Tuesday 19 January 2021

Weekend of 16th and 17th January

 

Sparrowhawk at second screen (c) Bark

This was a weekend with two very different contrasting mornings. Saturday was grey, misty and with a fine drizzle. The rain got on bins scopes and cameras, and for me it made seeing through my glasses very tricky.

Goldcrest in the mist (c) Bark

Sunday however was the very best kind of winters morning, with bright sunshine, clear blue skies, temperatures just above freezing and birds seemingly everywhere.
Lapwings over Big Otmoor (c) Bark

One of the best things on Sunday morning after coming through the Car park Field was finding that some of the White-fronted Geese were feeding quite close to the cattle pens. 


White fronts (c) Bark

They were with Canada Geese and Greylags but did not seem unduly nervous of us on the bridleway. We counted approximately twenty or so of them on Greenaways and a similar number at the top of Ashgrave. Unfortunately, we could find no sign of the Brent Goose that was seen last week, and we assume it has moved on.
The size difference between the Whitefronts and Greylags is very Noticeable (c) Bark

Both Hen Harrier and Marsh Harrier were seen at the weekend, but I didn't connect with the Hen Harrier.


Marsh Harrier (c) Tom N-L

I did, however, get very lucky with a Sparrow Hawk. Just as I was about to leave the second screen, with my scope on my shoulder, I glanced out at the lagoon for one last time and as if from nowhere a Sparrow Hawk landed on the fence post outside, not more than two metres away.
Sparrowhawk (c) Bark

I managed to fire off six pictures one handed, before it saw me and flew. On Sunday morning we were lucky enough to see a Peregrine bathing in the flood on the further edge of Noke Sides it spent at least five minutes in the water splashing about and flapping its wings, it then flew up into one of the adjacent Oak trees to preen.
Distant bathing Peregrine (c) Bark

When we looked more closely, we could see that there was another Peregrine with it in the tree. Scope views showed that there was pale fringing on the smaller of the two and it appeared slightly more brown than slaty grey, and so we assumed that it was a juvenile.
Redpoll (c) Bark

Walking along the bridleway on Sunday morning we came upon a small party of five redpolls feeding. They were on one of their favourite food plants Rose Bay Willow Herb. It was difficult to pick them out and could so easily have been overlooked, given their size and from behind their extremely effective camouflage.


Their camouflage in the dried grasses is superb (c) Bark

Increasingly Redwings and Fieldfares are feeding on the ground as the berries are all gone. Some Redwings in particular are becoming less nervous and more confiding as they forage in the short grass beside the paths.

Confiding Redwing (c) Bark

Bullfinches are changing their feeding strategy too and are beginning to change from picking seeds from dried up blackberries to eating the swelling buds of Blackthorn bushes. They can most easily be seen doing this in the larger bushes of the car park field.
Bullfinch on blackthorn (c) Bark

It is surprising how we take some birds for granted and don’t always  appreciate their colour or their beauty. A careful, close look at a Starling or a Chaffinch reveals amazing colour and structure, because they are so common, we sometimes overlook them.


Starling (c) Tom N-L and Chaffinch (c) Bark

As I have been writing this morning, news has come in that three Cranes have been seen over Greenaway's and headed towards Noke Sides. Cranes have been heard in the past few days at other sites in the county and these birds may be the same ones.

Stonechat along the bridleway (c) Bark

Until we get a good look at them and can see leg ring colours we will not know if they are “our” birds returning It seems to be very early for our breeding cranes to come back as last year they returned on fourteenth of February, which itself was earlier than the year before. More information will follow when I have it.


Like winter watercolours (c) Tom N-L

No comments:

Post a Comment