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After a quiet few weeks of mild and sometimes wet and windy weather the daily searching has paid off! A visit yesterday evening, saw me scanning the huge flocks of Skylarks mixed with Meadow Pipits and large flocks of Linnets. I was almost done but as I scanned yet another group of Skylarks another smaller, more rusty-coloured bird was also moving along with them, very much in their slow, low-to-the-ground style, but clearly not them. On the first good view as the bird appeared from behind the furrows of soil I knew I had a LAPLAND BUNTING! The usual panic then ensued as I tried to fit my scope-phone adaptor to my scope, relocate the bird and start videoing! All of this I did but, need I say typically, as I pressed record everything flew off. I have a short clip of video with blurred soil and some fuzzy flying birds! I'd like to say the header photo is of the bird but it is one I took in Cornwall last year of a far more obliging bird. I watched the sub-flock of around 30 Skylarks fly across the track and away - at one point I thought I could hear a call reminiscent of a Lapland Bunting but wasn't sure. Either way, it disappeared and a 5-hour search this morning from first light was unsuccessful. I shall continue to search, as I'm sure others will as, if accepted by the rarities panel, this will be a first for Hertfordshire (rather surprisingly). An inland Lapland Bunting on the deck is a rare thing so re-locating it would be a very popular outcome. Searching for the bunting did reveal a few other birds including at least 2 Corn Buntings with the flock of Skylarks, 6 Grey Partridge and 4 Crossbills. Two males and a female of the latter species perched up in the tree by the ruin giving excellent views before flying over to the puddles on the track to drink. They were only there briefly before they headed towards Symondshyde Great Wood where there is no doubt a resident flock this autumn . A rare sight at Stanborough GPs - perched Crossbills! In other news, the site has been fairly quiet but highlights included a male Brambling with the finch flock along the track on 16th-18th October. Two Crossbills circled the site on 26th Oct and the juvenile Merlin was seen again in flight. A drop in temperatures (albeit short-lived) on 23rd Oct saw 6 Green Sandpipers roost and Teal numbers increased to over 40 birds. The Teal were also joined by an immature male Wigeon on various dates along with a few Shoveler. Work at the site continues apace with land drainage completed in many sections and the worked areas quickly tilled and seeded by the farmers. Attention has now turned to the main pit which is sadly being drained and exactly how much of that will be left remains to be seen. 'Enjoying it while it lasts' is the order of the day and the site is still playing host to a great variety of birds as the ground continues to be worked.
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The number of small birds on site has been increasing rapidly over the last few weeks with the arrival of many Meadow Pipits, Linnets and Skylarks. This must all be enticing to birds of prey and indeed a Sparrowhawk has been regularly seen harrying the flocks along with up to 3 Kestrels. A particularly large 'dump' of small birds - including a 300+ strong flock of Linnets - seemed to occur on 12th with misty, damp conditions during the first part of the morning. I stationed myself on the track and, as I have done many times before, imagined a Hen Harrier skirting the back edge of the big field before hunting over the main pit weedy margins. The raucous cries and caws of Rooks and Carrion Crows startled me from my day-dreams and I put my binoculars to my eyes and...picked up a ringtail Hen Harrier, making its way along the back edge of the large field! It then began to hunt over the weedy area at the back of the main pit before dropping down into ground cover. I couldn't quite believe it! I took some very distant and somewhat shakey record shots and video to confirm that it was indeed a Hen Harrier and not a rarer form. Unfortunately the corvid ranks were not as delighted as I was and rallied to drive the poor harrier up high and away offsite heading southeast. I assumed that was the last we'd see of it but a message came in later on that the neighbouring farmer had seen it over his fields in the afternoon. Others re-located it in the rough fields adjacent to Cromer Hyde Farm that had previously hosted 4 Short-eared Owls. Unfortunately the mobbing continued and the harrier was last seen heading south just before sunset. The harrier takes the site year list to 130 and is the first record at the site since one on 24th October 2022. The same day also saw 3 Rock Pipits at the edge of the main pit. Two flew off high while one remained, being seen the next day too. With the continuing abundance of potential prey items at the site it was perhaps no surprise that the next day saw another bird of prey visit - a Merlin (#131 for the site year). Rather obligingly it perched up just 50 yards away on the new fence along the track. The video below records some of my best views of the species ever - likely to be a juvenile bird. The presence of so many flocks of small birds on site has brought an air of excitement to the recent visits, spiced up by the activities of these scarce raptors. With the first flocks of Redwings and Fieldfares arriving in the county this state of affairs will hopefully continue for the next few weeks. Autumn is in full swing but worthy of note also was a late Sand Martin on 6th October.
