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Since leaving Cornwall a week has already gone by and each day has delivered one or two additions to the 2025 5 Miles From Home List. In fact I am 6 species up on the same date last year so the local area has certainly been delivering! Since my Cornish trip I have added a further 17 species to the list - some of them expected such as Greenfinch, Sparrowhawk, Green Woodpecker, Raven and Red-legged Partridge but others not so expected. The Little Owl headlining this post is always a pleasing find - especially as this one at Tyttenhanger Gravel Pits has been harder to find in recent years. After what appeared to be a good year with 2 pairs at nest holes they then disappeared and have not been regularly seen in the last couple of years. Knowing they are still there is reassuring as I know of at least two other sites where the main nest tree has been felled - either by the land manager or by strong winds. Two star birds reappeared while I was away - the Yellow-browed Warbler at Verulamium Park in St Albans and the Black Redstart over-wintering in the roof of St Albans Abbey. The Yellow-browed Warbler & the Black Redstart in St Albans The Yellow-browed Warbler had been giving astonishing views low down at the lake's edge but I had to make-do with treetop views. Local birder Murray Brown had re-found it on 7th January after it went missing during Christmas. The Black Redstart - presumably last year's returning bird - was a somewhat peculiar sighting in that the bird has taken up residence in the cathedral roof. It's believed to be feeding on a healthy supply of Ladybirds but can only be seen when it appears at a small diamond-shaped window at the west end. I trust it knows how to get out but is no doubt benefiting from the shelter and free food! The same day saw me visit Stanborough GPs where I flushed a Jack Snipe and Garden Wood at Tyttenhanger GPs where I found an over-wintering Firecrest - both great birds to get on my list so early on. I was a bit slow with the camera but did manage a distant shot of the Jack Snipe as it (unusually) chose to fly around quite high before dropping back down. A very pleasing find on 14th came in the form of a Woodcock in a wood at Highfield Farm on the edge of St Albans. It has become my most reliable site for the birds and will hopefully remain that way for many years more. A dog walk around the Munden Estate, Bricket Wood the next day gave me a pair of Mandarin Ducks but these were out done on 19th with a flock of 15 at Coopers Green GPs! The dog walk the next day brought brief views of a Barn Owl that has been regularly hunting at Redbournbury and at least 2 of the resident Cetti's Warblers there. My list now stood at 90 species. Distant video-grabs of the Short-eared Owl at Stanborough GPs on 16th Jan I was extremely pleased to get the Barn Owl - after all I've yet to hear or see a Tawny Owl this year. However, that same evening I popped into Stanborough GPs and was rewarded with a distant Short-eared Owl. It appeared to fly up from Cromer Hyde farm but then headed off north-west flying higher and higher. This is a real bonus bird as I didn't record one locally in the whole of 2024 despite there being 4 in the area at the end of 2023. To have it 'in the bank', so to speak, this early on bodes well for the 2025 year list! The week was not done however and with gulls on my radar I spent some time checking local roosts. I trekked out to the back of Coursers Farm where a newly scraped area has been attracting gull flocks. After some scanning I was rewarded with an adult Caspian Gull that with the Little Owl took me to #93. A visit to Coopers Green GPs today also revealed a healthy gull roost with a surprise Great Black-backed Gull among them. This is a bird I usually have to wait until Christmas to see and is maybe the bird that appeared at Coursers GPs this Christmas just gone. Either way, it takes me to 94 species for my local list and begs the question as to whether 100 is possible before the end of January? Watch this space...! Adult Caspian Gull at Coursers Farm and a Great Black-backed Gull at Coopers Green GPs
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As has been my wont for the last few years the New Year saw me visiting The Lizard in Cornwall for a week. There is nothing that I like better than to walk out along the coastline and encounter the elements and the wild ruggedness of the landscape. Lowland Point (pictured) is usually one of the first places I head to where usually it is just me and the sea and the rocky shore. There's always something of interest, either in the bird and marine life or in what the sea has thrown up. I've learnt to linger, even in a storm, and take time to sift through what can be found. Mediterranean Gulls and Firecrests are common encounters at this time of year giving the feel of rarity. Wintering Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps also pop up hinting at the warmer climes - although no sense of that on the first day I arrived. Instead a storm blew from the southwest throwing foam onto the beach and driving rain. Guillemots and Razorbills sat on the sea while Kittiwakes along with a single Fulmar and Manx Shearwater sheared past. And then a small wader flew up from the beach and settled just ahead of me - the first treasure in my search: a Purple Sandpiper! This was my first ever at Lowland Point in over 40 years of visiting. Further along the shore I came across three large eels washed up on the rocks. Each about a metre long I realised they must be Conger Eels - a species I had only ever heard of and never seen. Perhaps victims of the storm or more