This week broke records for the amount of heat endured on Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday and by a special bird encountered by the coolest sessions on Thursday, where the warmest temperature was 17 degrees at a misty coastal location. Tuesday's record of being bitten by horseflies and other pernicious insects was one not to be envied.
Overheated Mistle Thrush
Immature Blue Tits and adult Long-tailed Tit
Magpie
Thieves of Raspberries
ditto
ditto
ditto
Magpie
ditto
Song Thrush
It was get-bitten-by-a-horsefly-day at Tuesday’s location. In fact insects and flowers rather than birds were the order of the day. The exceptions were 2 brief glimpses of a Kingfisher and at least 4 Tree Sparrows.
Banded Demoiselles
Ditto
Female Banded Demoiselle
Ditto
Ditto
Brown Trout
Ditto
Retreating Hare
Hares
Mayfly
Painted Lady
Pool Frog
Red Admiral on a Butterfly Person
Small Tortoiseshell
Thin-legged Wolf Spider
Tree Sparrow
Wednesday broke records because it was the hottest birdwatching class in 23 years. The afternoon was the hottest with temperatures possibly over 30 degrees C. We tried to minimise the effects by walking in the shade whenever possible and there was a breeze at times. Both groups had glimpses of a singing Lesser Whitethroat, but not long enough to photograph. By Friday this bird had become completely silent. The camera was left behind after lunch, so the splendid Red Kite remains off the blog. The Marbled Whites and many other butterflies were very flighty in the excessive heat.
Whitethroat
Yellowhammer Playing Peek-a-boo
Willow Tit or Marsh Tit? - see Friday's bird in the same location below
Collared Dove - becoming a local rarity
Common Blue
Marbled White
Ditto
Ditto
Marbled White (c) 2026 Tony Robinson
ditto6-Spot Burnet Moth
Comma
Ditto
Pyramidal Orchid
Stonecrop
Common Twayblade
It was the coolest day of the week on the coast with temperatures below 20 degrees C all day. Nevertheless, it was quite pleasant in the coastal breeze. We arrived to discover that there was a special offer on at the supermarket. 9 Quail had been counted in the central part of the "Great White Cape." We heard 5 walking from our northern starting location, only to discover that these were not included in the tally, so our figures boosted the record from the whole site. The best and closest was heard in a field of Barley, but despite staring at the sparse edge of the crop from which the sound seemed to emanate we didn't have a visual record. However, the "Wet-me-Lips" call is so distinctive, and the bird is so rarely seen, the 'sighting' was included in the class tallies. Even the very strict criteria administered by the Thurs pm group, allowed the bird through, although I may be mistaken on this - the final arbiter is currently on holiday. In the almost quarter-of-a-century of classes this is the first time we have heard a single Quail, never mind five different individuals!
Puffin
dittoPuffins (c) 2026 Nigel Kitchen
Shag
Gannets
GannetGrey Partridges
Linnet
With Caterpillars
ditto
Meadow Pipit (c) 2026 Nigel Kitchen
ditto
Peregrine (c) 2026 Nigel Kitchenditto
Meadow Pipit (c) 2026 Nigel Kitchen
ditto
Whitethroat
Record Shot of Corn Bunting
Record Shot of Corn Bunting (c) 2026 Nigel KitchenRecord Shot of Immature Starling (c) 2026 Nigel Kitchen
Painted Lady (c) 2026 Nigel Kitchen
Chicory
Lady's BedstrawPaddleboarders
On the way to Friday's location there was a terrific downpour accompanied by the rumble of thunder. However, luckily by the time of the session the rain had completely stopped. It was a little cooler at first, but by the end of the class the temperature had mounted to 26 degrees C. We returned to Wednesday's locations, and the birds were very similar. However, Wednesday's very prominent Lesser Whitethroat had already curtailed its song until late April 2027! We had our best views of a Mistle Thrush this year, but even that was feeling the heat.
Whitethroat
Willow Warbler
Overheated Mistle Thrush
ditto
6-Spot Burnet-Moth6-Spot Burnet-Moth (c) 2026 Dave Hill
Painted Lady
Marbled WhiteMarbled White & Scorpion-fly (c) 2026 Dave Hill
Comma (c) 2026 Dave Hill
Centaury
ToadflaxWild Strawberries
Wild Strawberries (c) 2026 Dave Hill
We then went on to one of YWT's smallest reserves. Here, the highlight was a Marsh Tit.
Marsh Tit - see white mark at base of bill
Meanwhile, in a Sancton garden,
Privet Hawk-Moth (c) 2026 John Nicholson
Meanwhile, in a Wistow garden...
Leopard Moth (c) 2026 Mike Hind
Finally, in a Beverely Parklands Garden Moth trap
All photos (c) 2026 Nigel Kitchen
Box-Tree
The UncertainBuff Ermine
Riband Wave (Female)
Riband Wave (Male)
Smoky Wainscot
In the moth trap this week
20 June
Aethes Margaritana
Ashy Button
Bird-Cherry Ermine
Coronet
Coronet
Elephant Hawk Moth
Flame Shouldered-Dart
The Lackey
Morning-Glory Plume-moth
Obscure Wainscot
Pine Hawk Moth
Scalloped Oak
Banded Yellow & Thistle Ermine
21 June
Barred Marble
Beautiful Hook-tip
Buff-tip
Clouded Border
Common Footman
Mottled Rustic
Common Yellow Conch
Dark Arches
Dwarf Cream Wave
Ermine Knot-horn
Flame Carpet
Homoeodoma Sinuella
Marbled Minor
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| Marsh Grey |
Mottled Beauty
Mottled Rustic
Poplar Grey
Riband Waves
Celypha Lacunana
22 June
Common Footman
Common Marble
Double Square-Spot
Green Budworm Moth
Lackey
Ditto
Meadow Grey
Mottled Beauty
Bramble-shoot Moth
Notocelia Trimaculana
Ditto
Phycitodes Binaevella
Poplar Grey
Short-cloaked Moth
Single dotted Wave
Small Magpie
Snout
23 June
Bright-line Brown-eye
Common Marble
Common Footman
Least Carpet
Lackey
ditto
Marbled Carpet
Orange Pine Tortrix
ditto
Swallowtail
Notocelia Rosaecolona
24 June
Ash Bud
Barred Fruit Tree Tortrix
Beautiful Hook-tip
Blood Vein
Coronet
Elephant Hawk Moth
Gypsonoma Dealbana
Magpie
Maple Leaftier Moth
Oak Lantern
Red Banded Tortrix
Scalloped Oak
Turnip Moth
White Plume Moth
25 June
Large Yellow Underwing
Smoky Wainscot
Small Winscot
Silver-ground Carpet
Short Cloaked Moth
ditto
Ruddy Streak
Holly Tortrix
ditto
Dwarf Cream Wave
Clouded Border
Celypha Lacunana
Ancylis Achatana
26 June
August Thorn














































































































































































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