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Cattle Egret (c) Bark |
The coolest late Summer Bank Holiday on record developed
into a calm but bright start to the month and had more of an autumnal feel
about it than a summer one.
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Michaelmas Daisy |
We have picked up two new species for the year, a very
elusive Pied Flycatcher and a much more visible Cattle Egret. The only other
Cattle Egret recorded on the reserve was found at the start of January in 2017
and was only seen and photographed by one observer.
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Lapwings at the second screen (c) Bark |
As we were watching a group
of Lapwings that were loafing on the muddy spit out in front of the second
screen a white bird flew in and landed amongst them causing them to panic,
which in turn spooked the bird that had just landed. It was clearly a Cattle Egret
with its unmistakeable yellow bill and its much more robust structure, than its
more delicate and refined Little Egret cousin.
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Little Egret (c) Bark |
It flew around looking to land
again but made off in the direction of Greenaways where it was eventually
re-found associating, as its name suggests it should, with the herd of grazing cows.
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With the cows (c) Bark |
With their increasing
population I assume
that it will not be long before the species becomes a regular addition to the Otmoor
avifauna.
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Landing Snipe (c) Bark |
The mud at the second screen is also attracting good numbers
of Snipe. I counted over fifty last weekend. Sometimes they will land right in
front of the screen and offer stunning close up views.
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Close Snipe (c) Bark
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There was also the
rather macabre sight of one Snipe perched on top of the skeleton of a goose
that has been out to the right of the screen for eight weeks or so, the bones gradually
appearing as the soft tissue decayed.
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Snipe on a skeleton (c) Bark
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Kingfishers are back on the lagoons . They tend to be seen
at this time of the ear much more frequently. There are no suitable nest sites
for them on the reserve so the come back post breeding. There would appear to
be plenty of small fry for them to catch, going by the pattering of splashes
across the water when a predator chases a shoal of them into the shallows.
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Reed Warblers and Whitethroat (c) Bark
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There are small passerines in mixed flocks working through
the hedgerows, Whitethroats and Lesser Whitethroats with occasional Blackcaps, Chiffchaffs
and Willow Warblers. In the reeds close to the screens and along the ditches
there are Reed Warblers including some young birds not long out of the nest and
still calling their parents to feed them. The clumps of bramble along the path
to the second screen are good spots to stake out and wait for a party to move
through.
There are abundant feeding opportunities there, from both blackberries
and the insects that are attracted to them. First thing in the morning it is
also a great place to see dragonflies. This particular hedgerow catches the morning
sun and dragonflies need to warm up before they can start hunting.
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Whinchat (c) Tricia Miller Redstart (c) JR Wheatear (c) Dan Miller
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We are still finding small groups of Whinchats and
Stonechats both on the reserve, around the farm at Noke and out on the MOD. There
has been a family party of Stonechats along the path that leads towards July’s
Meadow.
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Juvenile Stonechat (c) Bark |
Occasional Wheatears too are turning up often on the shorter grassed
areas being grazed by sheep. Over the last few weeks the number of Yellow Wagtails
going into the reedbed to roost at dusk has steadily risen.
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Yellow Wagtail (c) Bark |
Observers have
estimated up to one hundred and fifty birds. They too are spending their days
feeding around the grazing animals, if the cattle come close to the path or
bridleway it is possible to see them really well.
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Moulting Marsh Harrier (c) Bark |
We still have three different Marsh Harriers showing up
across the reedbed from time to time. One of them is in moult and looks very scruffy.
Several Kestrels ae working the reserve and there is still a family party of
them hunting in the grasses across the MOD fields. We are still seeing
occasional Hobbies.
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Cronking over the car park (c) Bark |
I seldom visit the moor now without hearing or seeing
Ravens, there is certainly an established pair that roam across the whole
reserve and its environs. They have been taking advantage of the natural mortality
rate of the enormous numbers of feral Canada and Grey-lag Geese that are ever present
on our fields. They are noisy and quarrelsome when on the water, but despite their
ubiquitous nature can still be spectacular when a flock takes to the air or
flies in low over ones head.
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Cranes Above (c) Andy Harris below (c) Bark
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Just as I was about to sign off, I have heard of yet another
two new additions to the year-list. A Wryneck was seen beside the bridleway a
little bit beyond the pumphouse. Being a Wryneck, it is unlikely to hang around
or to be very easy to see should it do so! The other was a flyover Tree Pipit.
I remember when they were regular breeding birds on Otmoor. There was a pair that
could be seen all summer long by the side of the road down from Beckley and others
that bred just out on Saunders Ground at the end of the Roman Road. They seemed
to slip away unnoticed unlike the Nightingales that we lost at about the same
time.
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Cattle Egret (c) JR
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