likely a fisherman's by-catch. They looked fairly fresh with just the first marks of gulls beginning to feed. In the afternoon I opted for the shelter of the wooded valley that leads down to Tremayne Quay on the Helford River. Along the way, more Firecrests and a brief glimpse of a Marsh Tit as it made its way along with a flock of Long-tailed Tits. The river banks held Curlew, Redshank and Greenshank - all welcome additions to my year list and by the end of the day I had run up a total of 57 species. The next day I took advantage of a break in the weather to visit the Helford River again in search of a Red-necked Grebe. I knew one had been sighted a while back and in previous years I had managed to find one just off the mouth of Frenchman's Creek where it enters the main river. I scanned with my telescope for a while finding several Great Northern Divers in the process. Just as I began to lose hope a Red-necked Grebe swum into view - a juvenile bird - and gave good but brief views as it constantly dived, only staying surfaced for less than a minute at a time. Later in the day, another bird - an adult - was found by another birder and at times both birds showed together. I, however, had moved on, picking up a very smart Black-throated Diver off Dennis Head and the usual wintering Common Sandpiper on Gillan Creek. A brief look at Coverack Sewage Works revealed at least 4 Chiffchaffs along with a very pale Siberian Chiffchaff of the tristis race. This was to be the first of several 'Sibes' with another 3 seen at Helston Sewage Works later in the week along with another obliging Common Sandpiper. One of the Siberian Chiffchaffs at Helston & a Common Sandpiper I finished the day on Goonhilly Downs with a hunting male Merlin, my Cornish tally now up to 70 species. The next day saw me back along the Coverack coast from Lowland Point with the target set as 'Grey Beach' - a sheltered cove that often attracts passerines and waders thanks to the abundance of insects out of the wind and the, presumably, warmer section of sandy cliff. Last year I found a Water Pipit feeding amongst the seaweed with the Rock Pipits...what might be in store this year I wondered? Despite there being a flock of around 20 Rock Pipits my search revealed no unusual pipit. However, I did note many Chiffchaffs flitting around on the cliff, catching flies so I turned my attention to them as previous years had revealed a Siberian Chiffchaff and a Black Redstart. However, the bird that caught my attention this year was a little Yellow-browed Warbler - my 5th find of this species this year! Making the most of the sun I visited Kynance Cove in the evening where a pair of Choughs were enjoying the clifftop thermals and a Peregrine soared across the downs. The rain however, returned with a vengeance the next day so I headed out in the car for some roadside birding. In a sodden field full of Redwings I found 3 Cattle Egrets but the rain denied any decent photos. At this time of year, finding any livestock puts you in with a good chance of finding these birds and flocks of up to 100 have been seen in previous years. Moving on to Gunwalloe Cove and some more car window viewing I found a Red-throated Diver on the sea with a lone Guillemot. Diving constantly, the diver (and the weather) denied me any decent shots but I did manage just one record shot! The next day, in contrast, was sunny and bright and I joined two local birders - Steve & Joe - for a visit to Loe Pool in the hope of locating the regular wintering Bittern. Joe had a secret weapon in the form of a thermal imager and very quickly located a likely heat-blob in the reedbed. Sure enough a Bittern-like area of feathers could be seen but the bird quickly moved further into cover and out of sight. We moved around to the other side of the reeded area noting several Cetti's Warblers, a Firecrest, Kingfisher and at least 3 squealing Water Rails as we did. Once again we located the likely Bittern heat-signature and before long we had managed to train my scope onto the bird. We all had reasonable views of this highly elusive and highly camouflaged bird before once again it disappeared. The short video clip below shows how well-hidden it remained! Three Goosander were also on Loe Pool and on the way home I picked up a juvenile Marsh Harrier near the Lizard village and Golden Plover and Snipe over Goonhilly Downs. My Cornish year list had reached 89 species with one day left but more rain forecast. Undeterred, the next day I headed out to Lowland Point for a good soaking but, truth be told, I find battling the elements somewhat therapeutic - especially when I know there's a hot shower to go back to! The wind was blowing directly onshore with no chance of shelter. In a short lull in the rain I scanned the sea revealing a steady passage of auks - Guillemots and Razorbills - along with a strong passage of Kittiwakes. Three Manx Shearwaters went past too and a Cetti's Warbler called from Godrevy Beach. The real find however, and a sad one at that, was a dead Common Porpoise on the beach. The Great Black-backed Gulls had begun to tuck in and when I walked back later the tide had reclaimed the corpse. It is not the first cetacean I have found on this beach and it is always a sorry sight, particularly as I had seen a small pod of porpoises heading past Lowland Point just a couple of days ago. The dead porpoise on Godrevy Beach I reported the dead porpoise to the Cetacean Strandings Investigations Programme (CSIP) based at the London Natural History Museum. Here you can report both dead and live strandings and hopefully the information will contribute to a better understanding of these ocean-going creatures.
