Thursday 27 September 2018

An early morning in Wigston Magna, Leicestershire - September 27, 2018


I put the moth trap out last night and trapped and identified just thirty-nine moths covering twelve species.  Red-line Quaker was new for the garden and Blair’s Shoulder-knot new for the year and a Foxglove Plug was a real surprise.

The following were recorded: Light Brown Apple Moth [2]; Garden Carpet [1]; Common Marbled Carpet [1]; Foxglove Pug [1]; Brimstone Moth [1]; Silver y [1]; Barred Sallow [2]; Red-line Quaker [1]; Lunar Underwing [10]; Blair’s Shoulder-knot [1]; Large Yellow Underwing [8]; and Lesser Yellow Underwing [10].


Foxglove Pug


Red-line Quaker


Blair's Shoulder-knot


Lunar Underwing


Lunar Underwing

A day at Rutland Water, Rutland - September 25, 2018


When I left home this morning and headed to Rutland Water it was quite cool and he car indicated that it was just 1.5°C as I was approaching Stockerston.  There was however a clear sky and little wind and the forecast was suggesting the temperature might reach as high as 20°C later in the day.  I saw a Common Buzzard as I approached Stanton Wyville and a Red Kite onto the Uppingham Road, near Blaston.

When I arrived and parked on the unnamed road alongside the fishponds, Steve was just coming out of the field, having checked the fishponds.  He hadn’t seen a great deal with an eclipse drake Red-crested Pochard being the highlight.  I saw the pochard before I went through the gate to check the fishponds myself and I heard a Common Greenshank, which flew over the water as I walked down to the water trough.  As I scanned through the birds towards the western end there were plenty of birds that included Northern Shoveler; Gadwall; Eurasian Wigeon; Mallard and Eurasian Teal and there were also good numbers of Common Moorhen and Little Grebe.  As I scanned the muddy area close to the trees I found three Common Snipe and two Green Sandpiper, and a Eurasian Curlew flew over.  There were a couple of Egyptian Geese and several Great Cormorant on the bund but the area between the bunds contained far fewer birds.

I eventually went back to the road and then to the gate before joining Steve on the end of the spit.  A Great Egret was feeding in the bay south of the spit and four Little Egrets were observed.  Steve saw a Common Buzzard land on the north shore, where it remained for some time and there were a few Northern Pintail along the north shore.  Steve then left and said he was going to Barnsdale to see if he could locate the Red-necked Grebe and I went and viewed the woodland to the west where I found a Coal Tit, a few Eurasian Blue Tits, a Great Tit and three Goldcrests.  It wasn’t long afterwards when I received a WhatsApp message indicating that Steve had found the Red-necked Grebe and it was apparently swimming west from Armley Wood.

Malcolm had called me earlier to say he was a Eyebrook Reservoir and would join me later.  I gave him a call and he was still at Eyebrook as he had been looking for a reported Whinchat without success.  I informed him I was going to look for the Red-necked Grebe from the fisherman’s car park and he said he would join me.

I drove along Oakham Road to the fisherman’s car park and climbed over the gate to scan the north arm.  As I made my first sweep with the bins I picked up a grebe swimming west along the arm and suspected it was the Red-necked Grebe.  I got the scope on the bird and confirmed my identification and watched it as it continued swimming at some pace down the arm.  It eventually stopped almost opposite the car park and provided some nice views, although it was probably about midwater.  I then heard a Common Sandpiper call, which then landed just to my left where it remained for a while before going back up the arm and landing on the shore a little further away.  Malcolm had arrived in the car park and both the Red-necked Grebe and Common Sandpiper were still visible, but the sandpiper flew further up the arm and disappeared before he joined me.  The Red-necked Grebe was still sitting on the surface still provided nice views and when a fishing boat came down the arm it started to come towards us but as the boat went by it swam back up the arm and away from us.  Other than a Northern Pintail, a Common Pochard and a distant Red Kite we hadn’t seen much else and so went to the Egleton Reserve.

I suggested to Malcolm that we went to the southern area of the reserve and so we walked through the wood to the west of Lagoon One.  We didn’t see anything much as we went through the wood but stopped just after coming out and had a Common Chiffchaff and a male and female Blackcap in the bushes and a Eurasian Jay flew over.  We continued along the track to Snipe Hide and found a rather nice example of a Shaggy Ink Cap just outside the hide.


Shaggy Ink Cap

The flash just outside the hide had almost gone dry during the hot weather and since being filled hadn’t produced many birds and the water level was now quite low again.  There were a small party of Canada Geese but nothing else on the scrape, but we could see a single Great Egret on Lagoon One.  Malcolm then cried Kingfisher, but it disappeared as quickly as it appeared, and I missed it.  A party of Common House Martin then dropped low over the flash and were obviously feeding but they didn’t stay too long and moved off, but I found a single Sand Martin just before they departed to the west. 



Having exhausted Snipe Hide we continued onto Harrier Hide to view Lagoon One, where we found four Little Egrets and a Common Greenshank.  When I looked out to the right of the hide I found a Common Chiffchaff in bushes but with little else we moved on to Fieldfare Hide, seeing a Small Copper as we walked along the track.


Small Copper

The water is now some distance away from the hide but other than nine Little Grebe and a Little Egret there was little else.  I then noticed a Great Egret alongside the Little Egret but neither Malcolm or I had seen it fly in and we assumed it was probably the bird off Lagoon One, which we had seen flying off.  It then flew back towards Lagoon One and disappeared adding further evidence that it was probably the same bird.


Great Egret


Great Egret


Great Egret

With the time now approaching 12:00 we headed back to the car park for lunch and afterwards joined Steve in the centre.  There was a single Common Snipe to the left of the viewing area and a party of at least twelve Barn Swallow flew in front of the centre as they headed south.  Two Eurasian Curlew were observed towards Harrier Hide and there were three Black-tailed Godwits on the long island.  A Eurasian Sparrowhawk was observed over Lax Hill and a Common Buzzard circled just in front of the viewing area.


