Wednesday, 12 March 2025

Forest of Dean & Somerset Levels for Oriole Birding - Day 4 & 5: 12th - 13th March 2025

12th March:

I was a cruel leader today and we had breakfast at 7am in The Swan and were walking around the van in Silver Street by just after 8am passing a Wren singing from the top of the Palace walls and a pair of Grey Wagtails on the way.  It was a short drive to Greylake where the usual assortment of Wigeon, Teal, Shoveler and Mallard were on display just outside creating a patchwork of largely cryptic patterns on the bund they were sleeping on. 


Teal



Wigeon

Wigeon


The only Snipe was put up from the track as we walked down and a handful of Lapwings were the only other waders we saw.  Great Egrets in various stages of breeding plumage dotted the vista but there were no Cranes to be heard or seen and juts the odd Marsh Harrier and Buzzard about so we walked back past many calling Water Rails and Cetti’s Warblers – our two daily invisible species.

Great Egret


I took us south to Oath where we got lucky with a pair of roadside Cranes as they fed along the banks of a ditch and with our target in hand we looped back round and back over the A39 to Shapwick and the flatlands around Westhay Moor beyond.

Crane

Cattle Egrets were the quarry and we found them in four spots totalling about 250 or so birds strutting around the dark peaty fields like plump white chickens.  Some were with livestock but most were just out foraging and seem to operate like Starlings do with an albeit much looser rolling wave with back birds flying to the front as they push across a field.  It was fascinating to watch.  Some had a hint of buff on the mantle and crown and a few even had paler looking legs.  I still find the explosion of this species in the UK and delight much as I did with the start of the Little Egret colonisation back in the late 1980s and early 1990s.




Cattle Egrets 

We looped around and back to the Avalon Centre for lunch where I was delighted to bump into another ex RSPB employee, Graham White, who was a key influence on the habitat management of Rainham Marshes back in its exciting formative.  He was in fine form and it was good to have a catch up.  He is down in the Avalon to help with Bittern monitoring.

Billy Bloodworm and the Blue Eyed Birder


The rest of a chilly afternoon was spent back at Ham Wall on the same walk to the Avalon Hide as yesterday.  It began well with Trish finding a Kingfisher from the road bridge that actually perched up and allowed itself to be scoped.  Smiles all round.

Kingfisher

In the meantime I was scanning the other side and found the male Ring-necked Duck although it was in and out of the reeds and it was difficult to get everyone onto this dapper Atlantic waif.  I think I have seen one on almost every one of my visits down here over the years.

Goldcrests, Chiffchaffs and Long-tailed Tits were again noted and I was fortunate enough to see an Otter cross one of the major cuts but it did not come back out. Down at the viewpoint the two Glossy Ibis were in close and gleaming in the temporary sunshine and there seemed to be a few more duck too.  The Robins and Great Tits were mumping.


Glossy Ibis

Robin

Stigmella aurella


Sallow

Bitterns boomed all around in roughly the same spots as yesterday but despite our best efforts we still never saw one (or the pair of Cranes out from the hide that were lurking on the obscured back pool.  However, the Marsh Harriers put on a great display and two Sparrowhawks dashed through while Great Egrets moved between nesting areas in exaggerated display manoeuvres.

Marsh Harrier


Great Egret



A flock of 65 Cattle Egrets had already gone north over us and we picked up a large roving flock in fields on the other side and I counted 135 as they moved between fields.  These are no where near the Westhay birds – simply crazy.

Cattle Egrets


Water Rails were noisy and a Cetti’s Warbler even popped up on some brash and flipped us the tail before dropping back out of view again.  It was still cold and inside the hide it was even colder and so we abandoned once again and walked back.  I was at the back and so missed the group’s interaction with two American Mink on the path in front but a little further on one of them was in the main channel and it swam for several hundred metres before clambering out and bounding over the path.

Eristalis pertinax - the only Hoverfly seen on the whole trip!

