Iceland - 4th - 8th March 2022

Tuesday, 12 December 2017

The Marsh Tit.



Hello 

No birds of note seen today so some images of one our scarcer birds to be found in the woodlands of Northamptonshire, the Marsh Tit. This is a species which nationally is on the decline, but not as much as the rapidly vanishing Willow Tit which it closely resembles. However in Northamptonshire the Marsh Tit appears to be holding its own and is still to be found in most mature woodlands and indeed in sub-optimal woodland habitat too. 

Strongly territorial, once birds establish themselves following post-breeding dispersal, these birds will stick to 'their' wood or part of a wood if a large woodland complex. However they regularly visit feeding stations in the winter and will venture away from their preferred habitat to do so (birds were regular visitors to the Summer Leys nature reserve feeding station last winter).

Visually these birds are easy to overlook but audibly they are rarely quiet and like most tits have a significant repertoire of calls and rather less variation in their songs. The biggest Marsh Tits overlap the smallest Blue Tits in size but are generally smaller than the Blue but bigger than the Coal Tit. Like all tits they will use holes in trees and sometimes will take to standard tit boxes to rear their young; they like to partly excavate or physically manipulate a nesting site but generally do not excavate or create a nest site to the extent of the industrious Willow Tit.

Sunflower seeds (with or without husks) are their favourite artificial food and birds quickly tame up where this food is offered. They will also consume bird fat, peanuts, niger seed, mealworms and other seeds too. It is likely that this species is present in all reasonable-sized woods in the county which offer at least some mature deciduous trees, hazel, thorn bushes (with berries) and standing rank vegetation with seed heads or similar.

Precocious, noisy, expeditious and full of bounce, these birds always make me smile when they come bounding along a woodland ride in the winter to see what I have for them, or later in the spring singing their rich if repetitive song from the cover of new buds and  leaves...

Regards

Neil M




Marsh Tits at
Scotland Wood,
Kelmarsh Estate.

Monday, 11 December 2017

Snowy landscapes

Hello

Well I don't think the snow is going anywhere just yet! So I spent the morning visiting feeding stations on the Kelmarsh Estate, the deep snow making it a much slower process than normal! Many tree branches were lowered to the floor, bearing the weight of the snow, and after tonight they will have the extra burden of ice too! Snow-bound trees look especially beautiful with un-coppiced hazel seemingly taking centre stage.

Bird-wise it seemed quiet, a single flying Woodcock at Sunderland Wood being the only noteworthy bird on my morning saunter. Toiling through the snow and clearing ground for the birds to feed at Harrington Airfield soon had me sweating; the birds were quiet here too with just three Golden Plovers and two Snipe being the only observations of note.

Jacob spent some of the day at Pitsford Reservoir today in iconic wintery weather. His bird tally amounted to two Great White Egrets, eight Pintail, two Goosanders, a Barnacle Goose, two Redshank, six Snipe, two Woodcock, seven Golden Plovers and a Grey Wagtail. The gull roost contained an influx in Common Gulls but a reduction in Black-headed Gulls plus also a first year Mediterranean Gull and a first year Yellow-legged Gull.

Regards

Neil M



Scotland Wood,
Kelmarsh Estate.

Pitsford Reservoir, courtesy
of Jacob Spinks.


Harrington Airfield
courtesy of Eleanor McMahon.

Sunday, 10 December 2017

A snowy December day!

Hello

Late last night there was a Barn Owl active on the outskirts of Old village, no doubt looking for food before the dump of snow which began a few hours later...

An organised walk at Pitsford Reservoir today had to be cancelled at short notice, such was the amount of snow puthering down. It was almost impossible to birdwatch in any event, such was the amount of snow coming down and the dull murky conditions combining to make it almost a waste of time raising binoculars.

Clearing snow for birds on the main feed station also proved difficult, no sooner had I cleared an area and the snow covered it again! Hopefully most of them managed something to eat! Six Snipe were the only birds of note I saw.

In the garden here at Hanging Houghton the birds flocked in for food, particularly Blackbirds and finches. A Mistle Thrush and a Redwing were eating the Guelder Rose berries and a Redwing and some Fieldfares came in for some apples.

A visit to Harrington Airfield this afternoon was hard going in the deep snow and flocks of 17 Golden Plovers and 20 Skylarks looked very forlorn in the big 'white-out' of the top fields. A single Snipe was seen in flight and there were still Fieldfares trying to find the very last of the berries. Harrington Airfield is often described as being bleak, it certainly was today!

Regards

Neil M




Wintery weather
at Pitsford Reservoir.





