Iceland - 4th - 8th March 2022

Wednesday 22 August 2018

Mid week birding

I started the day at Harrington Airfield. a place you either love or hate. For me it is the former . After a pleasant wander around I had notched up 2 Whimbrel which flew over calling, a Northern Wheatear, Whinchat , Turtle Dove and 5 Grey Partridge. A large mixed flock of Linnets, Goldfinches, Yellowhammers and Reed Bunting remain and there were Whitethroats and Willow Warblers in the bushes.
Despite being out and about for most of the day I saw very little else of note.  Plenty of Common Buzzards and Red Kites in the air and feeding on the freshly cut and scuffled fields.

Eric visited Titchmarsh Reserve, Thrapston and says " a real good day on the reserve considering the time of year. 1 or maybe 2 Hobbies at the south end of the reserve but no sign of the Osprey today.    A large mixed flock of tits and warblers with plenty of young Willow Warblers among them.  There were singing Lesser Whitethroat, Willow, Sedge and Garden Warblers and a Chiffchaff calling.     A Kingfisher flew up river.
Viewed from the north hide a Great White Egret was perched in a tree and good views of a superb Marsh Harrier as it dropped in by the Peter Scott/ open backed hide."
Eric also commented that " birding in Northants is tough sometimes but it is not all about megas and rarities"  . Sentiments that I can relate to as I trek around the field hedges etc.

Regards Eleanor

Tuesday 21 August 2018

An early morning meander around the fields below Hanging Houghton produced a Northern Wheatear, Common Redstart, 5 Grey Partridge and 4 Golden Plover flying around calling before finally settling on a recently scuffled field.  These are the first ones I have seen for months, another sign that Autumn is rapidly approaching which is my favourite time of year. I always find it an exciting time for birding as you just never know what you might find.  I had a little taster of this today.   Due to the hot weather my running has suffered so I was determined to go for a long run this morning.  As I went along the Brampton Valley Way between Lamport crossing and Draughton crossing I was literally stopped in my tracks by the sound of a singing Cettis Warbler . Initially I thought I was hearing things but I stopped and listened and it soon obliged by singing again and I managed a glimpse of the bird as it moved through the hedge. 
This afternoon I checked a hedgerow between the villages of Walgrave and Old as in recent years it has picked up Common Redstart on migration. This is the first time I have checked this hedge for a while and there were at least 4 Common Redstart flitting about along the hedgerow and landing on the fence posts and field. Whilst they were not very vocal they were shimmering and shaking their tails.  In the same hedge were 2 Spotted Flycatcher, several Blackcaps, Whitethroat and Willow Warbler.
I spent some time simply watching these birds as they moved along the hedgerow. It always amazes me how loyal birds remain to certain areas and year after year use the same hedgerows etc as they migrate.

Regards Eleanor 

Monday 20 August 2018

Monday's Musings

Yesterday I visited the Bird Fair at Rutland Water . I had a lovely day catching up with friends both local and from overseas as I wandered around the 8 marquees full of fabulous displays, information, optics, clothing, bird food , books etc and the many tempting offers on view.  I didn't listen to any of the huge variety of lectures on offer but I did watch the pantomime !!!!  It was a "take" on the well known story of "Wind in the Willows" and it was hilarious with some well known TV folk taking part. 
 I was pleasantly surprised to find a lack of crowds so it was quite easy to move around and view things. Apparently Friday was "manic" there.   I did witness a sudden movement of birders who migrated quickly to the BTO ringing demonstration when it came over the tanoy that a Grasshopper Warbler had been caught and could be seen in the hand , a bird which many folk have never seen at such close quarters.

This morning it felt as if there should be something about, or maybe it was simply wishful thinking on my part. With this in mind I headed for Harrington Airfield where I saw absolutely nothing !!! It was almost a birdless zone.
This afternoon I fared a little better in the valley below Hanging Houghton/ Blueberry Area where I bumped into a Northern Wheater, Whinchat, Common Redstart and a Curlew.

Regards Eleanor

Saturday 18 August 2018

Saturday Selection

After all the activity in the valley below Hanging Houghton, this morning it was eerily quiet, no combine harvesters and no birds !!
I took two of the dogs to Staverton for their agility training and a couple of Ravens were rather amusing with their acrobatics and strange vocal calls . They were clearly enjoying themselves or perhaps just having a laugh as they watched us !!
Birding at nearby Kentle Wood area produced a male Peregrine and 2 Northern Wheatears on a newly scuffed field whilst at Borough Hill there were 2 Common Redstart and a Whinchat.
On my way home I stopped off at Ravensthorpe where I was surprised to see so many wildfowl present including a male Wigeon and a female type Red Crested Pochard, a stark reminder that Autumn is rapidly approaching.
My final outing was to Harrington just before dusk where there was a Turtle Dove, Common Redstart and Whinchat.

