A somewhat distant record shot of Britain's second Long-tailed Shrike So here is my plan to cope with our third heat wave of the year – drive 390 miles overnight to Fife where it’s a balmy 16 degrees. Don’t worry though, there’s no such thing as global warming, the self-proclaimed orange headed genius said so! Seriously though, what would motivate me to drop everything and do a 780 mile round trip to deepest Scotland – well a bird obviously. And I’m not obsessed really! honestly! OK so here is a familiar story for anyone who has read my twitching blogs before. Let’s go back to 13:30 on Saturday afternoon when a Shrike on a farm just outside of Crail in Fife was reported as probably a Lesser Shrike, a nice rare bird in its own right, but possibly a Long-tailed Shrike, a bird as rare as rocking horse poo in the UK. I was home sitting over the weekend while Carolyn was at a wedding fare with her cake business. When she got home mid-afternoon after ...
Last week I decided to undertake a day trip to Bempton Cliffs RSPB in Yorkshire to see and photograph the hordes of sea birds that gather in the spring and summer to breed on the cliffs. A long but fairly relaxed drive had me on site at 09:00. My main target for the day was to see and photograph Gannet courtship behaviour. Before heading to the cliffs I spent some time with Bemptons thriving Tree Sparrow population. As a young boy growing up in the small Wiltshire village of Hindon Tree Sparrows were a very common site in the countryside hedges. Sadly, our wonton disregard for our environment and the other creatures that inhabit it has hit the Tree Sparrow very hard such that they are now a comparatively scarce bird in the UK with a scattered population at a number of hotspots. Stirling work by the RSPB at Bempton, however, has helped the Tree Sparrows thrive there, so much so that a volunteer told me that they had now ringed more than 400 youn...