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Tag Archives: birding

A Whinchat family

08 Saturday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn migration, bird migration, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, migrating birds, Saxicola rubetra, Whinchat

180908 2 whinchats (1)

One of the highlights of this week at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park has been watching the party of three Whinchats that have stopped off to feed up prior to their migration to central and southern Africa. I think they’re a family group because this one appears still to have the plumage of a juvenile.

180908 whinchat (1)

Another (below) is still part way through the moulting process. I read recently that birds don’t usually migrate until after their moult is complete, as the lack of all their proper flight feathers, in particular, can affect their ability to fly long distances. Perhaps that’s another reason why they’ve broken their journey at Cosmeston.

180908 whinchat (2)

This is the third Whinchat, or Saxicola rubetra, to give it its scientific name.

180908 whinchat (3).jpg

Their common name, as with many birds, reflects their behaviour – whin is another word for gorse, as these little birds are commonly found amongst gorse and bracken and areas of low shrubs and bushes. Chat relates to their call, which combines the sound of two stones being tapped together with a series of melodic whistles.

180908 2 whinchats (2).jpg

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I got a Gropper!

06 Thursday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Grasshopper warbler, Gropper, Locustella naevia

Non-birders will be wondering what on earth my title is about; birders, on the other hand, will immediately recognise the name and understand the reason for my excitement. Gropper is birder shorthand for Grasshopper warbler (Locustella naevia) and this is one difficult bird to photograph, except perhaps in the springtime, when it pops up a little more often to advertise itself to potential mates. Although Groppers are present in many parts of Britain, it’s usually their grasshopper-chirping-like song (called reeling) that lets you know one’s about.

180906 grasshopper warbler (3)

I was alerted to this bird’s presence by my birding friend Graham, who got a photo the previous day, and he’d also seen migrating birds in this general location, one of the outer fields at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, so I figured it was worth a look.

180906 grasshopper warbler (2)
180906 grasshopper warbler (4)
180906 grasshopper warbler (5)

I found this particular bird and stood still watching it for so long that a grasshopper (the insect, not the bird) started climbing up the inside of my trouser leg, which, sadly, didn’t end well for the grasshopper as I freaked slightly about what it might be. And, to be completely honest, not having seen a Gropper up close before, I actually thought the bird I was watching was an immature Reed warbler. It was only when I sent Graham a photo later that he confirmed its identity. I might just have to go back and see if I can find it again.

180906 grasshopper warbler (1)

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Wild word: feather

05 Wednesday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

#WildWords, bird feathers, birding, birdwatching, British birds, feather, wild words

Feather: Noun; any of the flat appendages growing from a bird’s skin and forming its plumage, consisting of a partly hollow horny shaft fringed with vanes of barbs (Oxford Dictionary).

180905 feather (1)

I often come across discarded feathers when I’m out walking and try to guess which birds they’ve come from, though, unless they’re very distinctively patterned, that can be virtually impossible. Sometimes the feather just has to come home with me … like these three below. I think the bottom one’s probably from a Pheasant – not sure about the other two.

180905 feather (3)
180905 feather (4)

180905 feather (5)

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Birding out the window: Collared doves

02 Sunday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birding out the window, birdwatching, British birds, Collared dove, garden birds

180902 collared dove (1)

Sometimes you don’t even have to leave home to watch wildlife, even when you live in a first-floor flat with no garden. These two beautiful Collared doves were visiting the garden of a neighbour across the back lane. Although I can’t see them, this kindly person obviously has bird feeders that are always kept topped up with delicious bird treats, as quite a variety of birds visit the garden on a regular basis.

180902 collared dove (2)

I wonder if they’re speculating about whether I also have food for them?

180902 collared dove (4)
180902 collared dove (3)
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More migrants passing through

01 Saturday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

autumn migration, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Chiffchaff, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, migrating birds, Pied plycatcher, Redstart, Wheatear, Whinchat, Whitethroat, Willow warbler

My local country park, Cosmeston Lakes, has been awash with migrating birds this past week. And it’s not just me getting better at finding them – according to birders who’ve been checking the area much longer than I’ve lived nearby, this has been a bumper year for sightings.

180901 Redstart female 2408180901 Redstart male 2408

On 24 August I found two Redstarts, a male and another that may have been a female or an immature bird that hadn’t yet developed its full adult colouration.

