Tags
Avocet, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Lodmoor Nature Reserve, Recurvirostra avosetta, RSPB Lodmoor, winter birding
I’ve just returned from my first little holiday since last September, a four-night break in Weymouth, a location that’s now a firm favourite of mine. As has become my habit, after checking in to my guest house, I headed east along the seafront to walk off five hours of train travel with a circuit of Lodmoor Nature Reserve. Though the wetlands were more full of water than usual due to all the recent rain and the paths were, as a result, quite muddy, the birdlife was a delight, and, as expected, the species were quite different from what I’d seen in the summer months. Now, there was an abundance of Teal and Shoveler, Lapwing and Wigeon, the latter two not species I see very often and both new additions to my birding year list. The other new species was a real treat and totally unexpected, this gorgeous Avocet (Recurvirostra avosetta). The Avocet is such an elegant bird, crisply clad in classic black and white, with the upwardly curved beak that makes it instantly recognisable. I was entranced and lingered until dusk watching this bird feeding and preening; it was the perfect start to my holiday!

There is a good winter colony of avocets on the Exe near Topsham.
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Good to know, thanks, Philip. Maybe that’s where this one had strayed from, as the locals tell me very few Avocets are seen at Lodmoor. π
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this tells the story: https://philipstrange.wordpress.com/2023/05/08/where-theres-mud-theres-birds-a-visit-to-topsham-in-east-devon-to-find-the-avocets/
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I’d forgotten you wrote this. Thanks for the reminder. Maybe next winter I’ll need to visit Topsham. π
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A fantastic creature! I’d love to see one, but they don’t frequent any of the (Northern) areas of the UK I’ve frequented. On a different note; a late night coming back off the fell in total darkness this evening, with visibility down to less than a couple of meters because of thick mist, I heard a couple of Curlews flying around just above me – the first this year for me, and obviously just back from wintering on the coastal areas around Morecambe bay. It was quite delightful, or at least until all the Oystercatchers turned up, drowning everything else out! Spring can’t be too far away now.
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What a wonderful experience! There’s something magical, almost ethereal about Curlews calling in the mist.
And, yes, the birds are beginning to move. I noticed a larger number of Turnstones on the local river embankment yesterday, which is usually a sign of the more southerly birds starting to move north to their breeding grounds. Spring is on its way! π
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