Common Buzzard

Brian had joined us in the centre and he, Malcolm and I set off for the northern lagoons, seeing a Common Buzzard over the large meadow and hearing a Jay in the woodland alongside the Winter Trail.

We headed for Northern Shoveler Hide on Lagoon Three and found two Green Sandpiper quite close to the hide and a third towards the reed island.  There was a Little Egret quite close to the hide and we found four Common Snipe on the edge of the reed island.  A Black-tailed Godwit then appeared from behind the reed island and a Jay then flew over, followed by a second and then a third and the godwit was joined by a winter male Ruff.  We had already seen a Red Kite over the woodland and Brian then picked up a Eurasian Hobby, which performed well over the wood.  A Great Egret then flew over and a second dropped out of sight behind the islands only to appear a few minutes later before flying off towards Lagoon Two.


Juvenile Green Sandpiper


Great Egret


Great Egret

Malcolm and I then went to Buzzard Hide to get a different view of Lagoon Three and flushed several birds as we opened the flaps in the hide, included another Green Sandpiper and just before we left there were two Eurasian Hobby over the woodland and I counted seventeen Common Pochard.

There was a nice Common Snipe close to Crake Hide and another Little Egret but nothing else of note and we moved onto Lapwing Hide, where we found two eclipse male and a female Red-crested Pochard.


Common Snipe

Our final port of call was Sandpiper Hide on Lagoon Four where we found two Yellow-legged Gulls and Malcom picked up a Eurasian Sparrowhawk that landed in the bushes to the west of the lagoon.  As I scanned Burley Wood I found two Common Buzzard and a Common Kestrel before we started to make our way back to the car park.  As we were approaching the centre Steve called to say there was a female Greater Scaup in the North Arm.

I was thinking of calling at Eyebrook Reservoir to the end the day but decided I would go and look for the scaup.  When I arrived, Steve was with Lloyd on the spit and when I joined them Steve gave me directions for the scaup, which was asleep but when I found it, it raised its head briefly revealing the white blaze and the rather rounded head.  Lloyd then pointed out the female Common Scoter, which has now been present for well over a month.  I stayed with Steve for a while but then called it a day.

Monday 24 September 2018

A day in Leicestershire & Rutland - September 22, 2018


Roger picked me up at around 07:00 and after picking up David he drove to Eyebrook Reservoir.  We had a Jay and a Common Kestrel just after passing through Blaston, where there were also twelve Red-legged Partridge.

As we approached Eyebrook Reservoir from the northern approach road we saw another eight Red-legged Partridge.  Roger then continued along the Leicestershire side and turned in a gateway, where there were four more Red-legged Partridge, and parked at the norther corral.

David was in the corral first and when I joined him he had already located the Grey Phalarope, which we had seen on Thursday evening.  It was however quite restless, flying around with only short stays on the water.  It then landed on the far shore and started preening and so we went around to the other side hoping to photograph it, but it had moved when we got to the other side.  We picked it up again towards the inlet when it spent quite some time flying around the inlet and landing on the water near the corral.  It then went quite high and we lost it and it wasn’t seen again before we departed, and we assumed that it might have gone, but it was seen again later.

We had seen a Common Buzzard perched near the bridge as we drove around to the Rutland side and I had counted eighteen Northern Pintail near where we were watching the phalarope from.  Mike, who had joined us then found a European Stonechat and there was a Yellow-legged Gull down towards the island.  We walked back down the road and found three Common Ringed Plovers, two Dunlin and a Common Greenshank near the inlet, where there was also a Little Egret.  A Red Kite was observed over the reservoir as it drifted south and there was a second Little Egret along the Leicestershire bank.  There were a few hirundine over the water and on closer inspection we found they were all Sand Martin.

We headed for the Lyndon Reserve at Rutland Water next as both David and Roger were hoping to catch up with the American Wigeon and the Grey Phalarope we had missed on Thursday and was still there yesterday.

When we arrived we initially went down to Teal Hide to scan the South Arm and found thirteen Common Pochard near the hide.  Chris Park then sent a WhatsApp message indicating that the Grey Phalarope was off the Green Bank.  We could see Chris but even after speaking to him we were unable to locate the phalarope, even though he was still watching it and gave us some idea of where to look.

We eventually decided we should go to Wader Scrape Hide to see if we could find the American Wigeon, although it hadn’t been reported since I saw it on Tuesday.

We hadn’t seen anything of note as we walked to the hide and on entering the hide there were plenty of birds in the bay to scan through.  There were good numbers of Gadwall, Eurasian Wigeon and Coot with smaller numbers of Mallard and Eurasian Teal.  As I scanned the shore towards the bridge I found a first-winter Grey Phalarope feeding along the edge of the water.  I alerted the others and we had reasonable views as it walked away from us.  I called Chris, as we were under the impression that Thursday’s bird was an adult, which he confirmed, making this bird a second at Rutland Water and a third in the counties.  The Grey Phalarope did fly around but wasn’t quite so restless as the Eyebrook Reservoir bird.


Record shot of the first-winter Grey Phalarope

Whilst in the hide I counted sixteen Little Grebes and there were five Little Egrets in the bay and David found a Eurasian Curlew.  A Common Buzzard had been seen on the bund and when one flew over we assumed it was the same bird and there was also a Yellow-legged Gull on the bund but with no sign of the American Wigeon we made our way back.

We did call in Deep Water Hide and picked up a phalarope in flight that landed on the far shore.  When we got it in the scope we could see it was a first-winter Grey Phalarope and presumably the same bird we had seen earlier in Manton Bay.  There were numerous Common House Martins in the South Arm and I suspected there were several hundred.


