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Tag Archives: British birds

Glamorgan swift champions

05 Monday Mar 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Glamorgan Swift Project, nest boxes for swifts, Penarth swift champions, Swift, Swift nest boxes, Trinity Church Penarth, Trinity Methodist Church

As you all know, I’m a very keen birder and member of the Glamorgan Bird Club. A couple of months after I moved here to Penarth, I was delighted to hear Swifts screaming almost daily in the sky above my flat, and to see them practising their aerial acrobatics when I was out walking in the local area. I was aware that Swifts are an endangered species – in the last 30 years, numbers in Glamorgan have declined by 50% – and wondered what I might do to help. Here’s what happened:

11 June 2017 While on a club outing, I got chatting to Alan Rosney, the bird club’s committee member who co-ordinates the Glamorgan Swift Project. I mentioned that I heard the birds screaming overhead a lot and that there was a church across the road from me (the Trinity Methodist Church), with a tower that might be a possibility for some nest boxes. The next day I emailed Alan the church’s details so he could check it out and follow up if he thought it a possibility.

180305 Swifts Trinity (1)

19 July 2017 Alan paid a visit to the folks at Trinity Church, to discuss the plan.

7 August 2017 A positive response from the church – the boxes could go ahead, ready for the following year’s return of the Swifts.

180305 Swifts Trinity (2)
180305 Swifts Trinity (3)

29 September 2017 Alan and other project members visited the church to check where the nest boxes might be located and for Howard, the box builder and installer, to measure up.

180305 Swifts Trinity (4)
180305 Swifts Trinity (5)
180305 Swifts Trinity (6)

23 February 2018 Installation day, and Alan invited me along to see the result of my original suggestion. I had a lovely chat with Julia and Ian, other keen birders involved in the project, and with Chris, the church’s representative, and got to see inside the church tower but there was no way I was venturing up that ladder.

180305 Swifts Trinity (7)

So the boxes are in, but there was an issue with the speaker system so that will be installed in late April / early May, ready to call the Swifts to come a’nesting. The speakers are set on a timer system to play the sound of screaming Swifts, in the mornings and evenings, to try to entice the birds to use the boxes. Of course, the birds might not oblige – we can but keep our fingers crossed that they’ll take a fancy to their new accommodation. The day they traditionally return to Britain is May the 4th so, little Swifts, I’ll be looking out for you from my living room window, and may the fourth be with you!

180305 Swifts Trinity (8)

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February at Cosmeston

04 Sunday Mar 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, parks, walks, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Buzzard, chaffinch, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Great tit, Lesser redpolls, Malard, nuthatch, Redpoll, Redwing, Reed bunting, treecreeper, Tufted duck

180304 180202 (1) nuthatch

2 February A stride was required so I passed through Cosmeston as part of a longer walk. I did, as always, keep an eye out for unusual birds, though the only bird that fitted that category was a Buzzard in a tree by the dipping pond, exactly where a friend had reported it the previous day.

180304 180202 (2) buzzard

I scattered some seed around for my small and hungry feathered friends, and I did linger a while by the lake to take some photos of gulls. (I’m attempting to learn to recognise gulls of different ages but I’ll post separately about that when I’ve got more photos and information.)

180304 180202 (3) great tit

4 February There are various routes I can take when I walk to Cosmeston; on this day I approached from the north, which produced a couple of Bullfinches near Old Cogan Farm and, further down Mile Road, a couple of Redwing feasting on ivy berries.

180304 180204 redpoll (1)
180304 180204 redpoll (2)
180304 180204 redpoll (3)
180304 180204 redpoll (4)
180304 180204 redpoll (5)
180304 180204 redpoll (6)

To escape the Sunday crowds, I headed off piste and almost immediately spotted a Green woodpecker and, seeing it fly to the ground, started stalking it. It flew off but then a mixed flock of tits and finches flew in, amongst which, to my very great delight, were 3 Lesser redpolls, a bird I’ve only seen once before and which is not often seen in these parts. They were feeding in an alder tree, moving often, doing acrobatics while suspended from cones, flitting from branch to branch, all of which made them difficult to photograph. But what a delightful 30 minutes I spent watching their antics.

180304 180209 redwing
180304 180209 reed bunting

9 February I was hoping to spot the Redpolls again today but lucked out, though I did spot a flock of perhaps 8 Redwings in the trees nearby. A handsome male Reed bunting was enjoying the seed a kind passerby had left on a fence post by the west lake, and it wasn’t just me who was finding the winds strong and gusty – this Tufted duck was having a bad hair day.

