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Whooper Swan (c) Tezzer
|
Over the last two weekends I have only managed one visit when
the weather was bright and dry, the other three times were grey, misty, damp
and cold! There has been further rain and the moor is looking like a proper
wetland and one can begin to see what it might have looked like before it was
enclosed, drained and modernised.
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Stonechat (c) Bark |
In the winter people from the surrounding villages
would catch fish and eels and they would also hunt wildfowl. They would then sell
this wild harvest in the market in Oxford.
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A blizzard of ducks over Big Otmoor (c) Bark |
Wildfowl numbers are very high especially Wigeon, Teal and
Shovellers. A couple of Saturdays ago we spent some time scoping a very misty
damp and flooded Big Otmoor. We attempted some counts, although visits from a
Peregrine and Marsh Harriers frustrated us when everything flushed, and we had
to start over again.
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Stonechat (c) Derek Lane |
We did establish that there were at least two thousand two
hundred Wigeon out there and at least five hundred Shovellers. Teal were more
difficult to count as they were well tucked in amongst the sedges. There were
also sixteen Pintail that we could see, although I had counted more than these
out on the Flood and in a flyover between Flood and Ashgrave.
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Snipe at the second screen (c) Bark |
Lapwing and Golden Plover numbers are also very high as they
particularly like the very flooded Fields. There are over Four thousand Golden
plover and approximately three thousand Lapwings. All of these birds with the
addition of forty or fifty thousand Starlings roosting every night, means that
there are plenty of potential meals for raptors and as usual we are drawing
more of them in. As well as our “resident” Marsh Harriers we have two different
Peregrines visiting regularly, one of them significantly larger than the other.
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Sparrowhawk(c) Bark
|
There are several Sparrowhawks, one of which we assume, is the bird that leaves
the remains of Starlings in the window of the screens and we also found one
unfortunate, partly eaten Starling hanging in the brambles along the pathway.
Merlin, both male and female are being seen regularly. I have twice seen one
over Closes and once over Big Otmoor.
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Short-eared Owl (c) Roger Wyatt |
Two Short Eared Owls were seen hunting
over the north eastern side of Greenaway’s last week, their prey however is
more likely to be mammalian rather than avian. They were the first to be seen
for over three weeks.
The flooded fields have also attracted large numbers of
Snipe, on Monday a flock over one hundred and fifty were seen flying together
when flushed by a raptor, while another flock of over a hundred were seen at
the same time on another part of the reserve.
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Reflective Mute Swan on the one fine visit I had lately (c) Bark |
Amongst the ducks that have been seen was a male Goosander
last week. These are fairly unusual birds to find on the moor as they favour moving
water.
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Six adult Whoopers on The Closes (c) Tezzer |
Best birds of recent days however have been two visits by two different
parties of Whooper Swans. On Monday seven birds were seen to fly in and land on
Ashgrave, they stopped for a bit of a “wash and brush up” before moving on
again after just twenty or so minutes. This was obviously a family party of two
adults and five cygnets.
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First family party in the mist (c) Steve Roby ( it is possible to see bill colour)
|
Despite the
grey misty and murky conditions, the photographs show two of them have yellow
bills and the others have pink coloured bills and rather grubby off-white
plumage rather than the clean bright white of the adults. On Tuesday, another
group of seven Whoopers turned up and this time the pictures clearly show that
they were all adults. They landed on the Closes and again did not stay for very
long. The Goosander and the Swans bring the yearlist up to one hundred and
fifty-three species.
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Reed Buntings (c) Bark |
The winter finch feeding programme is starting to attract
larger numbers of birds, as the natural resources start to be depleted in the
wider countryside. There have been up to fifty Reed Buntings and smaller
numbers of Linnets and Chaffinches.
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Yellowhammer in the gloom (c) Bark |
This past weekend I found five
Yellowhammers amongst them. When one stands quietly and patiently by the gate
it is surprising just how close the birds will come once they start feeding. It
is well worth checking through them carefully as a similar feeding programme in
the north of the county in 2017, attracted a Little Bunting, which stayed for nearly
a week.
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Cetti's Warblers (c) Old Caley |
I have no very clear idea just how many Cetti’s Warblers
there are on the moor at the moment but there must be at the very least twelve.
There are regular places that they call from and they also have a range of
rather “chuntering” sub-songs. They often seem to call in response to movement.
Now that the leaves are off trees it is much easier to see them properly as
they forage through the bushes and brambles.
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Wren (c) Old Caley |
I have also noticed just how many
Wrens there are about especially along the track to the second screen. Both the
Cetti’s and the Wrens will be vulnerable if we experience any sustained periods
of very cold weather.
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Hare (c) Old Caley and Early morning Muntjac (c) Bark |
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