Common House Martin


Common House Martin

From Lyndon we drove to the unnamed road to view the North Arm and after parking walked down towards the spit.  Mike, Roger and I stopped to observe a group of passerines, which were mainly Long-tailed and Eurasian Blue Tits, but we also found a Common Chiffchaff, two Goldcrests and a European Treecreeper.

When we joined David, he said there were two Great Egrets, one on the north shore and the other in the bay to the south.  I scanned the southern bay and found seven Northern Pintail, a Common Pochard and two Little Egrets as well as the Great Egret and Mike found another Eurasian Curlew.  I then scanned the north shore and found the Great Egret along with four more Little Egrets and Roger alerted us to a Common Tern feeding over the water.  There were several waders along the shore, but they were well spread out and I had seen four of each Common Ringed Plover and Dunlin, when a WhatsApp message from Richard Bayldon arrived indicating that there was a Great Skua east of the island in the South Arm.

We spent no time in getting around to the Old Hall and with Richard still there we were soon watching the skua.  It was resting on the water and drifting towards South Arm Two.  I called Chris, who had seen it from Lapwing Hide, and he said that they had also been watching a nice juvenile Arctic Tern and so we walked west to view the area.  We soon found a tern that turned out to be a Common Tern, which we thought was the bird we had seen on Thursday but couldn’t see any more terns in the arm.  We then noticed a tern over Lagoon Two that was obviously feeding over the lagoon but was too far away to identify.  We watched as it eventually flew towards Lagoon Three before moving towards us and feeding over South Arm Three when we were able to confirm that it was a juvenile Arctic.  Richard had also seen the adult Grey Phalarope but despite another search we were again unable to find it, but we did find six Dunlin on the island before it started to rain, and we then went to Egleton for lunch.

The rain was rather intermittent but after we had finished our lunch we went to the centre when it became a little more persistent.  There were three Little Egrets and another Great Egret on Lagoon One and I counted nine Northern Pintail.  There had been a Hobby in view as we went up to the viewing area, which I missed, but I then noticed it perched on one of the posts near Mallard Hide.  It was an immature that remained in view both in flight and perched for the remainder of our stay.  There were also two Black-tailed Godwits on the long island and two Dunlin and a Eurasian Jay flew over.  Another birder then indicated that there was a Western Marsh Harrier near the swift tower, which looked like a further female but appeared rather dark, suggesting it might be an immature.  David then found a Common Greenshank at the back of the lagoon and a Common Kingfisher perched on a post in front of the centre briefly before flying further away and perching again, before disappearing.  David then spotted a Eurasian Sparrowhawk landing on a post to the left of the hide, which was rather brownish, but as it flew it was quite small and we considered that it was a juvenile male.

With the rain still falling and a message earlier form Chris Hubbard regarding the adult Grey Phalarope being visible form Teal Hide occasionally we decided it might be the best place for us to go.  When we arrived Erik and Craig were in the hide and hadn’t seen the phalarope and despite a rather extensive search were unable to locate it and eventually called it a day.  A Common Buzzard we saw just after leaving Manton was the only bird of note on the way home.

It had been a good day’s birding with a county year-tick, the Great Skua, and two Grey Phalaropes being the highlights with one being self-found.

Friday 21 September 2018

A day in Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Leicestershire & Rutland - September 20, 2018


There was a Temminck’s Stint near Soham, Cambridgeshire and a Pallid Harrier in Norfolk yesterday and so David, Roger, Malcolm and I had planned to go for them today.  The weather forecast yesterday indicated that there would be some overnight rain, which should be clear where we were heading around 09:00, however the forecast had changed and there was now a risk of rain all day.  Roger picked me up at around 07:00 and we then drove to David’s, who was the nominated driver, before collecting Malcolm in Market Harborough.  Malcolm then informed us that there had been negative news on the Temminck’s late last night but despite that and the weather we decided to head for Welney and hopefully the Pallid Harrier.

As we made our way towards Peterborough the rain was quite heavy at times and after reaching Thorney we decided we would call at Eldernell before continuing to the Welney Wetland Centre, where the harrier was being seen.

When we reached Eldernell it was still raining but was now mainly a light drizzle but there was no sign of the hoped-for Common Cranes but we did surprisingly have a female Western Marsh Harrier in flight.

The journey between Eldernell and Welney produced a couple of Common Kestrel, one just after leaving Eldernell and the other the other side of March and we then had a Common Buzzard before reaching the B1098.

On reaching Welney it was still raining, and it had been over three hours since I had left home.  The benefit here is that there is a rather pleasant hide, where we were able to stay and look out over the washes, where there was a small lake just in front of the hide.  There was a single Black-tailed Godwit and five Common Snipe around the edge of the lake and four adult and two juvenile Whooper Swans feeding in the fields beyond and Malcolm picked up a Whinchat on the edge of the scrub beyond the lake.  As the rain eased we found a Western Marsh Harrier flying to the east and another birder alerted us to another harrier to the west.  When I got on the second bird there was clearly a white rump and we suspected it was the Pallid Harrier.  It then flew in front of the hide, and although some distance away we were able to confirm that it was the Pallid Harrier, before it flew further to the east.  As it started to rain it dropped down again and disappeared.  There was a good number of hirundines feeding over the lake, most of which were Barn Swallows, but we did see a single Sand Martin and a Common House Martin. There was also a juvenile Common Shelduck amongst the more numerous Northern Shoveler, Gadwall, Mallard and Eurasian Teal and a Common Redshank was also observed, and a Common Kestrel was observed to the west.

As the rain eased again a Western Marsh Harrier was seen and then the Pallid Harrier also took to flight, and we watched as it flew some distance to the east before dropping out of sight again.  As we went back to the car for lunch I saw five Eurasian Tree Sparrows around the feeding area and after lunch with a report of a Grey Phalarope at Rutland Water we headed off back towards home territory.

