This year so far birding has often seemed like trying to get blood out of a stone. Twitchable rarities have been few and far between and even scarce birds have been, well, scarce on the ground. This has made the usual summer birding doldrums seem even duller than usual. So a juvenile rare Black Stork in Suffolk hence seemed worthy of a visit, and by this I mean a seven hour return journey drive. I’m either desperate or completely bonkers – my ever suffering wife certainly thinks the latter! I’ve only ever seen one in the UK, a brief flyover a few years back at Frampton RSPB so the chance to hopefully photograph this, by all accounts, obliging teenager was very tempting. White Storks in the UK are troublesome birds. They went extinct as a breeding species in Britain in 1416 when the last recorded breeding pair nested on the roof of St Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh. A significant number of recently reintroduced, an...
Grimley Night Herron curtsey of Adrain Sparrowhawk For the past week or so a second calendar year Night Heron has taken up residence on the old gravel pits at Grimley just north of Worcester. I’ve seen a few in the UK over the years and so it wasn’t a drop everything and go moment but none the less these are rather spectacular herons and so I have made two visits to Grimley over the past week. I should really say Black-crowned Night Heron as there are a number of species of Night Heron including the somewhat similar but much rarer Yellow-Crowned Night Heron. The latter has not been recorded in the UK but there was a long standing and much admired one last year in Southern Ireland. The adult Black-Crowned night Heron is short-necked, short-legged, and stout with a primarily brown or grey plumage with, yes you guessed it, a black crown. Their eyes are a piercing red. Two or three long white plumes, erected in greeting and courtship displays, ex...