Monday, 1 December 2025

Thirty Years Ago - November & December 1995

5th November:

A strange day out to see a dead Fin Whale on the beach at Reculver.  Unsurprisingly for 50 tons of blubber it was still there.  The smell from this 66 foot long monster was pretty ripe but not as bad as pelagic chum.  Most of the outer layer of skin was gone and part of the actual baleen plate had come out and was lying on the beach which was fascinating and it looked like a giant toothbrush.  Two men for the NHM ‘disposal unit’ were preparing to dismember it and actually walked around the body with us and showed us the ear which they said they would be carefully opening up to remove the ear wax as they would be able use it like tree rings to age this 66 foot long female whale.  They very kindly removed a piece of baleen filament and given our genuine interest allowed me to legally take home this amazing object.  It was beautifully stratified in blue-grey, black, white and pink and the ‘hair’ that ran through it projected from the end.



We decided that hanging around while they cut up the whale would be rather foolish and the chaps (in full body suits) started putting up some ‘stay back’ rope and given the rather bloated nature of the corpse we opted to leave rather than get covered in blubber from the imminent chainsaw action.

The Swale was very quiet with just a few waders and Brents and none of the hoped for Little Auks so after a bite to eat we headed south to St Margarets where two Pallas’s Warblers had been found in a small copse near the monument and with some perseverance excellent views were had.  One was typically plumaged but the other was quite pale and felt more Yellow-browed like until you saw the rump.  The whole bird was very subdued. There were lots of Goldcrests and some smart Bramblings and with the light fading and temperature we came home.

19th November:

A typical Essex day out with Pete but Abberton was rather disappointing and was still ridiculously low but we did see eight Bewick’s Swans and a couple of Goosander.  Mersea held no surprises but the Brents were in in force and Golden Plover were sprinkled across the Cudmore Grove fields.

26th November:

A visit to a craft fair in Maidstone gave me the chance to add a Sidcup Ring-necked Parakeet to my year list!

2nd December:

A totally ridiculous twitch for a bird in a bag to Marton Mere in Blackpool where the American Bittern was back in ’91.  At least we were guaranteed to see this 1w male Siberian Meadow Bunting as it had apparently flown into a parked car and been hastily picked up and kept overnight. We arrived at about 0430 and had a few hours cramped kip in Bacon’s Fiesta before congregating some way from the zoo car park for an 0800 release.  As it happened they did not release it till 0900 by which time about 500 birders had arrived.  It basically resembled a full male SMB but the pointed tail feathers were the key aging feature.



It was shown to one and all and then released and was only seen again after we gave up and left.  As to its origins; who knows? It is a primarily sedentary Asian species that has long been predicted for some reason as a potential GB vagrant.

Enquiries showed that 1) most Asian Buntings are (including Black-faced) are imported in the spring as adults 2) They are very rarely imported 3) They are expensive at £145 each.  The fact that both this and Black-faced Bunting turned up as 1w in the winter seems to suggest that they may both be wild.  To get here otherwise would require some very odd importation, captive breeding and subsequent escape.  If I can tick Black-faced Bunting in the north west why not Siberian Meadow? 

[Eds:  Now, regardless of all this blathering, I did not add SMB to my list despite my rather fluid ticking protocols.  I have it in my head that there were even accusations that the whole thing was a deliberate release of a captive bird for some bizarre reason and that the whole car incident never happened. Perhaps some of my readers can shed some light on the matter?  Back then it was worth a punt and a few years later I seem to recall going to see another in the dunes at Old Hunstanton.  I have seen them in the snowy winter fields of Japan now and know which day I preferred.]

23rd December:

A mid-morning visit to Thorndon CP where some Arctic Redpolls had been elusively residing with a big flock of Mealies.  I quickly found a 1w male with about 200 Mealy buddies and it soon became apparent that others were likely and by the end the gaggle of Essex birders present had agreed on at least two definite Arctics and quite probably four others in with this challenging flock.  Only trapping would have provided the true number as it could have been much higher.  [Eds: It is sad now that most birders will never spend the time to even look through a large winter Redpoll flock not because it is challenging but because there are no other ‘species’ to look for anymore. Never give up on looking for the different.]



26th December:

Another Thorndon CP visit, this time with Dad to look at the Redpolls.  The light was better and the views superb and a different snowball male Arctic was found.  There were dozens of Fieldfares and a few Siskins, Green and Goldfinches to round up the last trip out of 1995.