180304 180209 tufted duck

21 February This was school half-term holiday week in Wales, not a particularly pleasant time to visit a country park to enjoy the delights of nature as the parks are usually full of screaming children and frazzled parents at such times. I managed to avoid most of that by taking the paths less travelled but still found much of the wildlife was being scared away by the noise.

180304 180221 fleeing the noise (1)
180304 180221 fleeing the noise (2)

Still, I thought I’d make a list of what I did see: Great tit, Blackbird, Dunnock, Robin, Magpie, Goldfinch, Redwing, Carrion crow, Jay, Wren, Blue tit, Buzzard, Jackdaw, Long-tailed tit, Woodpigeon, Mistle thrush, Chaffinch, House sparrow, Starling, Green woodpecker, Reed bunting, Nuthatch, Coal tit, Coot, Cormorant, Mute swan, Black-headed gull, Lesser black-backed gull, Herring gull, Mallard, Tufted duck, Great crested grebe, Canada goose, Greylag goose and Pochard – not a bad list, with 35 bird species, and just one mammal, the ubiquitous Grey squirrel.

180304 180228 treecreeper

28 February South Wales was feeling the brunt of the ‘Beast from the East’, a freezing weather bomb from Siberia, when I paid my last February visit to Cosmeston so it was a short visit, partly for the exercise and I also bought a couple of bags of seed from the Rangers’ Office to feed the birds. You know they’re finding foraging tough when you see a Treecreeper come to the bird feeder – most unusual! And it was also unusual to have the sparse remnants of the previous day’s snow on the ground, so I had to get a few photos of birds (Chaffinch and Mallard) in snow as well. Let’s hope spring (re)appears soon.

180304 180228 chaffinch180304 180228 mallard

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February on the Ely embankment

03 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, walks, winter

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Coot, Ely embankment, Grey wagtail, Redshank, Rock pipit, Turnstone

My first February wander alongside the River Ely was in the late afternoon of Saturday the 3rd. It was quiet – were the birds all watching Wales thump Scotland in the 6 Nations rugby, I asked myself? A faint peep alerted me to a Rock pipit tootling along the embankment path towards me. It had been minding its own business, looking for a lunchtime snack, when it suddenly realised there was a stonking great human standing on the path in front of it … at which point it flew off to the relative safety of the water’s edge.

180303 180203 rock pipit (1)180303 180203 rock pipit (2)180303 180203 rock pipit (3)

Shortly afterwards, I could see a roundish form that might’ve been a rock but was, in fact, a Turnstone, the only one seen that day. And, as well as those two birds, one Pied wagtail and two Grey wagtails were in residence. One of the Greys had an interesting plumage aberration, as you can see below.

180303 180203 Grey wagtail (1)
180303 180203 Grey wagtail (2)

I was away for a week mid February so my next visit to the embankment was on Tuesday 20 February. A strong cold wind was blowing small waves on to the stony shore and, initially, there were no birds to be seen. But, about half way along the embankment path, I spotted a huddle of seven Turnstones, looking sleepy, enjoying a little bit of warmth from a shaft of sunlight that had reached their roosting spot from between the nearby houses. And, a minute or two later, I noticed one further Turnstone who was already meandering along, turning stones as it searched for breakfast bugs. Two Grey wagtails, hardy creatures, were also dotting about.

180303 180220 turnstones

The twenty-seventh of February was a bitterly cold day, as Britain was in the grip of a severe blast of polar weather, blown across Europe from Siberia, and even Cardiff had a few snow showers that day (quite unusual in recent years). Hopefully, the birds had found somewhere more sheltered than the embankment, as the stiff easterly was so cold that icicles were forming on branches that littered the shoreline and there was a slab of ice at least a foot wide coating the rocks along the water’s edge.

180303 180227 (3) turnstone180303 180227 (2) coot

In spite of those bitter conditions, I spied one Grey wagtail, one Turnstone, a pair of Coots, and a solitary Redshank. It made me feel cold just looking at that lovely bird standing in the icy water!

180303 180227 (1) redshank

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Birding at Dryslwyn, Cilsan Bridge and Tregaron Bog

02 Friday Mar 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, walks, winter

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cors Caron, Dryslwyn Castle, Glamorgan Bird Club, Green sandpiper, Lapwing, Red kite, Tregaron Bog, Tywi Valley, Whooper swan

Up at 6, collected at 7 and off we headed, west along the M4 for a 9 o’clock meet up with our other Glamorgan Bird Club buddies at the foot of Dryslwyn Castle in mid Wales. This was unexplored territory for me and the scenery of the Tywi (or Towy) Valley was simply stunning, with castles and monuments seemingly on every hill top and the beautiful River Tywi meandering through the valley below them. It was clear but cold, with a bitter wind, and heavy frost and thick ice still blanketing those spots the sun could not reach. Later, we moved on to Tregaron Bog, also known as Cors Caron National Nature Reserve, a fabulous area of marsh and wetland. And what a superb day’s birding we had!