My time in Cornwall was up but my stormy visit to Lowland Point gave me one more gift in the form of a Whimbrel - a scarce wintering bird and no doubt one of the first to be recorded in Britain this year. Soaked through I could return for my hot shower with 90 species under my belt for the week and a respectable 114 for my British Year List 2025. A weekend of family and friends staying over meant that my expectations of getting out birding were quite low. However, the great thing about birds is that they can and do turn up anywhere. A leisurely stroll around Verulamium Park in St Albans with family in tow held no great expectations but the lakeside and riverside habitats always make me keep my radar out for something like a Firecrest.
Pausing to point out the ducks and fish along the river to my 5 year old nephew coincided with some noisy calls from a bird across the river that I knew immediately to be that little Siberian gem - a Yellow-browed Warbler. I had my camera with me but only 2 hands so I enlisted my daughter's help to both video the general area with her phone and play the call on playback on my phone while I fumbled around with my camera. The warbler responded to the calls but never came close enough for a glimpse let alone a photo and instead seemed to move further into the wooded area. Time was up and I had to make sure that neither my nephew or my dog ended up in the water and returned to join the family group. Pleasingly, others were able to locate the warbler the next day and David Hutchinson took the excellent photo of the bird that heads this post. The find was my 3rd local Yellow-browed Warbler this year and follows the big autumn influx across the country. I wonder how many more are waiting to be found? Yellow-browed Warblers - I do love them and they seem to love me!
Today I was walking Max the dog up at Redwell Wood Farm and noting the complete lack of birds on the move! Compared to some other recent visits, the skies were empty, the wind was dead still and very little was calling in the way of birdlife. However, as I returned to the car I decided to check the hedgerow for Ring Ouzels and as I did a single high-pitched call came from behind me. I knew immediately that it was a Yellow-browed Warbler but having only called once I immediately had doubts that I had really heard it. However, I knew I had so I retraced my steps back to where I had seen the same species just a couple of weeks before - in the willows by the ponds. The bird then called a few more times and showed very well along the edge of the bushes. It even sat still long enough for me to get some 'classic' warbler shots - through the twigs. A Firecrest also joined it briefly - an exact repeat of 2 weeks ago when both species were present! It seems likely however that today's bird is a new one - after all I have walked past many times over the last few weeks without so much as a hint of a warbler. To my mind, today's bird also appeared duller and had it not called I might have considered the possibility of a Hume's Leaf Warbler! This is now the 3rd Yellow-browed Warbler I have found this year and the 4th ever that I have found within 5 miles of home. After all the excitement of the previous day (Cornwall Delivers! - Day 1), I decided to walk from the house I was staying in and stick to the coastline immediate to me. I knew the stretch of coastline well - after all it included one of our family's favourite swimming spots. The circuit would take me out through Treleaver, along the mighty serpentine cliffs to Kennack Sands and then up a wooded valley before heading back across dairy farmland. Of course, I hoped I might find a Yellow-browed Warbler with many being reported just the week before and the strong chance that some may have lingered. I also dreamed of a rarer warbler - maybe in one of the wooded valleys along my path as I had noted the discovery of a Western Bonelli's Warbler further SW along the Cornish coast the day before. But birds or no birds, it was going to be an enjoyable walk. Halfway between Black Head and Kennack Sands I heard a wimpery bird call just ahead of me on the path. I wasn't sure what it was but it recalled young Bullfinches or a young bird. I turned the corner (probably too noisily) and saw a small bird fly into the one and only bush sticking out of the heather. I got my bins focused and wow! A Wryneck! Having never found my own Wryneck until just a month ago this was a real surprise not to mention a treat. The bird stayed put just long enough for a quick 'record shot' before disappearing deeper into the undergrowth. I waited for it to reappear but eventually had to move on leaving it to its disappearing act. The walk through Kennack Sands produced very little else save a