There was a Common Kestrel at the roadside as we drove along the road away from the centre and there was another alongside the A47 to the west of Guyhirn and a Common Buzzard before we reached March.  A WhatsApp message from Erik then arrived indicating he had found a Glossy Ibis near the Old Hall.  I gave him a call and he confirmed that it was between the end of the road and the Old Hall and that the Grey Phalarope was still in South Arm Three.  We were now close to Peterborough and were optimistic we would be seeing a couple of good birds, one of which was a year-tick.  However, it wasn’t long afterwards when another WhatsApp indicated that the ibis had flown off.  We saw another Common Buzzard just after passing through Peterborough but hadn’t seen anything else as we pulled up near the Old Hall.

Erik was still there but it was surprising how quickly the wind had got up and there were now some significant waves in South Arm Three.  Erik was still pretty sure the phalarope was still there but after walking around the cycle track to view the area where it had been there was no sign.  We spent quite some time scanning the water but eventually having to concede it had at least moved and possibly left.  We did see fifty Common Pochard, two Common Goldeneye, seven Little Egrets and a Common Tern whilst looking for the phalarope, with the goldeneye being my first of the autumn.

We then walked back towards the car and I went on to view the bay near the Old Hall where the ibis had been as Erik said there was some Common Ringed Plover and Dunlin there and I was hoping that perhaps the phalarope might have joined them.  I went as far as the Old Hall to get a better look into the bay and found another Little Egret, two Common Ringed Plover, a Little Ringed Plover and eight Dunlin but there was no sign of the phalarope.

Disappointed missing both good birds we went to the North Arm where we had twelve Northern Pintail, two Great Egret, four Little Egrets, twelve Common Ringed Plover, five Dunlin and a Yellow-legged Gull and a Eurasian Hobby over Burley.

A visit to the centre produced another Great Egret, a Red Kite and three Ruff before leaving for Eyebrook Reservoir.

When we arrived at Eyebrook Reservoir I was pouring my coffee in the northern corral when David said I’ve got a Grey Phalarope.  He provided some directions and we were all able to have views of it on the Rutland shoreline.  It seemed rather restless as it kept flying short distance between short stays on the shoreline.  There were three Ruff amongst the gulls and a Common Greenshank on the far shore and like at Rutland Water plenty of hirundine, of which we could only identify Common House Martin.  Three Northern Pintail and a Red Kite were also observed during our brief stay.

It had turned out to be a pretty good day with two year-ticks with the Grey Phalarope being particularly pleasing having dipped on the one at Rutland Water.

A day in Leicestershire & Rutland - September 18, 2018


I considered not going out today following yesterday’s yellow warning for strong winds but it didn’t seem to bad and the warning was eventually cancelled and so I made my way to Eyebrook Reservoir a little later than usual.  I didn’t see a great deal on route with a single Red Kite at the Horninghold crossroads being the best.

I arrived at the northern approach to the reservoir at around 08:20 and went to the northern corral after turning around.  I had seen a single Red-legged Partridge as I approached the reservoir and there were twenty-three on the track from the gate where I turned.

When I entered the corral, I could see a Little Egret in the stream and eventually saw three.  As I scanned the far shore I found two Common Greenshanks and then noticed some small waders on the mud, which turned out to be five Common Ringed Plover and two Dunlin.  There were two Ruff on the shore to the south of the corral and I saw a couple of Northern Pintail on the reservoir.  I drove around to the Rutland side, where it was quite difficult to view, due to the wind, but I did count another twelve Northern Pintail making fourteen in total.  Whilst I was in the corral there was a small movement of Barn Swallow and I counted twenty-two and also picked out a single Sand Martin.

I had called Steve to see if he was out and had any luck with yesterday’s reported American Wigeon, which was in the fishponds at Rutland Water.  He and Terry hadn't found the wigeon but had seen six Green Sandpiper in the fishponds and thirty-two Common Redshank in the North Arm and I therefore felt that it would be a good place to start at Rutland Water.

I saw two more Red Kites, one just before Uppingham and another over the town and arrived at Rutland Water at 09:15 and at the unnamed road a few minutes later.  I parked near the gate into the field and made my way down to the water trough to view the fishponds.  There were plenty of birds and I saw three Little Egrets but was only able to locate three Green Sandpipers and there was a Yellow-legged Gull on the bund and a single Common Pochard on the water.

I returned to the road and walked down the road and through the gate to reach the spit. I counted the Little Grebes and found twenty-two and with just twelve in the fishponds the numbers appear to be dropping.  When I reached the spit there were twenty Egyptian Geese feeding on the south shore, which I assumed were the twenty that had flown over the fishponds earlier and there was another nine on the spit.  Five of the six Great Egret Steve and Terry had seen were still present in the southern corner and there were five Little Egrets scattered along the southern shore.  I then found several of the Common Redshank on the shore and initially when I counted them I could only find twenty-eight.  However, I finally managed to count thirty-two only to find another bird making thirty-three and I did a recount and was able to confirm that there were thirty-three, which is an exceptional autumn count.

As I scanned the north shore I found a party of smaller waders and could see there was a mixture of Common Ringed Plover and Dunlin, but they weren’t easy to count due to a combination of the wind and their constant movement.  They flew around on several occasions and then landed a little closer when I was able to see there were ten Common Ringed Plover and eighteen Dunlin.  I found a single Northern Pintail amongst the wildfowl and a Common Buzzard was observed over the reservoir to the north.  There were 100+ hirundine over the water but they all appeared to be Common House Martin.