It feels like it's been a slow autumn passage this year at Stanborough GPs but that may also be to do with the continuing in-filling work at the pits. Very little open water is left but just enough to retain the Mallards and a surprising number of Little Grebes (10+). The expected passage of Wheatear peaked on 8th Sep with at least 7 birds on site and a Whinchat too. Notable too has been the evening roost of Egyptian Geese which rose to a record 65 birds on 11th Sept - possibly a County record. The species seems to be going from strength to strength and may well be set to overtake Greylag Geese populations. The evening of 13th Sept saw the largest flock of Meadow Pipits this autumn with over 200 birds flying around the site and over the main field. With just one of two birds on 11th these birds are fresh in from the north. An additional highlight of 13th was a flyover Golden Plover that dropped down into fields south of Coopers Green Lane. The real highlight cam yesterday evening, however, with a (presumably) returning female-type Merlin hunting over the site. Initially perched on the track it then hunted Meadow Pipits over the large field, giving chase right into the trees towards Cromer Hyde Farm. As I prepared to leave the site I noticed it was perched back in the field much closer and I was able to take some photos and video in the fading light. The Merlin seemed quite dark suggesting a juvenile bird. The same evening also saw a roosting juvenile Dunlin at the site (see title picture) and an arrival of at least 7 Mandarin Ducks to roost - absent from the site in the last month.
Not much in the way of photos to prove it thanks to heavy rain but this morning saw an influx of waders to the site. Heavy rain moving in from the southeast with easterly winds in the previous days meant the conditions overnight were ideal to bring waders down as they migrated.
As soon as I stepped out of the car I could hear a Ringed Plover calling overhead and as I searched for it another bird started calling too. I picked the latter bird up first - a very early Bar-tailed Godwit - before getting on the Ringed Plover too. Both birds spent about 20 minutes circling the site calling but never seemed to land. Eventually both birds were lost to sight. However, Tom, another birder on site had already located 4 Dunlin which soon turned into 5 and were joined by a Redshank. In the process of scanning and searching the site 2 Green Sandpipers were also located. Along with a couple of Lapwing it was a 6-wader day for Stanborough GPs! Despite the rain and getting soaked the morning was a classic early Spring experience with the feeling that anything might drop in at any point. Tom had seen a pair of Pintail before I arrived and also had a probable Merlin sighting. This follows on from another 3 Pintail seen a few days ago and another Merlin sighting yesterday as it hunted the flock of 200+ Fieldfares still in the turnip field. A Little Owl was heard to call from towards Cromer Hyde Farm while a Great Crested Grebe graced the main pit - just the second record this year and a scarce visitor. A pair of Little Grebes and a pair of Mandarins also remain on site. No awards for photography for this one as the subject was distant and my humble bridge camera zoomed to the max. However, another Merlin record for the site (the 6th or 7th since 2021 and the 2nd this year) and this time of one perched on the ground, perhaps attracted by the pool as a source of food or maybe just for a bath. This, the same pool enjoyed by a White-fronted Goose back in December 2021. The bird - either a young bird or a female - was observed bobbing its head a bit which I have seen Merlin do before and only flew off as I tried to move closer. With the wisdom of a raptor it flew into the sun and perched in a tree some way off. I walked in that direction but the bird had slipped away by the time I got there. However, in flight it showed well with noticeably dark upper wings compared to the ubiquitous Kestrels on site. A mini-Peregrine really and perhaps observed by the regular Peregrine perched not far off in its usual tree! |
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