Monday, 12 September 2011

A taste of things to come

Saturday was our last birding trip in the UK before flying out to Portugal next week for ten days.  Not surprisingly, most of the talk as we travelled to RSPB Titchwell (hoping to see a Buff-breasted Sandpiper that had been there for some time) was about Portugal – the places we’d visit and the birds we might see.  Let’s hope it was auspicious that Titchwell gave us not only the Sandpiper [a lifer for all of us] but also two birds that we commonly see in Portugal – Little Bittern, and this Cattle Egret...

We also spent some time at Cley looking for a reported Citrine Wagtail. The Wagtail was our dip of the day, but there were plenty of birds on Pat’s Pool to keep us happy, including three more Sandpiper species...

Curlew Sandpiper

Green Sandpiper
Common Sandpiper

Thursday, 8 September 2011

Seasons change

There was a definite feel of autumn in the air on recent trips to North Norfolk (27 August) and Dungeness (4 September), the latter with friends from Beds Bird Club.
Our first stop in North Norfolk was Warren Woods near Cromer, hoping to catch a glimpse of a Western Bonelli’s Warbler and/or a Greenish Warbler that had been reported there. As we wandered round the woodland looking for them in a very chilly wind, I was glad that I’d remembered to pick up my fleece before leaving. The birds obviously had more sense than we did and stayed tucked away, out of sight. Thankfully the weather improved as we made our way to Cley later. After catching up with a Red-necked Phalarope there, we went a little way down the road to Walsey Hills NOA reserve where, by the time we were standing watching this juvenile Red-backed Shrike hunting along a hedgerow, the midday sun was bright and warm...


At Dungeness last Sunday, a walk round the reserve and hides produced plenty of good birds, notably Great White Egret, Cattle Egret, Whinchats, and Wheatears. The highlight of the day, however, was the afternoon sea watch, with Arctic Skuas, Black Terns, Little Gulls, Gannets, Kittiwakes, Guillemots, Common and Sandwich Terns all seen, plus several Harbour Porpoises. For me, the stars of the show were the Arctic Skuas - harassing Terns carrying food in an attempt to steal themselves a meal. It was thrilling to watch the aerial acrobatics of the two birds trying to out-manoeuvre each other. Occasionally a Tern would give in and disgorge its catch, and in a split second the Skua swooped in to claim its prize - wildlife action at its best.
Quieter moments were spent appreciating this Glaucous Gull on the shingle behind us...