From the North Arm I went to the Egleton Reserve and after parking walked to the centre.  I quick look at the feeding station produced just a couple of Great Tits and so I went into the centre to view Lagoon One.  Mike was already there, and we went up to the viewing area to view the lagoon.  There was a Common Kestrel perched towards the Wet Meadow and a couple of Common Greenshank at the back of the lagoon.  Two Ruff were observed to the right of the centre and a single Eurasian Hobby was observed over Brown’s Island.  A female Western Marsh Harrier made a brief visit causing some disturbance and there were four Little Egrets on the lagoon.  A Common Snipe flew over and shortly afterwards Mike and I went for our lunch.

Whilst having lunch in the car park a Eurasian Hobby flew over and a WhatsApp message from Steve indicated that the American Wigeon was in Manton Bay.  When Mike and I had finished our lunch we decided we would go to Lyndon to hopefully see the wigeon.

When we arrived in the car park Steve’s car was still there and so I gave him a call and found he was in Teal Hide and that he had found the American Wigeon from there, but it was in Manton Bay, which is some distance away.  Terry had therefore gone to Wader Scrape Hide as he wasn’t certain he was picking up the right bird.

Mike and I set off towards Wader Scrape Hide but didn’t see very much on route but met Terry as we were approaching the hide.  He had seen the wigeon, but it had taken him some time to find it as the view is partially obscured by vegetation.  He gave some indication as to where the bird was and Mike and I then went into the hide.

We could see plenty of birds on the water, many of which were wigeon, and having set the scope up I started to scan through the flock.  We couldn't see all the birds as a couple of willows obscured some of the water where some of the birds were.  However, Terry said the American Wigeon was amongst the Canada Geese and I think it was the third pass that I found the eclipse male American Wigeon.  I alerted Mike who was then also able to find it.  I opened the windows at the left-hand side of the hide and scanned the area towards the bridge.  Work was being carried out on Shallow Water Hide again and consequently there were fewer birds but there were five Eurasian Curlew roosting on the far side and I also found a Green Sandpiper.  There were five Little Egrets in the bay and I found a Yellow-legged Gull on the bund and thirteen Northern Pintail on the water.  Mike then picked up a Red Kite soaring towards the west and just afterwards I was able to locate the American Wigeon for another birder in the hide.

We went into Teal Hide when we got back to the centre as Steve had located another forty Common Redshank in South Arm Three.  We scanned the shore from Goldeneye Hide into South Arm Three but there was no sign and on speaking to Steve they had apparently walked towards Fieldfare Hide and out of sight.  I then picked up a couple of Common Terns that were flying towards us from the dam but before they reached us they turned and headed back towards the dam.

After returning to the Egleton car park Mike departed and I checked the feeding station, where there were a few common birds but nothing unusual. 


European Greenfinch


European Goldfinch

As I went to the centre Steve and Terry were walking down and we went into the centre together.  We hadn’t been in there very long when Terry picked up a passerine between Harrier and Mallard Hides, which turned out to be a Whinchat.  As we were looking at this I picked up a male European Stonechat, which was hovering over the vegetation before landing on one of the fence posts and then dropping into the grass.  Steve then picked it up again slightly to the left and we all had reasonable views.  After seeing a Red Kite over Lax Hill, a Hobby flashed in front of the centre and headed towards Mallard Hide before disappearing.  I caught sight of a pale tip to the tail indicating that it was a juvenile and shortly afterwards there was an adult, which we then saw several times before I left Steve and Terry and headed to the northern lagoons.

I went into Shoveler Hide on Lagoon Three first and found Martin already there.  He briefed me on what he had seen but a Peregrine Falcon had caused some disturbance just before I arrived.  There were three Green Sandpiper and a Ruff on the island in front of the hide and there were two Hobby over the wood.  I moved around to Buzzard Hide with Martin, to get a different view of the lagoon.  There were sixty Common Pochard on the lagoon and I picked up two Black-tailed Godwits on the island and Martin noticed the head of a Great Egret behind another island.  Three Ruff then flew in and dropped out of sight near to Shoveler Hide.  The Great Egret then took to flight only to return a few minutes later and landed back on the island but this time in full view.


Great Egret


Great Egret


Great Egret

I then noticed what I thought would be the two Hobbies over the wood but when I looked it was a Hobby chasing a Eurasian Sparrowhawk, which was then joined by the second Hobby before the Eurasian Sparrowhawk dropped out of sight.  Two of the Green Sandpipers dropped in front of the hide before we left and I set off to Crake and Lapwing Hides.


Male and female Common Pochard


Male Common Pochard


Female Common Pochard


Green Sandpiper

When I got into Crake Hide there were two Little Egrets and presumably the two Green Sandpiper I had just seen from Buzzard Hide.


Green Sandpiper

There were plenty of wildfowl in front of Lapwing Hide and I did manage to find a single drake eclipse Red-crested Pochard.  There were five Little Egrets in front of Brown’s Island and I could see another six on the Lyndon shore.  I looked towards Fieldfare Hide, which is not visible from Lapwing Hide and found four of the forty Common Redshanks.

A visit into Dunlin Hide on Lagoon Four produced six Northern Pintail and five Yellow-legged Gulls and there were two Red Kites and a Common Buzzard over Burley Wood.

An early morning in Wigston Magna, Leicestershire - September 17, 2018


I put the moth trap out again last night and trapped and identified 107 moths covering twenty-six species, of which four were new for the year.

The following were recorded: Ermine species [1]; White-shouldered House-moth [2]; Gold Triangle [1]; Agriphila geniculea [2]; Small Dusty Wave [2]; Small Blood-vein [3]; Garden Carpet [1]; Brimstone Moth [2]; Dusky Thorn [1]; Willow Beauty [3]; The Snout [1]; Ruby Tiger [1]; Burnished Brass [1]; Copper Underwing [1]; Mottled Rustic [1]; Vine’s Rustic [3]; Barred Sallow [1]; The Sallow [1]; Beaded Chestnut [1]; Lunar Underwing [2]; Common Wainscot [3]; Shuttle-shaped Dart [2]; Large Yellow Underwing [36]; Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing [3]; Lesser Yellow Underwing [28]; and Setaceous Hebrew Character [4].


