Saturday 10 October 2020

October Holiday Part 2 Lammergeier

 The vulture is still around. Having departed Derbyshire it was eventually located in Norfolk, disappeared again and then a few days ago was seen in south Lincolnshire around Spalding and venturing into Cambridgeshire at times. It has been mobile at times pitching up in odd locations and at one point roosted in a tree on an industrial site. Yesterday it spent much of the afternoon north of Thorney, roosting in a roadside tree and on one occasion disrupted traffic by feeding on the road!

Early start again today, and we arrived at 0715 to find a row of cars parked and a small crowd beyond. Luckily the verges were wide enough for the cars as there had been problems yesterday with bad parking. I was expecting to see the vulture perched a little way off, I wasn't expecting it to be one of three trees right by the road at the exit of a local farm and birders standing underneath looking up!. We stayed a bit further back and had stunning views as it was lit by the rising sun. The digiscoping kit worked quite well with the Z7 camera.



I was fiddling with the camera and missed it flying off over the field but managed to grab a couple of poor flight shots. We were horrified to see it drop onto the road in front of an approaching car. Luckily it was a birder who managed to stop and prevent other cars passing until it had flown into the field. Apparently it had picked up a flat rat.

The views in the field were pretty good though a bit distant and after a brief flight settled down to feed on a bit of rabbit rather closer to us. With a cold wind picking up and cloud building up I was resigned to spending a lot of time watching it in the scope on the deck. Colin threatened to go back to the car for a coffee but held off for a bit which was fortunate as it took off and we got amazing flight views. By now it had gron a full tail but the wings were starting to get a bit tatty.




My one regret about our trip to the Peak District to see it was not seeing it in flight (and barely seeing it at all over half a mile away on the cliff) and once it had moved south I wasn't' really expecting to see it again, and certainly not as well as we did today. Despite it's status as an introduced species (but wild bred and after several generations) its got to be my bird of the year.

October Holiday Pt 1 Norfolk

 My usual  holiday started last weekend-the usual October fortnight.

My first chance of a trip was on Sunday 4th. Ideally it would have been to Hartlepool for a Masked Shrike. I had missed the first two records due to ill health, and despite misgivings Colin and I decided to go for it, but with apparently poor restricted views and zero social distancing we bailed and headed for Norfolk instead. Not a bad idea as much of the east coast was covered in. migrants all Saturday. Unfortunately as it turned out a lot had departed overnight and the Shrike showed well all day with a better behaved crowd.

We got to Titchwell not long after first light with only a couple of cars in the car park. There were a lot of thrushes heading east overhead with smaller birds like Siskin, pipits and a nice Crossbill.  There were a few Blackcaps and tits feeding on the car park apples and I glimpsed a larger pale warbler which could have been Garden or possibly Barred. There were also several Bullfinch as well. 

We headed off round the Fen Trail in the hope of migrant chats etc but it seemed a bit quiet. There were a lot of Song Thrush, Blackbird and Redwing in the trees but smaller birds were hard apart from a few Chiffchaff and crests. Dunnocks and Robins tried their best to be Redstarts and Flycatchers. At the end of the trail at Willow Wood I found and eastern (probably Siberian) Lesser Whitethroat-the first I'd definitely seen, but it was too far from the camera. Over the pool and reed-bed masses of hirundines were feeding-mainly House Martins but lots of Swallows and a few Sand Martins as well.

Walking up the bank, the usual assemblage of waders and wildfowl were on the marsh, but Colin found a Swift, so I alerted the guys following us but they had already had a message from further ahead. We got closer and became rather excited as the scope views seemed to show a brown bird with a pale throat-all signs of Pallid Swift, which being October is pretty much the expected Swift. Unfortunately close views put paid to that idea and it turned out to be Common-very unusual at this time of year.

The sea didn't produce much. There were hordes of gulls and waders feeding on razor clams trhat had been washed up on the previous weeks storm, but the south easterlies meant that there were few birds passing offshore apart from a couple of Gannets and a flock of Wigeon.

After lunch we headed to Burnham Norton. It was a bit showery and windy and the small crowd part way down the track had not had a sighting of the Barred Warbler for some time. A couple of Blackcaps and some Redwings were feeding in the bushes and again Robins and Dunnocks tried hard to be rare. Further down on the dunes, the reported Radde's Warbler hadn't been seen since early morning, so we gave up and headed to Holme instead.

I havent been to the NOA observatorty for a few years, so it was a bit of a shock to see the state of the wooded dunes after recent years storms with large open areas where we had in the past seen things like Little Buntings, Flycatchers and chats feeding in and under trees. What the open areas did provide though were many more hirundines, and some more Swifts! We may have seen a dozen in total and I guessed that storm Alex had brought them up from the Mediterranean.

The dunes otherwise seemed quiet so we went into the reserve which offered more sheltered feeding areas. Sophie directed us to the Heligoland trap  where the Blythe's Reed Warbler was lurking. While waiting we also checked the birches and pines opposite, and patience produced three Yellow Browed Warblers, a female Pied Flycatcher, Chiffchaffs and Goldcrests, and my second Siberian Lesser Whitethroat (this had been trapped and ringed). Eventually the Blythes Reed also showed-as I had only seen various bits of two birds previously it was nice to have a whole one for a change, out in the open and not skulking as typical. One couple had spent several hours over two days before they got to see it so we were rather lucky.