few Chiffchaffs and the ubiquitous Firecrests. However, as I climbed out of the valley by Trevenwith Farm I encountered the first foraging flock of warblers and tits of the day along with more Goldcrests and Firecrests. I began to hear what sounded like a Yellow-browed Warbler but very faintly. However, as the flock moved through it called loudly a few more times and showed itself very well right in front of me! I managed to capture one call in a short video. The walk had indeed been a success as far as birds were concerned but the next day the weather closed in limiting my options. However, in the evening I returned to Treleaver valley and was reward with my first Ring Ouzel of the autumn flying up the valley along with quite a few Blackbirds. The following day (17th) saw me join local birder, Steve Wood, for a seawatch at the Lizard Point. From 7.30 - 9am we witnessed the continuing (and extraordinary) passage of Cory's Shearwaters - at least 60 past - along with smaller numbers of Manx Shearwaters and a single Great Shearwater. Seeing large shearwaters regularly off the Lizard has become expected in the last 5 years but prior to that they were very scarce so close in and certainly not as late as mid-October! A group of 7 Choughs also left the roost noisily at first light. After the seawatch I traipsed around the Lizard fields looking for rarer pipits but with no joy. The highlight, however, was a group of 20+ Ringed Plovers roosting in a freshly ploughed field. My final day on the Lizard saw me walk a long circuit of Kynance Farm and the surrounding moorland. While the Bluetail appeared to have well and truly gone I was rewarded with another Ring Ouzel that dropped in near the ruins at Kynance Farm along with a flock of 60+ Golden Plover circling over Predannack Airfield. Walking out across the moor and I encountered a couple of Dartford Warblers scolding me from the scrub along with 5 late Swallows heading south. I finished the day with a late afternoon seawatch from Porthoustock that turned up very little save a steady flow of Mediterranean Gulls, a few Manx Shearwaters and a single Great Skua that I managed a distant photo of. Dragging myself away from Cornwall I headed home but stopped briefly at Lower Tamar Lakes to year tick Willow Tit! I had a good view of one very scruffy individual along with several smarter Marsh Tits. I hope to be back soon but thank you again Cornwall!
After a very quiet vismig session at Potwells early this morning I headed back to the car at Redwell Wood Farm. Vismig can be very hit and miss and given my good run of birds recently I wasn't too disheartened by the lack of passage over head. As I walked along the track past the overgrown ponds I noticed quite a few Chiffchaffs active in the willows with one singing. With the recent influx of Yellow-browed Warblers into the country I thought nothing could be lost by playing its "tswee" call. I played a couple of calls but no response however, as I turned to walk on I suddenly heard two quiet and unmistakable calls! I knew immediately I had a Yellow-browed Warbler! A few Yellow-browed Warbler calls just discernible above the roar of the M25 traffic! I played the call a few more times and straight away a little bird appeared in the willow at the edge of the track calling on and off. I got some great views of this tiny Siberian visitor with its yellow brow that combines with it yellow wing-bars to give a striped first impression. Always on the move the bird flitted out of sight and I had to leave to get on with work but not before I noted two smart Bramblings sitting in the bushes by the bird feeder. Together with the warblers they gave the impression of a little fall of migrants - perhaps thanks to the heavy low cloud that rained a bit earlier. I put the news out and others found it later in the morning and into the afternoon, calling well and occasionally showing. Local birder and photographer, David Hutchinson, managed to get a great shot of it which is a lovely record of the moment. A Firecrest was also found with it so definitely some new arrivals today.
Even more pleasing is that the Yellow-browed Warbler takes me to #148 for my Five Miles From Home List and is also a new bird for my 2024 British Year List. It becomes the 3rd Yellow-browed Warbler I have found in Herts, the first being at Tyttenhanger in Jan 2019 and the second, a very special bird, being the 100th species for my garden in Oct 2020! I think they are probably one of my favourite birds to find and this year seems to be a good one to go looking. |
Rupert’s BlogHere you'll find my observations and musings on the wildlife I encounter - usually locally but sometimes further afield. Archives
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