Regards Eleanor

Friday 17 August 2018

A bit of movement

After the recent hot spell it was nice to get out and about and feel that "Autumnal Nip" in the air.  This morning I wandered around the Blueberry area where a "cream crowned" Marsh Harrier was hunting over the big field on the hill.  As I walked through the farm itself I was attacked by two puppies !!!  so I just had to stop and play with them and in doing so could hear a Common Redstart calling. I had to prise myself away and a male was calling and tail flicking in the hedge leading up to the house.  A further 2 Common Redstarts, this time juveniles were found in a different hedgerow on my walk round.
This afternoon I took my young collie to watch the harvest being gathered in but he wasn't at all phased by the giant combine harvesters and tractors etc.  The newly cut fields were a magnet for the hirundines, mainly swallows which swooped low over the fields and the Red Kites which came down to forage.  There was obviously a bit of movement as I came across 2 Whinchat, 1 Wheatear, another Common Redstart and at least 8 Whitethroat.  I also saw the same Marsh Harrier again.
A late evening visit produced a Barn Owl which is the first one that I have seen in the valley for a few months.

Eric has been birding at Titchmarsh again where he reports " plenty of young warblers around of at least 6 different species. An Osprey was again fishing on Elinor Lake and after two attempts at fishing it gained height and headed south,   perhaps that's it for another year ?. The 2 Great White Egret remain at the north end of Aldwincle. 

Regards Eleanor 





Thursday 16 August 2018

Garden birding

Hello

Very little opportunity for birding today and nothing of particular interest when we did venture out!

In fact the garden is difficult to beat at the minute with flocks of juvenile Starlings and House Sparrows arriving each day, which in turn are attracting other birds too. The Goldfinches and Greenfinches are bringing their fledged young to feed on the sunflower hearts and niger feeders and good numbers of juvenile Blue Tits are enjoying the peanuts and fat. Smaller numbers of Great Tits and Coal Tits are sometimes joined by a couple of Nuthatch and there are a few juvenile Chaffinches and still the occasional Yellowhammer coming for food too. A few Robins, Dunnocks and Blackbirds are a mixture of juveniles and moulting adults and a few warblers are occasionally moving through the garden, sometimes in the company of a roving tit flock. A small flock of Yellow Wagtails continually call from the grass field behind our house and occasionally join the Pied Wagtails that pop in and out of the garden.

Woodpigeons, Stock Doves and Collared Doves are every day birds and Jackdaws, Magpies and Carrion Crows squeeze themselves in to our small garden too! Of course all this attracts visits from the Sparrowhawks which must hate the Swallows living next door because they nearly always see them incoming and they alert all the birds around!

Regards

Neil M





Great Crested Grebe including
catching and consuming a reasonable-
sized Perch!




Great White Egret.

Tufted Duckling!

All images taken at Blashford Lakes
courtesy of John Tilly.

Wednesday 15 August 2018

Birds of Frampton.

Hello

This morning a ringing session was undertaken around the Old Scaldwell Road Feeding Station at Pitsford Reservoir. Initially it seemed really quiet and it took us some time to catch anything - but then a fresh momentum kept the birds coming until lunch time.

We encountered fifteen different species, the majority of birds being new and hatched this year. The 107 captures were made up of a Blackbird, a Great Spotted Woodpecker, four Dunnocks, two Robins, 19 Great Tits, 19 Blue Tits, two Long-tailed Tits, singles of Chiffchaff, Blackcap, Garden Warbler and Lesser Whitethroat, four Whitethroats, 49 Tree Sparrows, a Chaffinch and a Sand Martin.

All the Tree Sparrows with the exception of a single adult were youngsters hatched this year, and many of these youngsters were very young indicating that they were the result of third or even fourth brood efforts. The Sand Martin was a nice surprise and an infrequent capture at Pitsford.

With all these small birds in and around the bushes, it isn't surprising that they were buzzed regularly by at least two different Sparrowhawks.

The summering Marsh Harrier put in a couple of appearances again today, initially seen before 6am when it was watched flying across the reservoir and resting on one of the tree stumps by the shoreline between the Maytrees and Bird Club hides. An adult Yellow-legged Gull was about as usual and Neil H saw a juvenile Mediterranean Gull in the Scaldwell Bay.

The gull roost off the Sailing Club this evening was disrupted due to sailboards but it was possible to count nine Yellow-legged Gulls before dispersal.

Regards

Neil M



Ruff.



Little Ringed Plover.

Black-tailed Godwit.

Peregrine.

All images taken by John
Tilly on a recent outing to
Frampton Marsh.

Tuesday 14 August 2018

Pitsford Reservoir WeBS count

Hello

It was the Pitsford Reservoir WeBS count today although in truth there were not many water birds to count. The summering Marsh Harrier was present on and off most of the morning and again at 6pm this evening, regularly spending time over The Point trees and along the foreshore between the Bird Club and Maytrees Hides. Other raptors included a Peregrine and a Hobby and other birds noted included at least seven Little Egrets, a Common Sandpiper, a Snipe, two Yellow-legged Gulls and a Raven.

Two Ravens were at Hanging Houghton again today and Eric found two Great White Egrets on the Aldwincle Lake on the Titchmarsh Reserve near Thrapston.

Regards

Neil M






Toilet humour
courtesy of Robin Gossage!

Peregrine.

Small Spotty-eyed Dronefly.

parasitic fly Eriothrix rufomaculata

All images taken today by Robin Gossage
at Pitsford Reservoir.

