Clapton- Berkeley power station brief evening walk sightings 5/10/13

I usually go down the path at high tide to see the variety of birds especially waders but today it was low tide and there weren't too many birds


Whetears
  1. 5 teal
  2. 2 wigeon
  3. 2 WHEATEARS- one stage we had 4 but they migrated off after a few weeks, then we had another two different individuals but they only stayed for about two days and then there were these two individuals.
  4. Black headed gulls
  5. Common gulls
  6. Lesser black backed gulls
  7. Greater black backed gulls
  8. 2 curlews
  9. 1 grey heron
  10. 15+ starlings accidently spooked from the reedbed which they started roosting in
  11. 2 reed buntings
  12. 4 mallards
  13. 10+ meadow pipits
  14. 1 cormorant
  15. 1 robin 

5/10/13 Slimbridge WWT sightings

Very nice to see so much variety of birds.

Holden Tower

  • 100+ feral banacle geese
  • 30+ small waders
  • 50+ meadow pipits in one flock
  • 50+ greylag geese
  • 8 WHITE FRONTED GEESE- Extremely close at one stage as they flew in together from the Zeiss hide lake/pool and joined the greylags when no other birdwatchers were about but were very wary and ended up flying out onto the estuary which was quite distant.
Knott pool

  • 1 NUTHATCH- I think they are quite rare on the reserve but could be wrong
Tack piece

  • 50+ greylags
  • 50+ teal
  • 3 shovelers- 2 male and a female
  • 1 buzzard
  • Black headed gulls
Zeiss hide

  • 100+ black tailed godwits
  • 50+ lapwings
  • 1 Ruff
  • 10 pintails
  • Other ducks
  • 10+ Canada geese
  • 100+ rooks
  • 1 COMMON CRANE- wild, unringed and has been here for a few weeks now.
Rushy pool

  • 30+ teal
  • 10+ pied wagtails
  • 1 grey wagtail
  • Morhens
  • Coots
  • Cormorants
  • Corvids
Bird feeder hide

  • 5 chiffchaff
  • 1 female blackbird
  •  5 blue tits
Photos



 Teal
 Shoveler




 White fronted geese

 Pintail female
WILD COMMON CRANE