180901 wheatear 2408

Also on the 24th I had a very fleeting view of a Wheatear that popped up from grass to fencepost, then was off in the blink of an eye.

180901 whinchat 2708

On the 27th my birding friend Della texted me to say she’d found a Whinchat. That was the fastest I’d ever walked to Cosmeston and, luckily, the bird waited for me – and, in fact, stayed around most of the week so I saw it several times.

180901 common whitethroat

180901 chiffchaff180901 willow warbler

During my frequent visits to Cossie this week, I’ve seen ones and twos of Whitethroat and Chiffchaff, and tens of Willow warblers. These are the ones I spotted on the 30th.

180901 redstart 2908

Also on 30 August, I spotted another Redstart and, from the dark head colours, I could tell this one was definitely a male.

180901 pied flycatcher

The week ended with a bang! My birding friend, Graham, let me know that he’d seen a Pied flycatcher with a small group of Spotted flycatchers, a most unusual visitor. Luckily, I was on the coastal path heading homeward so was able to divert towards Cosmeston and, with Graham’s help, got distant views of this beautiful little bird catching flies along the tree line. What a stunning week it has been!

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Seeing spots before my eyes

27 Monday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, birds, nature, seasons

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Tags

autumn migration, bird migration, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Muscicapa striata, Spotted flycatcher

The autumn bird migration is now in full swing in south Wales and almost every day migrating birds are being spotted at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, where they’re stopping off to refuel before they tackle their long flights to warmer over-wintering locations in Europe and Africa. One that I find particularly charming is the Spotted flycatcher (Muscicapa striata), which is not really spotted at all, more streaky and stripy. The scientific name is more accurate: Muscicapa is a combination of the Latin word musca, meaning fly, and capere, meaning to catch, and the epithet striata is from the Latin striatus, meaning striated.

180827 spotted flycatcher (1)

I saw my first Spotted flycatcher at Cossie on 7 August.

180827 spotted flycatcher (2)
180827 spotted flycatcher (3)

A week later, on the 15th, I had two sightings.

180827 spotted flycatcher (4)
180827 spotted flycatcher (5)
180827 spotted flycatcher (6)

The 20th was a bumper day, with three birds, two obviously travelling together, and another doing its own thing.

180827 spotted flycatcher (7)

And last Friday, the 24th, a birding friend put me on to a single bird, that was catching flies in the paddock I walked through on my way home. Fingers crossed I manage to see a few more before they all disappear for the winter.

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Fish for lunch again?

25 Saturday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, little grebe, Little grebe chick, Little grebe feeding chick, Tachybaptus ruficollis

Last Saturday we had photos of a Great crested grebe feeding its youngster. Today I spent a delightful 20 minutes watching a Little Grebe (Tachybaptus ruficollis) catch and feed fish to its offspring. Here are some photos …

180825 Little grebes (1)

The adult Little grebe, on the left, is still in its summer/breeding plumage. I’m not sure if it’s a male or female as, from various websites I’ve checked, their plumage appears to be the same, and both parents share the incubation and care of their young. The little one was constantly peeping at its parent for food so the adult was diving in search of the small fish and aquatic invertebrates they like to eat.

180825 Little grebes (2).jpg

This is looking hopeful.

180825 Little grebes (3)

A not-so-small fish!

180825 Little grebes (4)

The youngster waits not-so-patiently for its parent to subdue the fish.

180825 Little grebes (5)

The handover.

180825 Little grebes (6)

Waiting to see if the young one can/will swallow the fish or drop it.

180825 Little grebes (7)

Still waiting …

180825 Little grebes (8)

The little one is struggling with the size of the fish but, at this point, the parent has given up waiting and dived down to find more.

180825 Little grebes (9)

One more big gulp and it’s down! I wonder how many fish it eats in a day.

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Birding at Garwnant and Llwyn-on

23 Thursday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, fungi, nature, walks

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Crossbill, Garwnant Forestry, Glamorgan Bird Club, Llwyn-on reservoir

We birders of the Glamorgan Bird Club are tough: we don’t let almost constant drizzle put us off a good day’s birding. Heck, we even sit at picnic tables eating our lunch in the drizzle. As long as our optics (bins, ’scopes and cameras) aren’t getting damaged by the wet, we carry on.