Monday 13 August 2018

Birds of Monday

Hello

Eric has been at it again at the Titchmarsh Reserve near Thrapston! Today he again saw three Ospreys on-site, the birds moving around between the Elinor Trout Lake, the Aldwincle Pit and Town Lake. There were still two Great White Egrets present too and other birds included four Little Egrets and two Yellow-legged Gulls and just two calling Cetti's Warblers.

Eleanor's visit to Harrington Airfield this morning provided views of a single Turtle Dove and four Grey Partridges and still good numbers of Linnets but not much in the way of migrant warblers etc.

A Whimbrel flew south over Draughton village at 7.25pm this evening 'trilling' loudly!

Regards

Neil M


Whimbrel.

Turtle Dove.

Sunday 12 August 2018

Traditional birds of August...

Hello

A/the pair of Raven paid us another morning visit to the village here at Hanging Houghton - it is likely that they have very large territories locally and pairs regularly tour around, re-establishing the boundaries, checking foraging areas and assessing potential nest sites all in readiness for breeding attempts early in 2019.

Eleanor's trek around Blueberry Farm paid off this morning with a juvenile Marsh Harrier quartering The Hill field (harvested oat crop) and two Redstarts in the hedging surrounding the short turf field just south of the farm (a traditional stop-over site in the autumn and sometimes spring too).

Birds north of the causeway at Pitsford Reservoir today included a pair of Hobby, two juvenile Ravens and an adult Yellow-legged Gull. The Tree Sparrow flock around the Old Scaldwell Road Feeding Station totalled in excess of forty birds.

The evening gull roost of the Sailing Club contained ten Yellow-legged Gulls (a variety of ages) and the only wader seen was a smart summer plumage Turnstone.

Regards

Neil M


Tree Sparrows.
Courtesy of Robin Gossage.

Turnstone.

Juvenile Mistle Thrush.

Most Mistle Thrushes will have
finished breeding now and it is at
this time of the year that they form up
into post-breeding flocks. These groups
include birds raised this year and moulting
adults and is likely to be the only time of
the year when it is possible to see a sizable
flock of Mistle Thrushes.

Saturday 11 August 2018

Ditchford WeBS count

Hello

I visited Ditchford Gravel Pits today and completed the August WeBS counts. As is often the case this time of the year, birds of interest were few and far between but there were super number of dragonflies, butterflies and other insects. I only recorded one Kingfisher, this site generally records double figure numbers in the autumn. A Hobby was enjoying the plentiful dragonflies, there were a couple of Common Sandpipers, two calling Water Rails, three Little Egrets and a brood of hungry, noisy Sparrowhawks!

Regards

Neil M




Adult Reed Warblers.

Comma butterfly on burdock.

Pond Turtle sp. Small numbers
of released turtles/terrapins can be
found in local waters.


Migrant Hawkers.

All images from Ditchford GP today.



Friday 10 August 2018

Tor the champion!

Hello

Well at last we have received some decent rainfall! I'm sure there are some juvenile birds that have never experienced it before!

A short walk in the Brampton Valley below Hanging Houghton early this morning was a pleasant, dry and sunny affair after the rain the previous evening. You could almost sense the parched land healing somewhat after a decent doust of rain.

A few migrant warblers and rather tardy buntings was about all there was on offer during my walk apart from a single Crossbill flying around aimlessly at 6.25am - you couldn't help but think it was a little lost!

This evening's gull roost at Pitsford Reservoir was enlivened with the arrival of an adult Osprey at 8.20pm, departing towards Brixworth at 8.30pm without catching anything. The gulls were rather distant in the still conditions but two super juvenile Caspian Gulls were a treat. At least six Yellow-legged Gulls were present too plus singles of Little Egret and Common Sandpiper.

Regards

Neil M




Common Eider.
Harlequin ducks.


Iceland Gull.

Raven.

All the above images from Iceland in June.



'Spot the Birdie Twitcher Tor' is his
official competing name, and this week
Tor has been competing in various classes
associated with obedience, agility and jumping.
And he's been doing rather well...!


Thursday 9 August 2018

Orca!

Hello

The bird ringing at Harrington Airfield today in cooler, cloudy conditions than of late provided sixty-eight captures of thirteen species. Most were new birds again and included both residents and migrants too.

The total was made up of four Blackbirds, seventeen Yellowhammers, five Dunnocks, four Blue Tits, twelve Linnets, singles of Robin, Goldfinch, Sedge Warbler and Reed Warbler, eleven Whitethroats, two Blackcaps, seven Willow Warblers and two Lesser Whitethroats.

This is the third and final ringing session at Harrington this week. Birds seen on-site there today included a Raven, six Grey Partridges and a Turtle Dove.

A dead Polecat at the side of the A508 on the outskirts of Brixworth today was the first I've seen for quite a while.

Eric's birding exploits on the Titchmarsh reserve today resulted in observations of just a single Great White Egret, but the three Ospreys present there today must have been spectacular!

Regards

Neil M







One of the highlights of our
super trip to Iceland in June
was encountering a large pod
of Orca or Killer Whales.