Beaded Chstnut


Barred Sallow


The Sallow

An early morning in Wigston Magna, Leicestershire - September 16, 2018


I put the trap out last night for the first time in a while and trapped and identified eighty-one moths covering sixteen species, one of which was new for the year.

The following were recorded: Light Brown Apple Moth [3]; Agriphila geniculea [2]; Small Blood-vein [3]; Common Marbled Carpet [2]; Brimstone Moth [3]; Dusky Thorn [2]; Willow Beauty [2]; The Snout [1]; Vine’s Rustic [1]; Angle Shades [1]; Lunar Underwing [7]; Large Yellow Underwing [27]; Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing [1]; Lesser Yellow Underwing [22]; Square-spot Rustic [2] and Setaceous Hebrew Character [2].

Sunday 16 September 2018

A day in Leicestershire & Rutland and Lincolnshire - September 15, 2018


David and I headed for Eyebrook Reservoir this morning but hadn’t seen a great deal as we entered the northern approach road to the reservoir.  David drove around to the Rutland side, seeing a Green Woodpecker and a Common Kestrel, and after parking we looked back into the bay at the inlet, where there was a good number of wildfowl and gulls.  The wildfowl were mainly Mallard and Eurasian Teal and the gulls Black-headed.  There was suddenly some disturbance and a juvenile Peregrine Falcon flew over but didn’t appear to be interested in hunting and the birds soon dropped back down.  As we scanned the mud and edges we found a Common Greenshank, a Little Egret, five Common Ringed Plover, six Ruff and a Common Snipe.  As I went through the birds on the water I found a rather smart drake Mandarin Duck, which appeared to be associating with some Greylag Geese.  It swam behind them on the water and then up the stream and when the geese went onto the mud the Mandarin followed them.


Drake Mandarin Duck


Drake Mandarin Duck

I called Malcolm to see if he was out and found he was at the bridge with Roger and they both drove around to see the Mandarin.  I then found six Little Grebes on the water and two Red Kites were observed over the Leicestershire fields.

From Eyebrook Reservoir we drove to Barnsdale at Rutland Water where we were hoping to find the Great Northern Diver and the Red-necked Grebe.  After parking we walked down the road to view the arm, seeing a Common Chiffchaff and Long-tailed Tit before we reached the viewing area.

There weren’t a lot of birds to the east, being mainly Great Crested Grebes and I did find Little Egrets on the far shore.  Malcolm then thought he might have the Red-necked Grebe and gave us all directions.  When I found the possible bird, it was with a Great Crested Grebe and in very poor light as we were looking towards the sun.  It and the Great Crested Grebe were swimming quite quickly towards the end of Armley Wood and the possible was clearly smaller than the Great Crested Grebe, but it was difficult to pick out any colouration.  The white on the Great Crested Grebe stood out but the other bird looked mainly dark, but the shape was characteristic of a Red-necked Grebe and we all eventually were satisfied it was the Red-necked.  As David and I got into the car to go to Egleton, Roger alerted us to a Northern Raven calling, and we eventually saw two between the road and Burley along with circa thirty Common House Martins.

David was to visit a pub in Edith Weston to arrange for his walking group’s lunch in December and was keen to look for a Red-crested Pochard before he left and so we made our way to the Egleton car park, seeing a Eurasian Jay as we drove along the main Stamford road.

After we got to the car park we stopped briefly at the feeding station, where we saw, Blue and Great Tits, House Sparrow, Common Chaffinch, European Greenfinch and European Goldfinch but with nothing else we headed for the northern lagoons.

When we reached Shoveler Hide on Lagoon Three we learnt that we had just missed both the Eurasian Bittern and a Western Marsh Harrier.  The Western Marsh Harrier had also scattered the waders that were feeding n the lagoon.  We eventually saw three Green Sandpipers, two Common Snipe and two Ruff before David went to Lapwing Hide to look for the Red-crested Pochard.  Malcolm, Roger and I remained in the hide hoping the bittern might show again as it had apparently dropped into the reed island.  Other than a few Common Pochard and a Common Buzzard over the wood we had seen very little else when David called to say he was off to the pub, having seen a Great Egret from Buzzard Hide.  We did see a Great Egret very briefly as it dropped behind the island and out of view, which David said was a second bird.  A Little Egret appeared to the left of the hide and four Egyptian Geese flew over before we decided to go to Crake Hide.


Grey Heron from Shoveler Hide


Egyptian Geese over Lagoon Three

As we walked along the track I suggested we should go into Buzzard Hide to see if we could see both of the Great Egrets.  When we got in only one Great Egret was visible and I counted fifty-three Common Pochard.  The birds suddenly took to flight and Roger picked up a Eurasian Sparrowhawk coming towards us, which then went over the hide.  As I looked at the birds in flight there were two Black-tailed Godwits and three Ruff, which all landed back on the islands.  A Red Kite then flew over the lagoon for a few minutes before flying away.


Northern Lapwing from Buzzard Hide

Having seen most of note from the hide we moved onto Crake Hide and whilst in the hide a Grey Wagtail was heard as it flew over, but we couldn’t locate it and just afterwards Roger noticed a Water Rail in the reeds next to the hide.


Water Rail

David had called to say he was back from his visit to the pub and was in the centre and so we started to make our way back, with the intention of calling in Sandpiper Hide on Lagoon Four.  I then had a BirfGuides notification that there was a Pectoral Sandpiper at Deeping Lakes, which is under an hour away from Rutland Water.  I called David to make him aware and whilst I was on the phone Roger thought he might have had a Eurasian Hobby that had disappeared and was possibly visible from Sandpiper Hide.  Malcolm went up the ramp to the hide, whilst Roger and I remained at the bottom as I had heard a Eurasian Treecreeper.  Malcolm then came back saying there was no sign of the hobby and just afterwards we located the Eurasian Treecreeper.