Harrington Airfield
in the snow!

Saturday, 9 December 2017

Incoming cold weather

Hello

Jacob reported that Pitsford Reservoir seemed quiet today but he still found a third year Caspian Gull, a Great White Egret, a Shelduck, eight Pintails, two Redshank, a Green Sandpiper, a Raven and a Grey Wagtail. Eric Graham visited the Titchmarsh Reserve today and saw a Great White Egret there too plus a Redpoll.

I spent some of today topping up bird feeders in anticipation of the severe frost tonight and snow during the early hours of tomorrow. Whilst doing so I heard a Hawfinch calling at Scotland Wood (Kelmarsh Estate) and saw a Siskin and a Woodcock there. Nearby there was a flock of at least twenty Siskins at Kelmarsh Hall.

Regards

Neil M


Great White Egret.
Freezing temperatures
and ice may well displace
our wintering GWEs onto
streams and brooks...

Male Siskin on a nyger
feeder. These small finches
can turn up on garden feeders
at any time of the year but
the late winter/early spring
is the period when they flock
to feeding stations.

Friday, 8 December 2017

Friday's sightings

Hello

An early morning and rather cool walk at Harrington Airfield failed to find much of interest although a flock of 23 Golden Plovers were flying about.

Eleanor took a walk around Sywell Country Park early this afternoon and noted a Little Egret, a Water Rail, a Kingfisher, three or four Grey Wagtails, a pair of Stonechats, a Cetti's Warbler, thirty Lesser Redpolls and about twenty Siskins.

A Barn Owl was hunting in the Brampton Valley below Hanging Houghton again this afternoon.

Regards

Neil M



Some of the grounds at
Lamport Hall.

Lesser Redpoll.
Courtesy of Cathy Ryden.

Kingfisher.
Courtesy of Steve Bennison.

Thursday, 7 December 2017

Some cold weather coming - and maybe snow!

Hello

Jacob's efforts at Pitsford Reservoir today provided him with sightings of just one Great White Egret, a Shelduck, 9 Pintail, a Ruff, 3 Redshank, at least 33 Golden Plovers (in flight), a Green Sandpiper, 2 Stonechats, a Grey Wagtail and a mobile adult Caspian Gull around the afternoon gull roost.

A Grey Wagtail and a single Lesser Redpoll were on view at Brixworth Water Treatment Works.

Birds in the Brampton Valley below Hanging Houghton this afternoon included two fly-through Curlews, about a hundred Golden Plovers and a Barn Owl.

A couple of ringing recoveries have been reported as follows:-

On 26th November 2017 Kenny and his team caught an adult male Blackbird bearing ring number LC11583 at Linford Lakes on the outskirts of Milton Keynes. It transpires that this bird was first ringed at Gibraltar Point Bird Observatory on the Lincolnshire coast way back on 21st October 2011 (2218 days before) when it was aged as a bird hatched that year. All this suggests that this bird originates from the continent and potentially has wintered successfully in the UK during the last six winters. No doubt this is a well-travelled bird and he has a few tales to tell!

On 25th August this year, the usual band of ringers operating at Stortons Pits on the outskirts of Northampton ringed a young female Cetti's Warbler. On 3rd December this bird turned up in a ringer's mist net 34km to the south-east in Bedfordshire at the Forest of Marston Vale. Although not a recognised true migrant, the number of recoveries of Cetti's Warblers emanating from Stortons in recent years indicates that successfully raised offspring from this reserve range widely around suitable sites in the UK.

Regards

Neil M


Male Blackbird.

Cetti's Warbler.
Image courtesy of
Chris Payne.



Wednesday, 6 December 2017

Blustery Wednesday

Hello

A calling Snow Bunting flushed up in the Brampton Valley at 7.45am this morning, from a 'scuffed' field between Hanging Houghton and Gamboro' Plantation.

A visit to Harrington Airfield at lunchtime provided only a handful of thrushes but three Hawfinches were in bushes by the third bunker and a Woodcock flushed up from between the second and third bunkers.

The reserve section of Pitsford Reservoir continued to provide a haven for two Great White Egrets and a 'redhead' Smew, these Pitsford sightings courtesy of Neil Hasdell.

Finally a Barn Owl was in roadside hedging this evening between Brixworth and Scaldwell villages.

Regards

Neil M


'Redhead' Smew.

Snow Bunting.

Tuesday, 5 December 2017

Ringing at Bradden

Hello

Chris Payne and Sam Betts spent much of the day ringing birds at Bradden today, processing 113 birds of 11 species made up of 50 Blue Tits, a Coal Tit, 15 Great Tits, a Blackbird, a Great Spotted Woodpecker, 6 Dunnocks, a Wren, a Siskin, a Greenfinch, 8 Chaffinches and 28 Goldfinches. Birds in the immediate area included Raven.

