Sunday 7 July 2024

Autumn Bookings

 Bearded Tits

There are about 11 weeks before the Autumn course starts, and there are a few vacancies on Tuesday mornings, Wednesday afternoons, plus Thursday & Friday mornings.  Migration is the keyword of the term, and initially we will be encountering summer migrants as they prepare to leave these shores.  We will also spend some time identifying waders at a variety of seashore and estuarine locations.  Some people find waders tricky, so I will do my best to point out out all the key features.  Later, winter migrants will arrive, and these will be identified too.  The best ever Autumn class was 8 years ago when the star birds were probably two confiding Hen Harriers, several Short-eared Owls, a Barn Owl and a Woodcock all seen at the same location.  If they reappear, the intention will be to connect with them once more.  

Peregrine - a photograph taken in the company of the Wednesday afternoon group.  In the Autumn we are most likely to find one of these looking far more active whilst it is harassing the waders on the Humber estuary!
 Bearded Tits - at Ness End
Autumn is the best time to see these charismatic birds 
 Wryneck - at Spurn
One of Autumn's unusual birds, which we'll try and see if we get an influx on the coast
 Moulting male Redstart  - on migration at Spurn
 Stonechat - this beauty over-winters with us
Ring Ouzel - on migration at Spurn
 Snow Bunting - we may encounter these later in the Autumn term
 Goldcrest - some years thousands appear on the coast
 Pallas's Warbler - this is less common than the previous bird
 Rough-legged Buzzard
 Great Grey Shrike - 10 years ago these were eating many of the exhausted Goldcrests
 Bar-tailed Godwit in breeding plumage
 Black-tailed Godwit
 Greenshank
 Spotted Redshank
 Water [as thin as a] Rail
 Hen Harrier - the star bird of a previous Autumn
Ditto
 Short-eared Owls - always popular with the classes
 Ditto
Bewick's Swan
 Starling Murmuration

Friday 5 July 2024

A Monster in the Trap

 Privet Hawk Moth

On Wednesday a catch-up session was held after a day of heavy rain postponed a class earlier in the term.  We went to Blacktoft Sands.  Marshland was first on the menu.  We saw two huddled up Spotted Redshanks & at least 4 Green Sandpipers.  Halfway through our visit in the hide a young Bearded Tit scuttled up a reed and was fairly easy to see for those on the left side of the hide.  

Spotted Redshank
Spotted Redshank (c) 2024 Tony Robinson
Green Sandpiper
Spotted Redshanks & Green Sandpiper (c) 2024 Peter Moizer
Little Egret (c) 2024 Peter Moizer
Little Egret (c) 2024 Tony Robinson
Little Egret (c) 2024 Hugh Wood
Immature Bearded Tit
Heron
Heron (c) 2024 Symon Fraser
Ditto
Ditto
Lapwing
Lapwing (c) 2024 Hugh Wood
Pied Wagtail (c) 2024 Peter Moizer
Reedling Hide seemed fairly quiet at first, but after 20 minutes another group of half-a-dozen distant Bearded Tits all gathered together in a corner of the reeds.  A Peregrine flew over and a now local rarity - a Collared Dove flew directly towards us.

Bearded Tits

Marsh Harrier
Ditto
Marsh Harrier (c) 2024 Peter Moizer
Marsh Harrier (c) 2024 Tony Robinson
Wren (c) 2024 Peter Moizer
The other hides were a little disappointing with one highlight being a food pass between the Marsh Harriers.  It is believed the female dropped her catch, but she subsequently retrieved it from the reeds.  Quite a few Swifts were heading south, but the Sand Martins were a little less predictable.  After lunch the reception hide was surprisingly effective with a Cetti’s Warbler immediately next to the windows collecting insect prey, and a Sedge Warbler and Tree Sparrow only a little further away.  
Cetti’s Warbler

Cetti’s Warbler (c) 2024 Peter Moizer
Sedge Warbler
Tree Sparrow
Ditto
Coot with Chick (c) 2024 Peter Moizer
Coot with Older Immature 
Gadwall (c) 2024 Hugh Wood
Record Shot of Immature Moorhen (c) 2024 Tony Robinson
Frog
Hoary Willowherb
I've been using the moth trap since c.2018, and upto now this year has been lack-lustre with relatively few moths seen, and they were much later to start coming to the trap.  However, last weekend there was a nice surprise just outside the moth trap - our first Privet Hawk-Moth.  It seemed almost as large as a Goldcrest!
Privet Hawk Moth
Ditto
Ditto
Ribband Wave
Ditto
Brimstone
Eudonia delunella

Elderberry Pearl
Epiblema costipunctua
It’s the best time to try & catch recently-emerged Marbled Whites at Kiplingcotes, Wharram Quarry & Brockadale.  Finding a warm enough day could be a problem!
Marbled White
Dark Arches
Dark Marbled Carpet
Scalloped Oak [ID thanks to Jan Smith]
Mottled Rustic
Rustic
Small Fan-Foot
Small Magpie
Wild Cherry Ermine
Common White Wave
Dun-Bar (Worn)
Small Fan-Footed Wave
Swallowtail & Brimstone
The Spectacle [ID Thanks to Jan Smith]
The Broad-Bidied Chaser was taken at Copmanthorpe & the remaining photos at Kiplingcotes at the weekend.
Broad-Bodied Chaser (c) 2024 Symon Fraser
Ditto
Long-tailed Tit (c) 2024 Symon Fraser
Marbled White (c) 2024 Symon Fraser
Ditto
Ringlet (c) 2024 Symon Fraser