An October day – 10,000 Birds


October is without doubt one of the finest months for birds in Britain, so why, with three weeks of the month already handed, was my month’s checklist caught on a mere 40 species? Easy reply: I had spent the primary a part of the month in Greece (see my final two posts), adopted by per week volunteering at a tennis event (an ITF W100 occasion in case you’re ) in Shrewsbury. Now Shrewsbury is in the midst of England, and although the city itself is charming, it’s not an excellent space for birds, so my days there did little to spice up my month’s tally. Drastic motion was required, so on the second to final Tuesday of the month I spent a day in Norfolk with my birding pal Andrew. 

The climate forecast was good, the stress excessive: we set off from house at 7.30 on a misty autumnal morning. Our first cease, at Lynford Arboretum, was a bit of disappointing because it failed to provide any of the hoped-for autumn migrants, similar to Brambling, Siskin, Redwing and Fieldfare. Nonetheless, we did see a helpful 25 species, together with a number of birds we weren’t to see later within the day, together with Marsh Tit and Tufted Duck.

As we approached the Norfolk coast the mist grew to become thicker, the air damper, prompting the automobile’s wipers to brush the display screen. It didn’t look promising, however happily the October solar nonetheless had adequate heat to burn the mist away, so by the point we had walked right down to Titchwell seaside the solar had damaged via. Sea watching in Britain is commonly a cold and moist affair: this was something however, whereas a tide-beached log offered an honest seat. The excessive tide offered ultimate viewing circumstances.

Scoping the ocean at Titchwell in good circumstances. The beached log made a welcome seat

I used to be quickly placing the little Swarovski scope to good use, discovering quite a few Nice Crested Grebes on the ocean, together with first rate, if distant, views of a Purple-throated Diver, all the time a satisfying hen to seek out. There have been a couple of Widespread Scoters to be seen, too, whereas a decent flock of six Purple-breasted Mergansers (all geese, no drakes) flying previous was a very good discover. Even higher was a single Eider duck that additionally flew previous, the primary Eider of the 12 months for each Andrew and me. 

Pinkfeet over the ocean

There was a formidable motion of a whole lot of Pink-footed Geese, initially sighted far out to sea. At first we thought that they had been Brent Geese – they had been a really great distance away – however as they got here nearer it was obvious that they had been gray geese, not black. There have been far to a lot of them to be Whitefronts, in order that they needed to be Pinkfeet, with their id confirmed ultimately by their distinctive calls and their darkish heads and necks. Many hundreds of Pinks winter in North Norfolk, so seeing these geese wasn’t a shock, but it surely was a pleasure. 

Sanderling on the shore line

Add in a few horizon-skimming Gannets, and Sanderlings and Oystercatchers shifting alongside the shore line, and it proved to be as productive an hour’s birding as one may hope for. We walked again, now in heat sunshine, previous the RSPB’s positive Titchwell reserve. That is essentially the most visited of all of the RSPB’s 200 reserves, so we handed quite a few different birdwatchers. We noticed numerous birds, too: half a dozen Spoonbills, huge flocks of Golden Plovers and Lapwings, a wide range of wildfowl starting from Darkish-bellied Brent Geese to Gadwall and Shoveler, plus a lovely variety of small birds. These included Linnets and Skylarks, Reed Buntings and a single Stonechat, whereas we heard Cetti’s warblers, Bearded Tits and Water Rails. Our species whole for Titchwell topped 60 fairly comfortably

.A fishing Black-headed Gull at RSPB Titchwell

Darkish-bellied Brent Geese at Titchwell

Lapwing

We ate our lunch within the automobile at Brancaster Staithe, a horny small-boat harbour the place birds are used to individuals, so usually straightforward to {photograph}. Turnstone and Redshank, Black-tailed Godwit and Brent Goose, all got here with vary of my digicam, as did Herring and Black-headed gulls. At websites like this, a automobile makes an excellent cell cover, although you need to watch out to not get caught within the mud.

Darkish-bellied Brent Goose

Black-tailed godwit, a migrant from Iceland

Redshank – its shanks (legs) actually are shiny orange, not purple

The evil eye – Herring gull

Curlew on the shore at Brancaster Staithe

From Brancaster we drove east alongside the coast, pausing at Woman Anne’s Drive at Holkham. Right here there’s a giant and well-managed Nationwide Nature Reserve, and it’s all the time an excellent place to see birds, usually at shut vary, although it will get progressively higher for birds because the autumn provides solution to winter. We didn’t cease lengthy, however had been happy to see a trio of Cattle Egrets feeding with cattle – these egrets are current colonists. Just a few Curlews had been feeding right here on the freshmarsh. I all the time get pleasure from seeing these huge, good-looking waders, and even managed a shot or two as people flew overhead. I additionally grabbed a shot of a passing Jay. Was it a contemporary migrant from the Continent? Each autumn the east coast of England sees Jays arriving from throughout the North Sea, so this hen had most certainly simply arrived from Holland or Denmark.

A passing Jay at Holkham – a brand new arrival from the Continent?

Curlew at Holkham

There are positive grazing meadows on both facet of Woman Anne’s Drive, and right here Egyptian and Canada Geese had been grazing among the many Greylags, with small events of Pinkfeet reasonably extra distant. The latter are cautious birds, however they quickly get used to individuals, so by December they usually graze near the highway, unconcerned by the crowds of human guests drawn to this in style vacation web site. 

Cattle Egrets are new colonists of North Norfolk

By now the solar was dropping, the shadows lengthening, so to benefit from the final of the afternoon’s gentle we drove east once more to Cley Marshes, one of many oldest hen reserves in Britain, and one owned and managed by the Norfolk Wildlife Belief. We had a goal hen right here, a Lengthy-billed Dowitcher. Now dowitchers could also be widespread in North America, however in Britain they’re rarities. Hearsay had it that the hen was seen from Bishops’ Disguise, in order that’s the place we went. With the solar behind us the sunshine was good, and it didn’t take lengthy to seek out our quarry, although it was quick asleep on a muddy island and id may solely be made by evaluating its dimension to its companions – Black-tailed Godwits and Ruffs. 

Ultimately, nonetheless, our persistence was rewarded and the hen wakened and began to feed in attribute dowitcher method, giving nice views via the scope, although it was too distant to {photograph}. By the way, this particular person is a returning rarity, for what is nearly definitely the identical hen was first recorded at Cley three years in the past. It spends a lot of the 12 months on the reserve, however disappears within the spring and summer time, when presumably it migrates north in a lonely and most certainly unsuccessful bid to seek out one other of its personal species. It’s a tragic story, actually, however this hen has given many birders a substantial amount of pleasure. It was the third time I’d seen it – the final event had been in July 2023, when it was nonetheless sporting its summer time finery.

The dowitcher wasn’t fairly the final hen of the day – that honour went to a pair of Inventory Doves, feeding in a area which had lately held Stone Curlews. The doves had been our 87th species, whereas for each Andrew and I the dowitcher was our 196th British species of the 12 months. Simply 4 to go for the double century. Watch this area.



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