Regards

Neil M


Male Siskin.

Monday, 4 December 2017

Portrait of a Woodcock.

Hello

Yesterday (Sunday) and John Woollett caught and ringed a female Blackcap in his Astcote garden. The bird was heavy and carrying fat so was presumably still on migration.

Today (Monday) and a solitary south-bound Hawfinch was the only bird of note at Harrington Airfield; the bushes were pretty-much devoid of the usual thrushes. A flock of (presumed migrant) Chaffinches on the outskirts of Old village numbered about a hundred birds and included a female Brambling.

A relatively short ringing session at Christies Copse in the Walgrave Bay at Pitsford Reservoir this morning provided 75 captures which included a Goldcrest, 5 Long-tailed Tits, 35 Blue Tits, 6 Coal Tits, 16 Great Tits, a Willow Tit, 2 Robins, 5 Chaffinches and 3 Great Spotted Woodpeckers. However star of the show was a stunning Woodcock flushed into a mist net, providing an excellent opportunity to study this sensational bird. At least seven of these birds were present on-site.

Birds noted included a Great White Egret and a pair of Ravens and a second Willow Tit was around the copse too. However there was some significant migration on-going all morning over the Walgrave Bay with a good passage of Bramblings heading west and constant flocks of Redwings and Fieldfares, a Siskin and a couple of Redpolls doing much the same thing. A single Hawfinch was going the same way at 10am but then pitched down in trees and bushes near to the copse (but wasn't seen again). At 1.40pm, as we were walking away, a vocal Snow Bunting flew over us heading south west but also dropping and may have landed in nearby fields.

Regards

Neil M


Adult male Great Spotted Woodpecker.






The Woodcock. A bird generally seen
in flight at dawn or dusk or flushed from
undergrowth during the day. It isn't often
you see one well enough to truly appreciate
these very special birds. Superbly camouflaged,
fast and strong flyers, and an amazing head shape
with the eyes high on the side of the head
provide for excellent all-round vision. Now a very
scarce breeding bird in the county, the vast
majority of the ones we see in the winter months
are from Russia and eastern and northern Europe.

Sunday, 3 December 2017

Ringing at Kelmarsh Hall

Hello

Today was the first ringing session of the season at Kelmarsh Hall and a rise in the temperature made being out and about more comfortable than a couple of days ago! A small team of ringers managed to catch and process some 173 birds of 18 species. A Kingfisher is always a bonus bird and other birds included 7 Blackbirds some of which provided biometrics suggesting they were not local birds.

We also managed to catch and ring 2 Redwings and a Great Spotted Woodpecker and monitored 33 Great Tits, 69 Blue Tits, 4 Coal Tits, 3 Marsh Tits, 5 Nuthatches, 3 Dunnocks, 5 Robins, 3 Wrens, a single Goldcrest, 3 Greenfinches, 25 Goldfinches, a Siskin, 6 Chaffinches and a Grey Wagtail.

The Goldcrest was interesting, an adult male bird which was first ringed there in February 2015 when it was also aged as an adult male. Goldcrests rarely live longer than two years (the oldest known bird was only five years old), but this bird is at least four years old.

Other birds seen included a couple of Ravens, at least one other Grey Wagtail and thirty or so Siskins.

Three Little Egrets and a Barn Owl were in the Brampton Valley below Hanging Houghton today and the Pitsford Reservoir gull roost provided views of an adult Mediterranean Gull and a third year Caspian Gull. A Barn Owl was also present at Staverton early this morning.

Regards

Neil M



Kingfisher.
Always a privilege!

Female Blackbird.

Female Siskin.

Saturday, 2 December 2017

Northants Bird Club Meeting 6th Dec

Hello

On Wednesday 6th December it is the last 2017 indoor meeting of the Northants Bird Club at the usual venue of the Fishing Lodge at Pitsford Reservoir.

Chris Ward, a professional presenter and regular visitor to the club will provide us with an insight into the birds and other wildlife of Australia. This will be Part One of a two part presentation with Chris returning in April 2018 to complete Part Two.

The meeting commences promptly at 7.30pm, hot drinks and biscuits are available and everyone is welcome!

Neil M

Grafton Regis birding

Hello

Some seasonal images from John Tilly of birds out and about near the canal at Grafton Regis...

Neil M






Robin.


Fieldfare.

Mistle Thrush.


Redwing.



Starlings.