Tuesday, 9 June 2020

May and into June. The view from the Bridleway Again

Curlew (c) Bark

Weeks have slipped by and June has arrived and with it early summer. The number of visitors to the bridleway steadily increasing as the degree of lockdown has been modified and diluted. It has been surprising and pleasing just how much can be seen and appreciated without venturing out onto the reserve itself. 
RSPB sign (c) Tom NL
It seems likely that access to the screens and certainly to the hide will remain closed for the foreseeable future. On the positive side it is easier to maintain correct social distancing in the great outdoors and we are told that transmission of the virus is lower outdoors than indoors.

Juvenile tits above Great Tit (c) Bark       Below Blue Tit (c) JR
Although we are only supposed to meet one person from another household in the open air, it is difficult not to bump into many friends and acquaintances along the bridleway. It would be antisocial and rude not to stop and have a few words with them.
Whitethroat (c) Mark C

Warblers are still very obvious beside the track and along the ditches, but they are now spending more time providing invertebrate food for hungry broods, rather than singing to attract a mate or claim territory as they were at the start of the month. 
Whitethroat with a bill full of Grasshoppers (c) Bark
All ten of our breeding warblers can either be seen or heard between the carpark and Noke with Grasshopper Warbler being the most elusive, although one has started to reel again in the southern part of the carpark field and another can sometimes be heard in the vicinity of one of the larger gaps between Ashgrave and the bridleway towards Noke. Cetti’s Warblers seem to be almost as common now as Sedge or Reed Warblers.

Garden Warbler and blackcap (c) JR
The hot dry month has reduced water levels significantly and the scrapes are rapidly drying out. A few passage waders have been seen including Wood Sandpipers, Ringed Plovers and Ruff. 
Lapwing and Marsh Harrier (c) Tom NL
Oystercatchers are still present (c) Bark
The breeding Lapwings can be seen challenging aerial predators that including Marsh Harriers, Red Kites, Immature Herring Gulls and corvids. Redshanks are still calling and courting, but I have yet to see any newly fledged juveniles. 
Redshank with the white wing patch (c) Bark
There is one odd and easily noticeable Redshank with a white panel in its left wing that can often be seen around the first large scrape on Big Otmoor. Snipe are drumming and chipping over The Closes, Ashgrave, Big Otmoor and Greenaway’s. They seem to be well spread out over the whole reserve this year.
Snipe (c) Bark
Bitterns are being seen regularly from the bridleway flying in and out of the reedbeds and on one day we saw two Bitterns and a Heron flying over together and it was not clear whether there was some pursuit or other going on all three descended over the reedbed and we lost sight of them. Almost simultaneously another bird had been seen to fly into one of the Greenaway’s reedbeds and so we can be certain that there is a minimum of three Bitterns on site, but we suspect that there are certainly more than that.



Bittern Pictures (c) Dan and Tricia Miller
 Little Egrets are haunting the shrinking pools and there have been up to eight of them together. The Great White Egret that was seen out on Big Otmoor earlier in the month, has unfortunately not yet made a reappearance.

Little Egret (c) Bark           Great Egret (c) Old Caley
Just as in the past few years we appear to have a very healthy population of Cuckoos and there are at least five different birds on over and around the reserve. We are hearing many more females calling now with their distinctive chuckling call. Unfortunately, there have been no reports of the striking hepatic bird hat was here during the last two summers. Interestingly however we had two separate sightings of bird with an antenna and tiny transmitter on its back during the last week of May.
Cuckoo (c) Old Caley
Marsh Harriers are a permanent fixture over the reserve and can be seen hunting across all of the fields and making food passes to each other, it will not be long before they will be calling newly fledged youngsters up from the ground and dropping supplies for them. 
Hobby (c) Old Caley
By mid-morning Hobbies can be seen every day hunting over much of the reserve but favouring Greenaway’s. Increasing numbers of Dragonflies are on the wing offering rich feeding opportunities for birds that are fast and agile enough to catch them. 


Broad Bodied Chaser, Downy Emerald and Four Spot Chaser (c) Bark
The abundance of invertebrate food, as flies hatch from the reedbeds and ditches, is attracting many swifts and hirundines. The Swifts will feed low and close especially in strong winds. There seem to be fewer Swallows about this year, not a data driven fact just a feeling. There were some reports of Swallows running into difficulties on their return migration in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Swifts over the bridleway (c) Bark
From time to time Common Terns can be seen hunting along the ditches over Greenaways. The Tern raft at the second screen could not be put out before the lockdown and the furloughing of the permanent staff. The returning staff managed to get the raft out and I have been told that it was occupied by at least one pair of terns almost immediately.
Common Tern (c) Bark
Curlews can be heard and seen over Greenaways and from the Roman Road, we are cautiously optimistic that these beautiful and charismatic birds are having a successful breeding season. They can often be seen coming in to bathe at the now shrinking pond to the east of the pump house along the bridleway.

Curlews (c) Bark

Corn Bunting has been added to the Otmoor yearlist. A single bird has been heard singing and seen a little to the north of the reserve. The last ones that I know of on the moor were seen over ten years ago on the MOD land. 
Corn Bunting (c) Bark
There is very little arable farming close to the reserve, but the abundance of different grasses should ensure that there will soon be plenty of seeds to feed on.
Large Skipper (c) Del boy
We are approaching the time when some of our scarcer and more sought-after butterflies will be on the wing. Black Hairstreaks should be flying now and small numbers can be sometimes be found in the Roman Road area and as we reach the ehd of June we will be looking for White Letter Hairstreaks on the northern side of the moor where there are still many suckering elms. Grasshoppers of many different species are pinging off from under your feet as you walk through any grassy area. 

Labyrinth Spiders  Above (c) Bark    below Tom NL
Early on damp dewy mornings it is possible to see carpets of spiders web woven outside and around funnels that lead back into the huge cracks and fissures that have appeared in the bridleway. They are the lairs of what I think are Labyrinth Spiders Agelina labyrinthica  that lay out a carpet of fine threads around a central funnel from which they emerge to seize any unfortunate insect that has tripped their wires.
As Quail have already been reported from the Downs, we might hope to hear their distinctive call soon as the grass grows longer. Despite the restrictions there is always something new or different to find or look for on Otmoor.
A Bee fly ? (c) Bark


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