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| Peregrine (c) JR | 
The mist lifted quickly this weekend giving way to soft golden sunshine 
that complemented the autumn colours shining out in the hedgerows. On Sunday the 
complete lack of wind and the atmospheric conditions meant that we could not 
hear the normal traffic noise from the A34 and the M40. The silence was complete 
and so every cheep, chirp, call and song was clear and discernable. 
The water levels at the first screen have finally fallen and the muddy 
banks and stubble from reed cutting are creating a perfect feeding area for 
Snipe. There were well over thirty on both days either roosting, preening or 
picking and probing busily along the margins or wading in the shallow pools. We 
examined them carefully but could find no Jack Snipe amongst them but one was 
found later on Sunday by the Robys out on the MOD land. 
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| Snipe (c) JR | 
There is still one 
Dunlin amongst them and on Sunday there were three Green Sandpipers. There are 
now well over forty Wigeon on the southern lagoon, a small number compared with 
the thousand or so that will be with us in winter but a significant increase on 
last week and another sign of the changing season. Another sign of that change 
was the first significant party of Golden Plover this autumn with at least 
twenty five being seen on Sunday morning.
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| Green Woodpecker from the first screen (c) Pat Galka | 
There have been no winter thrushes yet on Otmoor but there was a 
significant passage of Skylarks moving over. They appeared mostly to be heading 
in a south westerly direction in small parties of up to ten birds. They might of 
course have been the same birds flying in a big circle but I think not! 
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| Rodent control on Otmoor (c) JR | 
There 
are at least ten Stonechats out and about on the moor, with a pair near July’s 
Meadow another pair close to the hide and six birds out on the MOD. There were 
also three Whinchats in the same location on Sunday. A small party of Redpolls 
was seen again on Sunday in the Carpark Field and there are two large flocks of 
Goldfinches that are feeding on the seeding thistles both in July’s Meadow and 
along the path to the first screen. The larger flock contained at least sixty 
individuals but they were flushed by a Sparrowhawk before I could finish 
counting them.
Several chiffchaffs are still feeding with the roving tit flock. Amongst 
the tits in the Carpark Field were a couple of Coal Tits, not a common species 
on the moor. In the Roman Road on Sunday there were four Marsh Tits that were 
probably a family party.
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| Blue tit and Chiffy (c) Bark | 
More raptors are about and on Friday a Snipe was seen to have a lucky 
escape when stooped on by a Peregrine, that just missed it. Two different Marsh 
Harriers are being seen both over the reedbed and the along the back of 
Greenaways. Two Short Eared Owls are being seen on the MOD land and perhaps 
there may be more soon.
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| The last of this years Hobbies? (c) JR | 
A mystery raptor was seen on Saturday morning by three 
of us. It came across Ashgrave being pursued by several corvids. It was carrying 
prey and at first we thought it was a Buzzard but it was longer winged and 
longer tailed . It was a uniform dark underneath and I managed to get a scope on 
it just before it disappeared over the hedge into Greenaways, it showed a very 
slightly notched tail. None of us were confident enough to call it and so we put 
it out as a possible Black Kite. By the time we had rushed round to the 
bridleway from the hide it had gone, leaving us out of breath and with the 
adrenaline rush of seeing something unusual and the frustration of not being 
able to firmly I.D. it. Such is birding!
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| Fox on closes (c) Pat Galka | 
 
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