Tags
birding, birdwatching, bodkin, bog sparrow, British birds, chink, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Emberiza schoeniclus, pit sparrow, Reed bunting
As its name implies, the Reed Bunting (Emberiza schoeniclus) is most at home in the reed beds and rush-filled pastures that surround many of Britain’s freshwater lakes and ponds, though it has been encroaching on farmlands and into woodlands during the last 80-odd years, perhaps in response to a reduction in its preferred wetland habitats. Luckily, it’s flourishing in the expanses of reed beds that fringe the conservation lake at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, which is where I photographed these little beauties last Sunday.


I particularly like some of their common names (as supplied by Buczacki’s Fauna Britannica): black bonnet, coaly hood, bog sparrow and chink (Scotland); bodkin (Lancashire); pit sparrow (Cheshire; Colin blackhead (Renfrewshire); seave cap and toad snatcher (Yorkshire); ring bird and ring fowl (Aberdeenshire). I also particularly like the male bird’s large white and very stylish moustache.
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