Thursday, 5 January 2017

Here Wax

My monthly visits survey has reached 10 years, having started in January 2007. It feels like a significant moment which I wasn't sure I'd achieve when I began. I will write up some posts to reflect on that later but for the time being here's the final piece of that jigsaw.

29th-30th December.

Mute Swan - 10
Pink-footed Goose - c100 flying south AM 29th.
Wigeon - 380+ at Wansford
Teal - 60+
Pochard - 2
Red-legged Patridge - 11
Grey Partridge - 10
Great White Egret - 1
Little Egret - 4
Grey Heron - 9
Sparrowhawk - 1
Buzzard - 11+
Kestrel - 8
Water Rail - 2
Moorhen - 16 together at Lowthorpe
Golden Plover - 180+ is exceptional for December
Lapwing - 50
Snipe - 4
Woodcock - 2
Green Sandpipier - 2
Stock Dove - 32 in one flock is a good record
Little Owl - 1
Tawny Owl - 1
Kingfisher - 1
Fieldfare - 110+
Redwing - 7
Waxwing - 2 at Wansford
Jay - 1
Tree Sparrow - 30+
Bullfinch - 4
Yellowhammer - 25+ is a very good recent count
Reed Bunting - 5


Little Egret at Lowthorpe. There appear to be four birds in the area though it could be as many as six. I still haven't worked out their movements, it's normal to see some together and then find the odd one somwhere else later. But four is a minimum because I've seen them at the same time!














Old Big E is still hanging around. What a beast!














Normally seen hovering over fields it was nice to get relatively close to this Kestrel.














Useful comparison of Mistle Thrush with a female Blackbird. The poses are typical of both species.














A 'Green' Pheasant. I'm not sure what the status of these birds is. There is a similar species Japanese Green Pheasant (Phasianus versicolor) but the green ones in UK are presumed hybrid and/or variant bred birds, so called 'tenebrosus' . I've heard it suggested they're released by keepers as 'markers', e.g. if you release 10 birds from 1000 on the estate and you only see 3 regularly in  January then around 700 birds have been shot. You can see the logic, though I'd be surprised if it worked well in practice. Another likely and much more simple explanation is the estates just like the look of variant colour phases.

Edit: I came across another suggestion for releasing them - their behaviour is slightly different to 'normal' Pheasants and therefore offer a different 'sport' to guns.














The final species tally went up by two, to 111, which is higher than 2015 but slightly lower than average over the ten years.

110 Water Rail
111 Waxwing

1 comment:

James said...

Hi Bob, no big egrets yet for me in Nafferton but I did manage a 11 Little Egrets on the beck together between Christmas and New Year which was a surprise! They aren't always present in that number so I assume there is some interchange.