Female Bullfinch
On Tuesday we returned to last Thursday’s venue, but all the Whooper Swans had disappeared. There was a female Bullfinch near the car park and a small flock of Greenfinches on the way to the new hide. At the furthest hide there were some Pintail, Shoveler, Teal, Shelduck and Tufted Duck. Looking towards the church on the opposite bank of the Derwent we spotted at least 3 Marsh Harriers and a couple of Buzzards, but we didn’t manage to spot the flying barn door.
Greenfinches
Shelduck
Strange Memorial
Ditto
On Wednesday and Thursday too much rain was forecast, so all sessions relocated to our standby location. The car park lane on Wednesday held a few Fieldfare, and one of them was relatively confiding. There were Greenfinches, Goldfinches and a single Tree Sparrow on the first lot of feeders. One of the Pheasants seems to have become accustomed to humans and followed us round, hoping for titbits. There were 5 Egyptian Geese on a new lake in the morning, but they shifted to a field to the north of the site for the afternoon session. They were missing altogether on Thursday.
Fieldfare
Goldfinches
Goldfinches (c) 2026 Peter Moizer
Great Spotted Woodpecker (c) 2026 Symon Fraser
Pheasant
Egyptian Geese
Shelduck & Lapwings (c) 2026 Symon Fraser
Cormorant (c) 2026 Peter Moizer
One of the best birds were the pair of Stonechats in the wild flower field, and these showed quite well. We couldn’t find any of the 3 Bitterns with the thermal imaging camera, but it did locate a Snipe, which we would have completely missed without it - modern technology!
Stonechat
Snipe (c) 2026 Symon Fraser














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