When we got back to the centre I went up to the viewing area to make David aware we were back, and we went to the car for lunch and which we all went in David’s car to Deeping Lakes.

We arrived at Deeping Lakes around 13:30 and Malcolm had what he thought was the Pectoral Sandpiper when the rest of us joined him.  However, it went behind the island before we all had a good look and we weren’t certain if it was it or just a Ruff.  I saw Mike Snow further along and went and joined him and he was able to confirm that we had seen the Pectoral Sandpiper.  I then realised that Brian and Roger were also there and that they had all come over from Rutland Water as well.  David and Roger then joined us and a few minutes later the sandpiper was on view again in a gap along the island.  It then flew to the back of the lagoon and landed on an island where it had been seen earlier.

A Western Yellow Wagtail was then heard calling on a couple of occasions, but we were unable to locate it.  The Pectoral Sandpiper then came back to the original island and we had some nice views, if a little distant, of a superb juvenile before we set off back to Rutland Water.

We had a Red Kite just after leaving the reserve and a Little Egret alongside the River Welland as we approached Deeping St James.

When we arrived back at Rutland Water we headed for the unnamed road leading to the North Arm and after a chat with Chris and Colin we went down to the spit.  There were five Eurasian Curlew on the north shore, which were disturbed by a Red Fox and flew to the south shore.  Malcolm then found the Red-necked Grebe again but it was still very distant, although the light was now better.  I then counted twenty-one Little Grebes and there were twenty-four Egyptian Geese.  Four Northern Pintail were observed towards the north shore and another four were found in the south bay along with a Little Egret.

We went back to the Egleton Reserve and were considering going to Lagoon Four but on checking the book it seemed a better option to remain in the centre as the Western Marsh Harrier and a Common Kingfisher had been seen.  Erik, who we had seen in the North Arm, was already in the viewing area and informed us he had seen a European Stonechat.  It had been seen between Snipe Hide and Harrier Hide but appeared to have disappeared when Erik said he had found it.  When I got on the bird he had realised that it was a Whinchat and whilst looking at the Whinchat the European Stonechat appeared close to it and we then had a second Whinchat.  There was also a Great Egret and five Little Egrets on the lagoon.


Great Egret


Great Egret

As we continued scanning the lagoon we found three Northern Pintail, a Snipe, a Ruff, a Common Sandpiper and two Green Sandpipers.  The Western Marsh Harrier also paid a visit and it was an adult female and not one of the two juveniles I had been seeing recently.

David, Malcolm and I paid a brief visit to Eyebrook Reservoir where we found twelve Northern Pintail and a Common Snipe, which we hadn’t seen this morning.

Friday 14 September 2018

A day in Lincolnshire - September 13, 2018


David, Malcolm Roger and I had planned to go to Gibraltar Point today hoping that a juvenile Red-footed Falcon present for the last two days would still be there.  We left David’s a little after 06:00 and I drove towards Stanford and then onto Boston and Skegness arriving a Gibraltar Point by 08:25. We hadn’t seen a great deal on route with a Red Kite just after passing through Glaston in Rutland being the best.

We were surprised to see so few cars in the car park and were unsure where the West Dunes were, which is where the bird had been feeding but a site map cleared that up and they were right next to the car park.

There was a distant Common Kestrel over the salt marsh and a small party of Common House Martins over the car park as well as a few Barn Swallows, but they disappeared just before we set off along a track along the seaward side of the dunes.  We weren’t exactly sure where the bird had been feeding and as we walked along the track when suddenly it appeared in flight to our left and perched in the top of a dead tree.  It remained briefly before taking to flight again and landing in another tree quite close to the road.  I took a few photos of it before it flew again and landed in a different tree.  We felt we might see it better from in the dunes but when Malcolm and I went into the dunes we found it was on the other side of the road and so I went to the road where David and Roger joined me.  It flew another couple of times before perching again when I was able to get a few good shots before it flew over again.  Malcolm had now joined us, and we found it again hovering over the dunes before it flew out of sight only to return a few minutes later and land in the trees again.  When it flew again we lost it and it wasn't seen again for quite some time.


Juvenile Red-footed Falcon


Juvenile Red-footed Falcon


Juvenile Red-footed Falcon


Juvenile Red-footed Falcon


Juvenile Red-footed Falcon

With the falcon disappearing I followed another birder along the path leading to Sykes Farm and he alerted me to a Spotted Flycatcher.  David and Roger then came into the area and had brief views of the flycatcher and when Malcolm arrived David had located it again in a tree further along the path.  We continued down the path and David who had heard Eurasian Tree Sparrow and Eurasian Siskin earlier heard a Siskin calling again but all we could find were a group of European Goldfinch.  There was a Great Spotted Woodpecker in a tree to our left and as I walked past the farm building and further along the path I flushed a European Green Woodpecker.  We then walked back along the track when Malcolm found a Willow Warbler and I found a single Eurasian Siskin.

We continued along the track to the hide overlooking Jackson’s Marsh, seeing another Great Spotted Woodpecker as we did so.  From the hide there were ten Eurasian Spoonbills, a Little Egret, nine Pied Avocets and a Eurasian Curlew.  A Red Fox was also observed, which did cause some disturbance as it moved onto the meadow and disappeared into the hedgerow.


Ten Eurasian Spoonbills


Eurasian Spoonbills feeding


Red Fox


Eurasian Curlew

As we left the hide David and Malcolm had gone on ahead and had stopped and were observing a flock of birds in a tree.  I glanced through the bins and identified some European Goldfinches but when we reached David and Malcolm they had found a Eurasian Tree Sparrow amongst the finches.

