Nightingale (c) 2010 David Ware
Nightingale - belting again
Warm back view
Warm back view
Rufous Tail
Garden Warbler
Yawning Treecreeper
Treecreeper (c) 2010 Claude Hargreaves
Willow Warbler
Toad
I arrived at 8am to see if I could manage any pics of the Nightingale before the crowds arrived. I saw 4 individual males and a female. The 1st Nightingale let the morning class down, but we had great views of another, and would have had even better views if 2 photographers hadn’t jumped in front of us, as they obscured our view. There had been a big influx of Garden Warblers in since yesterday joined by a Lesser Whitethroat and a couple of standard Whitethroats. The Nightingales were harder to see in the afternoon, but a new one sang on the other side of the railway track & was visible in the same bush for nearly 5 minutes – all but one ‘student’ managed to pick it up. The Nightingales were “lifers” for 99.99% of those present, as were the Garden Warblers for most, and those that had seen the latter before has the best views they’d ever had. Well, that’s it for Whisby & the Nightingales until 2011! If you are interested in the plight of the Nightingale as a breeding bird in Britain, please follow this link to a recent article: http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/deer-to-blame-for-the-decline-of-englands-nightingales-1952989.html
4 comments:
Has there been many muntjac deer in east yorkshire though? Or has our the local nightingale population suffered as much other areas?
Nightingales are only seen as overshooting passage migrants in East Yorkshire. We had to venture into Lincs to see ours.
I guess that makes sense, and i believe i've actually seen a muntjac in lincolnshire.
There's a rumour that someone has introduced Muntjac (or they've made their own way) to Thorne Moors, endangering what was the most northerly Nightingale population. Apparently, only one pair successfully bred there last year.
Post a Comment