Mink watchers

We had another short session at the viewpoint where a male Marsh Harrier put on a show before a successful final ten minutes getting everyone to see the now vaguely visible Ring-necked Duck!  Energy levels were waning so we called it a day and headed back to Wells.

Marsh Harrier

I dropped them off and then the van round in Silver Street once again and with sudden late evening sunshine I walked through to the Cathedral to marvel at its grand facade before remembering to go and take a picture of the newsagent on the high street that Pegg & Frost buy their Cornettos from in Hot Fuzz.  I did not go in and ask for one…


City News - don't go in and ask for Cornettos...

13th March:

A final walk to pick up the van after breakfast gave me a chance to have my usual look at the wall with its funky mosses, Ivy-leaved Toadflax and Maidenhair Spleenwort.  I was chuffed to find four Rusty-backed Ferns too having first found one on a roof from room in the Swan three Marches ago!  I also saw Kingfisher, the pair of Grey Wagtails and chuckling Redwings on the way.


Maidenhair Spleenwort

Ivy-leaved Toadflax

Rusty-backed Fern

It was a bit of a wiggle to get through to Catcott Lows but I did manage to find the stunning Giraffe mural by John Minshull in Meare on the way.  The Acacia is the drainpipe and it even has shadows!

Giraffe mural by John Minshull


It felt quite bright as we drove along but once out of the car it was once again bitterly cold and the inside of the hide was even more of a cool box.  The Wigeon were just outside and making wonderful noises with the females making that weird little growling whoosh to accompany the whistling drakes.  There were the usual other dabblers along with four pristine Pintail. A single Snipe was preening amongst the sedges and Lapwings were gleaming in the pretend sunshine and a couple where even tumbling.


Common Snipe


Lapwing

Four Great Egrets were dotted around and a buck Roe Deer with his antlers in velvet grazed below the only visible flowering Sallow along the Alder belt.

 Roe Deer 

 Great Egret


We walked down the lane, regretting extra layers and were accompanied by singing Chiffchaffs, Robins and Wrens the whole way.  The track into the carr was muddy and you could see Roe Deer tracks and what I think are the hind feet of an Otter.  The peaty path took us past the fenced deep peat cuts which rippled and quaked at our passing but it was far too cold for any Great Crested Newts this time although there was a large heap of Frog spawn.

 Hemlock Water Dropwort

 Otter tracks?


Frogs Spawn


There were more Chiffchaffs and singing Treecreeper and Goldcrest while a drumming Great Spotted Woodpecker started up once the sun briefly reappeared.  We clambered up to the tower hide where I was some tiny hope that we might see Bearded Tits and amazingly two pair appeared just outside on the Phragmites where they softly called before being chased off to the next patch by a Cetti’s Warbler.  Everyone was very happy and Trish did a happy dance of delight!




Ravens played chase and popped and rolled with the larger male trying to get his prospective partner to pay him attention while a male Marsh Harrier cruised back and forth. Although warmed by the Beardies we were all frozen and decided to walk back before anything else dropped off.  We bid our farewells after a challenging but ultimately enjoyable and successful venture and went our separate ways.  I dropped Alison and Gloria back off at Bristol Parkway before wending my way back across country to Norfolk seeing just a few Kites and Buzzards and late afternoon glowing Brown Hares on the way.


Tuesday, 11 March 2025

Forest of Dean & Somerset Levels for Oriole Birding - Day 3: 11th March 2025

It was not far above freezing when we went for breakfast and the decision as to whether to give New Fancy View a final shot before heading south was taken by the travel news suggesting a three hour journey due to a serious accident on the M5 at Portishead so we ate and checked out and poodled down the road.