180302 Tywi Valley (1)

A large flock of Lapwing on the fields next to the River Tywi, and a Grey heron flying in.

180302 Tywi Valley (2)

Ducks, geese and Little grebes in the river.

180302 Tywi Valley (3)

A Red kite looks for lunch from its perch on this big old dead tree.

180302 Tywi Valley (4)

Looking towards Dinefwr Castle, with two swans flying off (possibly Mute but we also saw Whooper).

180302 Tywi Valley (5)

A thrush checks through a mole hill for potential food.

180302 Tregaron Bog (1)

Too distant for clear shots, two Green sandpipers (and a Teal), from one of the hides at Tregaron Bog.

180302 Tregaron Bog (2)

Intrepid birders, well rugged up against the chill.

180302 Tregaron Bog (3)

Beautiful countryside around Tregaron Bog, where grazing ponies help to manage the wetland environment.

180302 Tregaron Bog (4)

A Red kite; one of several seen this day and spectacular birds to watch.

My species list for the day was: Mute Swan, Whooper Swan, Pink-footed Goose, Greylag Goose, Canada Goose, Wigeon, Teal, Mallard, Goosander, Little Grebe, Grey Heron, Great White Egret, Little Egret, Cormorant, Red Kite, Hen Harrier, Buzzard, Lapwing, Snipe, Curlew, Green Sandpiper, Black-headed Gull, Herring Gull, Lesser Black-backed Gull, Woodpigeon, Great Spotted Woodpecker, Magpie, Jackdaw, Carrion Crow, Raven, Blue Tit, Great Tit, Coal Tit, Wren, Treecreeper, Starling, Blackbird, Fieldfare, Song Thrush, Redwing, Mistle Thrush, Robin, Stonechat, Dunnock, House Sparrow, Tree Sparrow, Pied Wagtail, Chaffinch, Goldfinch and Bullfinch. A further 7 species were seen by other members of our group but not by me: Peregrine, Common Gull, Rook, Long-tailed Tit, Goldcrest, Nuthatch, and Greenfinch.

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Rye birds

27 Tuesday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, seaside, weather

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cormorant, Great black-backed gull, Lapwing, Redshank, Rye Harbour Nature Reserve, shoveler, Wigeon

My original title for this blog was ‘A mad Kiwi and an Englishwoman go birding in a howling gale’. I decided that was a trifle long but it was certainly an accurate reflection of our day at Rye Harbour Nature Reserve. Nevertheless, we persevered, though we did put off walking the beach-top path – I think we would’ve been blown all the way back to Rye township if we’d tried that.

180227 Rye Harbour birds (4)

As you might expect, the birds were mostly hunkered down, sheltering where possible behind clumps of grass or huddled alongside sandy banks. Still, with brief stops here and there to scan the shingle and reeds with constantly watering eyes through fogging-up binoculars and short pops into hides (as much to warm up as to look out), we managed to clock up a total of 35 species. They were: Kestrel, House sparrow, Herring gull, Lesser black-backed gull, Black-headed gull, Mallard, Shelduck …

180227 Rye Harbour birds (3)

Shoveler (above, seen through a netting fence), Brent goose …

180227 Rye Harbour birds (5)

Wigeon (those handsome birds above), Oystercatcher, Carrion crow, Tufted duck …

180227 Rye Harbour birds (1)

Redshank (always a favourite of mine), Coot …

180227 Rye Harbour birds (6)

Cormorant (already beginning to nest in trees near Castle Water) …

180227 Rye Harbour birds (2)

Great black-backed gull and Lapwing (both above), Little grebe, Mute swan, Teal, Little egret, Goldfinch, Woodpigeon, Blackbird, Green woodpecker, Great tit, Coal tit, Magpie, Mistle thrush, Pied wagtail, Greylag goose, Egyptian goose, Pheasant, and Starling.

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The 18-buzzard bus

26 Monday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in animals, birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Buteo buteo, Buzzard, killing time on bus journeys

What do you do to help pass the time on a long bus journey? Read, sleep, listen to music, do crosswords or puzzles? I had taken along my knitting for the three-and-a-half-hour bus ride from Cardiff to London, but I didn’t knit a single stitch.