We continued onto the first hide overlooking Tennyson’s Marsh and found there were a good number of birds on the marsh.  There was a party of c.340 Black-tailed Godwit to the left of the hide and fourteen Common Shelduck just beyond these.  Roger found a Common Snipe on the edge of the reeds that ran away from the hide and further away there was another flock of roosting waders.  Most were Common Redshank, of which there were forty-one, but we also found a single Spotted Redshank and five Common Greenshank and there were another fifteen Pied Avocets.

We visited the second hide on Tennyson’s Marsh, but it was quite full, although we did find another two Common Greenshank before we went over the road to Mere Hide.  A Whinchat had been reported from the hide and we soon found it in the scrub along the eastern edge of the mere.  There was a single Tufted Duck amongst the more numerous Northern Shoveler, Mallard and Eurasian Teal on The Mere and there was also a Little Grebe and a Common Snipe flew over.

As we walked back towards the centre other birders informed us that the falcon had not been seen since early morning.  A visit to the information centre was disappointing, although whilst there we saw a mass of waders over The Wash, probably numbering in the tens of thousands and we considered most were certainly Red Knot.

Our plan was to go to Freiston Shore next where a Western Cattle Egret had been present for a while and had been reported earlier today.

We arrived at Freiston just before 12:30 and had our lunch, seeing a Eurasian Tree Sparrow before going down the path towards the sea wall.  As we approached the hide we could see a large concentration of waders through the hedge and went into the hide to look but found that they were all Common Redshanks, except for two Dunlin.  Another group of waders, again mainly Common Redshanks, included eight Eurasian Oystercatcher, a Pied Avocet and sixteen Ruddy Turnstone.

A little further along the path was some steps leading to a viewing area looking south over the fields where there were several groups of cattle.  We scanned through the cattle but couldn’t locate the Cattle Egret and found just a couple of Common Kestrel.  David and Malcolm then went on to the seawall, whilst Roger and I remained, trying to ensure a third falcon was just a Common Kestrel.  The bird was perched on a post some distance away and the light wasn’t helping in identifying it.  It did fly between post on to occasions when it recalled a Common Kestrel.  We still weren’t one hundred percent certain when the phone went, and it was David saying they had found the Cattle Egret.

When we joined David and Malcolm there were also two Little Egrets and after an altercation between one of them and the Cattle Egret, the Cattle Egret had all but disappeared.  I moved my position slightly and was able to see it a little better when I could see the thicker shorter yellow bill confirming its identification.  We could now see all the waders on the lagoon better and there must have been around six hundred Common Redshanks, but the only addition was a single Black-tailed Godwit.

David then went back to see if the falcon was still on the post and when I joined him he said he still wasn’t certain but still suspected that it was a Common Kestrel.  I went and looked and whilst doing so two Western Yellow Wagtails flew over calling and I alerted David.  He joined me and after a minute or so, it or another flew over again, which Roger also saw.  Roger and I then saw the falcon fly again between posts and both agreed it was just a Common Kestrel.

Our final site was to be Frampton Marsh and as we left Freiston we had a Common Kestrel hunting alongside the road and we arrived at Frampton Marsh about thirty minutes later at 14:30.

David went into the centre to check what had been seen and came out saying that a Little Stint and the Long-billed Dowitcher had been seen from the seawall car park and the seawall but that the Black-necked Grebe hadn’t been reported and so we drove to the seawall car park.

We had seen a Common Kestrel as we drove along the road and on reaching the car park we looked for the Long-billed Dowitcher and the Little Stint.  David found three Barnacle Geese with a group of Canada Geese and there were a few Black-tailed Godwits and Common Snipe and two Pied Avocet, two European Golden Plover and a Dunlin on the marsh close to the road but there was no sign of either of the target birds.

We walked along the path and up to the seawall and another birder who had seen the dowitcher earlier pointed out one of the areas it had been frequenting recently.  We walked along the seawall to a bench and looked back into its favoured channel.  David and Malcolm pointed out two birds in the channel but when I got the scope on them they were both Common Snipe.  There were two Little Egrets on the fresh marsh and another on the saltmarsh and there were six Little Grebes in the pool directly in front of the wall.  As I scanned the edge of this pool I found four Spotted Redshanks with three Black-tailed Godwits roosting and David said he and Malcolm had a bird in the channel they were pretty sure wasn’t a snipe.  I got the scope on the bird, but it was partially hidden but eventually gave good enough views to confirm that it was the Long-billed Dowitcher.

I then picked up a Western Marsh Harrier and a Eurasian Curlew over the saltmarsh and there was a Common Kestrel hovering further along the seawall.  As we walked back along the wall two Western Yellow Wagtails flew over and this time Malcolm connected.

The Little Stint had been seen yesterday from the 360 Hide and so we headed of in that direction.  We stopped when we reached the Reedbed Marsh junction to view a swan, which turned out to be the long-staying Whooper Swan and as I continued scanning I found eleven Northern Pintail and my only Ruff of the day.

The visit to the 360 Hide just produced a couple of Pied Avocet and so we went bck to view the Reedbed Marsh but other than several Black-tailed Godwits, a Dunlin, three Common Snipe and a Common Redshank there wasn’t much else and we walked back to the car, seeing three Egyptian Geese to the south.

The Black-necked Grebe had been reported on BirdGuides and so we drove around to the reservoir to look for it.  As we scanned Malcolm thought he might have it and walked further along the grass bank to get a better look but whilst he was doing this David found it with several Little Grebes in the northeast corner.  I then found a Green Sandpiper and Roger found a Common Scoter both on the southern edge, where there was also another four Common Snipe.

Feeling pleased with our day’s birding, where I recorded seventy-eight species with one, the Red-footed Falcon, being a year-tick.