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Bearded Tit (c) Peter Milligan |
For the past four weeks I have been looking and listening
out for Bearded Tits. I have been reliably informed that they have had a very
successful breeding season and that this could
be an irruption and dispersal year. I had only managed to get down to
the moor a couple of times in the last week as the very wet and unsettled
weather made birding last weekend almost impossible. Last Thursday I managed a
couple hours between the showers and did think that I might have heard a
tell-tale “ping” from the ditch beside
the path to the first screen. I stood and listened but there were no
other calls and all I could see were a couple of Reed Buntings feeding in the
phragmites.
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All I could spot was a Reed Bunting! |
Thus, I had a mixture of feelings when I heard on Friday evening
that a pair of Beardies had been seen and photographed from the bridleway close
to the kissing gate to the screens. A little
bit disappointed that I hadn’t found them myself, but mostly delighted to know
that this charismatic wetland beauty was once again on the moor after a four-year
absence. Since then they have been very elusive but were seen several times on
Saturday, but of course we failed to locate them on Sunday when I finally got down there.
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Female Bearded Tit (c) Peter Milligan |
There is a huge acreage
of reeds for them to hide in and hopefully will be joined by others in the next
month or so. If the winter is not too harsh, they may well remain and even
breed again next year.
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Snipe |
Water levels are rising steadily across the reserve now and
the muddy edges of the southern lagoon are being reclaimed, just from the sheer
quantity of rain that has fallen. The scrapes on Greenaway’s are filling up
rapidly after the dry summer. In front of the first screen there are over
thirty Snipe hunkered down in the stubble of old cut reeds, although their
camouflage makes them difficult to discern.
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Courting Gadwall |
There are over forty Gadwall on and around the
two lagoons and they are actively
courting and pairing up,
occasionally unpaired females are pursued in frantic noisy flights by amorous
males. Shoveller numbers too are on the rise and they are beginning to emerge from
their much drabber and dull eclipse plumage.
Both Fieldfares
and Redwings are being seen regularly now and there are several small flocks of
Meadow Pipits on the main fields.
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Meadow Pipit |
On Sunday we
saw a Peregrine over Greenaway’s and Ashgrave and there have been regular
reports of Merlin both male and female. One was seen over the reedbed then hunting
what was assumed to be a Meadow Pipit over the Flood Field. A male was seen
flying fast and low along the path to second screen and headed straight towards
the observer. Three different Marsh Harriers were seen at the weekend.
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Goldfinch |
There have been
several Otter sightings from the first screen. On Wednesday one swam across the
lagoon from right to left very close to watchers in the screen. On Sunday we
spotted a stream of bubbles in the northern lagoon but were unable to find or
see what was causing them and an Otter is the most likely explanation.
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Kingfisher still showing at the first screen (c) Paul Wyeth |
Once
again, we were surprised at the number of small mammals that skittered across
our path on Sunday. It may be that the water on the fields has displaced some
of them from flooded burrows and runs. Two barn Owls have been seen hunting on
the north eastern side of the reedbed and probably another individual at Noke.
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Autumnal female Blackcap |
Hopefully our Bearded
Tits will stay around, be joined by some others and allow me to get some
pictures! Expect an update next week.
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Calm at the southern Lagoon (c) Paul Wyeth |
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