180226 buzzards (1)
180226 buzzards (2)

I spent the 15 minutes waiting for the bus watching the earth of a molehill moving as the little mole tidied up its tunnel (and, of course, I was hoping it might poke its head out, but no such luck). And, once we were underway, we hadn’t cleared Cardiff’s suburbs before I spotted my first buzzard hovering over a park so, after that, I decided to abandon my knitting and keep my eyes on the countryside that was whizzing past outside the window.

180226 buzzards (5)

And what did I see? My list reads as follows: Lesser black-backed gulls, Herring gulls and Black-headed gulls, Carrion crows, Robins, Jackdaws, Pied wagtails, Feral and Woodpigeons, Magpies, Starlings, Mallards and Mute swans, Mistle thrushes and Blackbirds, a Rookery, lots of rabbits and Pheasants, and two small groups of deer, plus, of course, the 18 Buzzards alluded to in the title of this blog. I was very impressed to see so many of them.

180226 buzzards (3)
180226 buzzards (4)
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Little egrets, again

22 Thursday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cuckmere Haven, Egretta garzetta, Little egret, Rye Harbour Nature Reserve, Winchelsea Beach

It seems Little egrets (Egretta garzetta) are rather partial to southern England as I saw several during my holiday in East Sussex last week, at Rye Harbour Nature Reserve and in the fields behind Winchelsea Beach.

180222 Little egrets (1)

We also get Little egrets in Wales, of course, and I’ve blogged about them before, when there were two visiting a Cardiff lake last July, but I was delighted to get much closer to one particular bird last Saturday at Cuckmere Haven. The weather was glorious, and people were out in droves to enjoy the almost-summery day, but this lovely little bird simply moved slightly further away as they passed, then returned to the well-trodden grassy path to continue probing for earthworms and miscellaneous insects.

180222 Little egrets (2)
180222 Little egrets (4)

180222 Little egrets (5)

180222 Little egrets (6)
180222 Little egrets (3)

 

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Drake domination

20 Tuesday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

Aythya ferina, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Pochard

180220 Pochard (1)

So it’s not just in the world of human beings that males dominate females. No, I’m not climbing on my soapbox – I’m referring to the recently published results of surveys of European and North African populations of Pochard (Aythya ferina), which have indicated that, over a 16-year period, the proportion of males to females has increased significantly in favour of the males. You can read more about the research here.

180220 Pochard (3)

180220 Pochard (4)
180220 Pochard (2)

180220 Pochard (5)

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Goosie, goosie, goosander

18 Sunday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Goosander, Merganser, Mergus merganser

Officially Mergus merganser – the name merganser is a hybrid eighteenth-century word obtained from the Latin root merg-, meaning ‘diving’, and anser, meaning ‘goose’, this beautiful bird is the Goosander. It used to be known as the Common merganser, and I’ve noticed some birders still call it that – old habits…. The bird has a ton of other vernacular names, like, from Sussex, dun diver; green-headed goosander, harle, and jacksaw, in Yorkshire; land cormorant (in Dublin); in Shropshire, pied wigeon; and, in Orkney, rantock. And then there are the understandable references to that long serrated ‘all the better to catch fish with’ bill: sawbill, in Stirlingshire; sawneb, from Aberdeenshire; and, from Suffolk, sawyer.

180218 Goosander (1)

Female above, male below

Their fish-catching habit is why Goosanders have often been persecuted, particularly by the fishermen who think the birds are theirs for the catching. Fortunately, the bird’s population has, thus far, not suffered unduly from this persecution and, from 1871, the year they were first known to have bred in Britain, the Goosander has gradually colonised most of Scotland and spread through much of England and Wales.

Male
Male
Female
Female

Britain has another merganser, Mergus serrator, the Red-breasted merganser, and the two species can be hard to tell apart. But the main thing to note is location – Goosanders are mostly freshwater birds and can be seen year round on rivers and lakes in many parts of Britain, whereas Red-breasted mergansers, although equally at home in fresh- and salt-water locations, are mostly seen in the winter months in coastal areas.

180218 Goosander (4)
180218 Goosander (5)
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The turnstone and the redshank

15 Thursday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay, Redshank, Turnstone

180215 turnstone and redshank (1)

T: ‘Found anything tasty?’

180215 turnstone and redshank (2)

R: ‘Nothing to see here. Move along.’

180215 turnstone and redshank (3)

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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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