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Britain’s second Long-tailed Shrike lands in Fife – a mega twitch for a mega bird!

      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 ...
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A sea bird extravaganza at Bempton Cliffs RSPB

  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...

Drop everything and twitch for a UK first!! – a Western Reef Heron in Gwynedd on the Northwest Welsh coast

  A few days ago I was bemoaning the lack of good rare birds this spring to my good birding mate Nick . Notwithstanding the Cornish Lesser Kestrel at the start of May, nothing has troubled my UK list or made me jump out of the window and into my car.   Well, of course, if you are a UK birder you will certainly know what happened mid-morning on Saturday. A Western Reef Heron, sometimes called a Western Reef Egret, was found at a place called Foryd Bay on the Welsh coast. Just to add to the excitement it was, arguably, the more attractive dark morph.    This was going to be a major twitch for what was immediately a very strong candidate for UK bird of the year.   The Western Reef-Heron is common across coastal Africa and parts of southwest Asia and is an increasing vagrant to southern Europe. It has hence been “on the cards” as a potential UK vagrant for some time.   All other plans for Saturday were immediately banished.  My poor long suffering wif...

A Wood Warbler in the Wyre Forest at last!

     Wood Warblers seem to be comparatively few and far between this year. There have been none at the “usual” hotspots in the forest and my birder friends have reported difficulty finding them elsewhere. The Wood Warbler is my favourite spring migrant and I always look forward to seeing these charismatic little warblers flitting around in the foliage while singing their very unique and characteristic “spinning coin” song. How sad would it be if they are no more a feature of my spring forest walks!   I tend not to go to the forest much after late May when the trees are in full leaf and most birds are heard only but last Thursday I decided to make one final attempt to find a Wood Warbler. One had been reported in the western part of the forest at a place called Brands Wood. This is a large expanse of mainly old oak woodland and the location details were very vague. It is also part of the forest I have not visited before.   I could not work out where to park close...

Is it a Hobby? – no its an obsession! (Langford Lowfields rspb for Hobbies and Bitterns)

Bittern Wars!!! ·     Hobby, a regular, recurring activity done for pleasure, relaxation, or personal enrichment during one's leisure time   ·        Hobby, a fairly small, very swift falcon with long, narrow wings   ·        Obsession, a persistent disturbing preoccupation with an often unreasonable idea or feeling On Thursday this week, following some excellent intel from my birding friend Ian Bollen, I visited the RSPB reserve at Langford Lowfields. I planned to spend the morning hopefully photographing Hobbies and then relocate to Frampton RSPB in the afternoon.   As the Hobbies don’t really get going until midmorning when its warmed up a bit and their insect prey is a bit more active a silly o’ clock start was not required. So after a fairly relaxed 2 hour drive with a coffee break I arrived in the car park around 9 am and made my way to a raised area called Corf Castle as recommended by Ian. ...