Friday, 23 May 2025

Wordsworth’s Wandering Voice

O Cuckoo! shall I call thee Bird,

Or but a wandering Voice?

On Monday I tried out the Rosedale Abbey area.  I heard Golden Plovers, but couldn’t see any.  There were noticeably fewer Lapwings than previous years.

 Lapwing

Ditto
Ditto
Red Grouse & Brood
Tree Pipit
On Tuesday we travelled into Lincolnshire.  We were greeted in the car park by a fairly loud Garden Warbler, which eventually showed well.  It was cold and a little misty at first, but the sun began to break through towards the end of the morning.
Garden Warbler
Ditto
Reed Warbler
Shoveler
Shelduck
Straw Dot
Blue-tailed Damselfy
Four-Spotted Chaser
Garden Chafer
On Wednesday we returned to our local waterway.  The morning group encountered 44 species, whilst the pm session saw 28 and heard another 6.  A separate group started 30 mins after us and went a bit further than we did.  They had a tally of 20 species.  I’m not really sure why their total was so low.  In the morning we saw at least 2 Cuckoos possibly three, but after lunch only a distant male was heard.  We saw a brief glimpse of a Hobby around 11am, but in the afternoon we enjoyed prolonged views, including it perched on a conifer.
Linnet
Female Linnet
Reed Bunting
Ditto
Reed Bunting (c) 2025 Symon Fraser
Ditto
Sally’s Whitethroat 
Willow Warbler (c) 2025 Symon Fraser
Female Cuckoo
Ditto
Cuckoo (c) 2025 Tony Robinson
Ditto
Goldfinch
Hobby
Ditto
ditto


Marsh Harrier (c) 2025 Tony Robinson 
Ditto
Hairy Dragonfly
Hare
Marsh Frog
Ditto
Female Orange-Tip
Red Admiral
Water Lily
Water Lily
4-Spotted Chaser (c) 2025 Tony Robinson
Whirlygig Beetles
As soon as we opened the car doors on Thursday morning’s class we could hear a distant Cuckoo, so hopes were high.  We also had Whitethroats singing either side of the parking area.  We tried out a new hide/screen first.  There were Avocets, a Redshank some Meadow Pipits, Skylarks and a few Swallows.  However, the biggest surprise came when Rose spotted a distant and very high-flying Short-eared Owl. Next, we walked along a country lane with Linnets and Yellowhammers accompanied by the sound of the Cuckoo getting gradually louder.  A number of Lapwings flew up from the fields and a Kestrel was seen hovering.  We arrived at a new tidal realignment scheme.  Here, we saw a lot more Avocets, plus Shelduck and a single Redshank.  We reached the reedbeds, and could hear Reed Warblers, plus see a single Reed Bunting.  Eventually, we reached an open area, and it was here we saw a Cuckoo fly across.
Wren
The Russet Rump of a Yellowhammer 
Skylark
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Skylark (c) 2025 Paul Green
Skylark 
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Marsh Harrier
Mute Swans
Ox-Eye Daisies
Ditto
Painted Lady
Poppy
On Friday we returned to Tuesday's location.  The Garden Warblers were still singing in the car park, but this time the Great Spotted Woodpecker flew over a couple of times.  The Great Tits were almost ready to fledge.  Many of the other sightings are covered by Tuesday (above).
Marsh Harrier Mobbed by Corvids

Long-tailed Tits
Azure Damselfly
4-Spotted Chaser
Speckled Wood
At the weekend because of the recent lack of rain a Mistle Thrush came in the garden for a bath, which seemed for the first time in a couple of years.  The moth trap has unearthed a lot of Heart and Darts, and some other mainly nondescript moths. 
Mistle Thrush
Ditto
17 May
Light Brown Apple Moth
17 May 
Shuttle-Shaped Dart
Vine’s Rustic
18 May
Setaceous Hebrew Character
Swallow Prominent
Ditto
19 May
Common Swift
Ditto
22 May
Brimstone Moth

23rd May
Buff Ermine
Mottled Rustic

Two different stalwarts have had close encounters with Cockchafers, which are an inch in length, and look as aerodynamic as a brick.  The 2 were in a moth trap.
Cockchafers or May Bugs (c) 2025 John Nicholson
Cockchafer (c) 2025 Mike Hind
Blue Tit (c) 2025 Hugh Wood
This photo has been on the blog before, but the hole is being reused.