It was worth a shot and certainly better than sitting in traffic but although it was brighter and clear it was bitterly cold and no self-respecting raptor was going to have rolled out of bed and said ‘oh go on then, I’ll have a little fly round just for them’  I was without doubt a raptor duvet day and with our faces going numb with the biting breeze we politely stuck two fingers up at the local Accipiters and walked back down for the fourth time.  Not even a dashing pair of Goosanders or a male Crossbill that flew by singing could warm the spirits but we were all glad to have given it a go!



A convoy to Steart was a non-starter so I gave the other three cars the meet point and off we went.  The M5 accident briefly held us up and they were still trying to extricate the small domestic oil tanker from down the bank where it had seemingly flipped over the barrier and this was followed by a tractor and trailer in Bridgewater that had tipped into a ditch on a roundabout and taken out a lamppost. 

My sat nav took me on a new route and we then encountered the traffic headed back into town from Hinkley but did not know what had happened but the rest of the crew had got held up by an oversized load that had grounded on a small roundabout, also taken out another lamppost and blocked all routes!

At last we all reconvened and set out for a walk around the reserve. It had warmed slightly and a pair of Stonechat were up flycatching from the Willows and Reed Buntings were playing chase.  I had a vague hope of finding the wintering Least Sandpiper but there were no small waders on the Quantock Scrapes until we left and a lovely Welsh chap pointed out three pristine male Little Ringed Plovers blending into the mud with gleaming gold eye wear.  Pied Wagtails were everywhere along with a single Meadow Pipit and I heard a Water Pipit flying around.  Three Ravens saw off a local Buzzard.


Little Ringed Plovers

Gloria and her friendly Reed Bunting


There were 30 noisy Avocets and three Oystercatchers but strangely no Redshank or Black-tailed Godwits.  All the dabblers were there with a single drake Pintail amongst them and Shelduck loafed around doing not much as is the norm.  Little Egret and Grey Heron were added but there were no Spoonbills this year.

Grey Heron

I educated the group as to the wonders of looking for moth grubs in Teasels and Lesser Reedmace and showed them last years Cigar Galls caused by the fly Lipara lucens in the Phragmites where Cetti’s Warblers shouted invisibly.

Gall of Lipara lucens

 Lesser Reedmace


We sat and scanned the saltmarsh for a while but this time there were absolutely zero raptors and just a few Carrion Crows and Great Black-backed Gulls which was very disappointing.  A late lunch in the car park beckoned and with the tide low and wind getting up I abandoned the visit to check the foreshore and took us back inland to the Somerset Levels.


It was warm inside!

The stuck lorry had been removed and chaps were working on the lamppost while the roundabout looked a bit worse for wear but at least we were not held up and in 45 minutes were pulling into Ham Wall.

A much needed coffee for everyone and then a walk down to the Avalon Hide and back.  Bitterns were booming everywhere and I reckon we heard at least seven but not one graced us with a fly by.  Great Egrets were far more obliging with over a dozen seen in slow lazy flight and stalking the reedy margins with several Little Egrets while some of the group saw about 50 Cattle Egrets flying over but I missed them!


Great Egret

Glastonbury Tor

There were Snipe, Lapwing and a Redshank from the main viewing platform as well as the usual ducks but both Pochard and Great Crested Grebes were new for the trip.  The two Glossy Ibis eluded us at first but on the way back one flew in and showed well in the last of the sunlight and gleamed vibrant green with the first hints of summer burgundy.


Glossy Ibis, Great Egret and ducky friends


There were Goldcrests and Chiffchaffs in the Sallows and Brambles and the expectant Robins followed us all the way along the trail.  There were some raptors at last with Marsh Harriers of both sexes sparring and quartering the reedbeds while Sparrowhawk and Peregrine dashed through.

There was one last little snippet of springness with four Sand Martins hawking over the lakes before we had to pack up and wend our way to Wells for our first night at the Swan Hotel passing several unseasonably vast flock of Starlings. 



I am always rather taken with my short walk from where I have to park the van to get back to the Swan which passes the Bishop's Palace and the Cathedral on the way.