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Willow Warbler (c) Bark |
The weather has continued to cool a little from July’s highs
but at times it has been quite humid and uncomfortable. There has been some
rain but not really significant amounts, the cut areas on the fields however are
looking greener. The moor is quieter now and has settled into a midsummer languor.
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Languid Hare (c) JR |
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Blue Tit (c) Bark |
There are very large, busy parties of mixed tits both in the
car park field and along the bridleway. They move along the hedgerows, as they
feed the birds from the back flying over and ahead of the birds in front,
creating a loose rolling action. They seldom stop and communicate with each
other using a range of short sharp contact calls that must be universally
understood although there are frequently three and occasionally four different species
in the flock.
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Young Reed Warbler (c) Bark |
The Warblers do not seem to have aggregated together yet in
the mixed species flocks as they do shortly before migration. They can be found
either as lone individuals or as family parties. Whether on their own or in
small groups they too keep up a quiet chattering. It is particularly challenging
at this time of year to try to differentiate between the “tacks”, “huweets” and
“tseeps” coming from the depths of the bushes. Is that a willow Warbler, a
Chiffchaff or perhaps even a Redstart? Patience and persistence will usually be
rewarded with a brief sighting of the caller, it took us ten minutes at the
first screen on Saturday to finally nail down a Willow Warbler!
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Add caption |
By the kissing
gate on Saturday we watched a family party of Reed warblers shimmying down the
reeds to pick emerging flies from the surface of the water. Their acrobatic
skills are remarkable as they balance upside down like Olympic gymnasts. In Long
Meadow we found at least four Redstarts but there may well have been more to
judge by the birds we heard calling, they were as usual very elusive. A young
Spotted Flycatcher was seen briefly along the bridleway towards Noke on Sunday
morning.
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Distant Redstart (c) Bark |
We are getting the impression that seed eaters have had a
very productive summer so far. There is a large flock of mostly juvenile
Chaffinches by the cattle pens and the seeding thistles near the feeders are
attracting large numbers of Goldfinches. Although not often visible Bullfinches
can be heard making their rather weak “seeep” calls and they too seem more
abundant.
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Goldfinch (c) JR |
Seven Stock Doves dropped in to drink at the tiny remaining
pool on Ashgrave but there have been no sightings in the last week of Turtle
Doves and regrettably we have not seen any juvenile birds at all this year.
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Reflective Moorhen (c) Tom N-L |
The Common Cranes are still around the moor and can often be
spotted feeding out on the northern edge of Greenaways. They often emerge onto
the shorter grass before disappearing again into the still uncut areas of rank
grasses.
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Cranes Passing (c) Bark |
The number of ducks on the lagoons is slowly starting to
rise and they are uniformly drab in their eclipse plumages, it is still
possible to sort one species from another but more difficult. There are several
Kestrels on and around the reserve at the moment. They seem to disappear in spring
and clearly breed elsewhere. Now they are back they are hunting opportunistically
and often can be seen hunting from a perch and taking grasshoppers and other
large insects as well as their more regular mammalian prey.
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Kestrel (c) Derek Lane |
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Hungry Hornet (c) Bark |
Once again Hornets are chewing away at the bark of the stunted
ash trees along the bridleway and feeding on the sap that seeps from the wounds.
There are splashes of colour across the hedgerows now with Purple Loosestrife
flowering and berries and sloes starting to colour up. I was lucky enough to
see my first Clouded Yellow butterfly of the year last weekend, when I ventured
out to the Pill. They are a really lovely mix of yellows and orange.
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Clouded Yellow, Loosestrife and Guelder Rose. (c) Bark |
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