180823 birding at Garwnant (1)

And it was certainly worth carrying on ’cause we enjoyed a magnificent day’s birding. We started off with a walk around the trails at Garwnant Forestry in the morning and followed that with a walk through the woodland to check out Llwyn-on reservoir in the afternoon.

180823 birding at Garwnant (2)

I notched up my 187th bird species for the year with the several Crossbills we spotted and heard in various locations along the forestry tracks, and we also enjoyed good sightings of Willow tits and Willow warblers, Tree pipits and Treecreepers, and more than a few Spotted flycatchers flitting in and out from the trees and shrubs in their constant search for the perfect fly snack.

180823 birding at Garwnant (3)

Crossing the Llwyn-on feeder stream after lunch, I earned some brownie points for spotting a Dipper splashing about upstream, and the Spot flies were also active along the river bank there.

180823 birding at Garwnant (4)

As we walked through the woodland at the northern end of Llwyn-on reservoir, we were amazed and delighted by the sight of thousands of tiny mushrooms (probably one of the Mycena species) growing under the conifers, as well as several large groups of False chanterelles. I even had the birders sniffing at a white mushroom to teach them why it’s called The Miller – ‘It smells of dough/flour’, they correctly said.

180823 birding at Garwnant (5)

At the reservoir we marvelled at the magical sight of over 200 House martins feeding on insects above the shallow water – luckily for the birds, the reservoir is beginning to fill again after our recent drought. And the perfect finish to a wonderful day came with the cheery sight of 3 Yellow wagtails grazing together with, perhaps, 16 Pied wagtails in the grass at the water’s edge.

180823 birding at Garwnant (6)

One of the many small streams in the area

Here’s my sightings list for the day: Blackcap, Blue Tit, Bullfinch, Buzzard, Carrion Crow, Chaffinch, Chiffchaff, Coal Tit, Cormorant, Crossbill, Dipper, Goldcrest, Goldfinch, Great Crested Grebe, Great Tit, Grey Heron, Grey Wagtail, House Martin, Jay, Lesser Black-backed Gull, Long-tailed Tit, Nuthatch, Pied Wagtail, Raven, Reed Bunting, Robin, Spotted Flycatcher, Swallow, Tree Pipit, Treecreeper, Willow Tit, Willow Warbler, Woodpigeon, Wren, and Yellow Wagtail. Also seen or heard, but not by me, were Blackbird, Great spotted woodpecker, Lesser redpoll, Sand martin and Siskin – well, I might’ve heard the Siskin but I’m not entirely sure.

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Lunch … mmmmmm!

18 Saturday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

bird with fish, birding, birdwatching, Black-headed gull, British birds, Great Crested Grebe, grebe with fish, juvenile Great crested grebe

Raw fish might not be everyone’s idea of a tasty lunch but it’s the staple diet for this juvenile Great crested grebe.

180818 great crested grebe (1)

And here it comes now …

180818 great crested grebe (2)

‘Thanks, Mum.’

180818 great crested grebe (3)

‘It’s a slippery sucker.’

180818 great crested grebe (4)

‘It’s a bit big, Mum. I’m not sure how to eat this thing.’

180818 great crested grebe (5)

‘Ooops, almost dropped it.’

180818 great crested grebe (6)

Seeing the young one struggling to down its lunch, a Black-headed gull swoops in to try to steal the fish. Both grebes dive immediately.

180818 great crested grebe (7)

‘Where’d they go?’

180818 great crested grebe (8)

Seconds later, the gull flies off, Mum and junior both surface, and Mum’s come up with the second course.

180818 great crested grebe (9)
180818 great crested grebe (10)

This is one contented-looking Great crested grebe!

180818 great crested grebe (11)

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The aphid-eaters

15 Wednesday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, insects, nature, plants

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

aphids, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, ladybirds, Wild parsnip, Willow warbler, Willow warbler migration

180815 willow warbler (5)

Do you remember last Friday I blogged about the abundance of ladybirds at Cosmeston? They were feasting on the huge numbers of aphids on the Wild parsnip plants. Well, it turns out the ladybirds have had some competition for those aphids this week, as the migrating Willow warblers move through. I don’t think we need to worry though – there are more than enough aphids to go around!

180815 willow warbler (1)180815 willow warbler (2)180815 willow warbler (3)180815 willow warbler (4)

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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