Sunday, 14 September 2025

Norfolk for Oriole Birding - 14th September 2025

With seriously grotty weather pushing in from the south-west we opted to stay local to Briarfields and re-visit Titchwell.  It was a glorious morning with clear blue skies and an autumnal crispness to the air.  The car park was a heat trap and there were Migrant Hawkers and Common Darters patrolling and the background bird song was almost solely of Wood Pigeons and Robins as we walked down through the trees and out onto the track to the sea.

I do like a Wood Pigeon

Wood Pigeon

Migrant Hawker

Lyonetia clerkella

Eupeodes sp

Calliphora sp

Lucilia sp


It was a leisurely amble with lots of stops to scan the waders once again and this time we enjoyed excellent close views of two of the juvenile Curlew Sandpipers as they actively fed with various sized Ruff.  The pale Red-necked Phalarope was still spinning and bobbing but its browner buddy had seemingly taken by a Hobby the evening before!



Curlew Sandpipers 

Curlew Sandpiper

Ruff

There were 38 Spoonbills but Pete Merchant had had 68 a little earlier and it now seems that the Snettisham birds are different to those on this bit of the coast suggesting that we had seen about 110 in just three days!  Even this morning’s flock would have been the most I had seen in the UK in a day! 

Spoonbills



We did not see an Osprey this time but there were Kites and Marsh Harriers all around and two Ravens spiralled high and west while out on Thornham there were more Starling and Lapwings flocks as well as good ball of bouncing Linnets. Mark found a cracking male Wheatear sitting on some dead Thistles where more Linnets and some Goldfinches fed. Hundreds of House Martins and Swallows swept back and forth over the marsh and once again a Common Swift was picked up.

Red Kite

As we neared the beach we found the hoped for little colony of Sea Aster Mining Bees and watched them going to and from their sandy path side burrow that must get filled in by careless feet a hundred times a day.  A Satellite Fly was lurking around the burrows waiting to sneak in and do the dirty deed on the larva of the Bee.

Sea Aster

Sea Aster Mining Bee - Colletes halophilus

Satellite Fly possibly Miltogramma germani

Down at the sea the tide was still coming in but the fort was visible and sea looked flat and dead but our patience was rewarded with a dark Arctic Skua and hulking Great Skua going west and a cracking adult Pomarine Skua with the best part of its tail languidly heading the other way closer in – three Skuas and three species and completely unexpected.



There were a few silvery juvenile Gannets and our first adult too and on the sea we found seven sum plum Red-throated Divers, five Great Crested Grebes, Common Scoter and some Auks with a Guillemot and a flotilla of five Razorbills.  Juvenile Sanderlings arrived and scuttled on clockwork legs along the tide line while Oystercatchers headed to their Scolt Head roost.  A line of Geese were found coming in from the west at height and although at that point we could not hear them there was no doubt that we had our first 41 Pinkfeet and for me a true sign that autumn had arrived.  The scavenging Black-headed Gull had been replaced by a Common Gull that snaffled a bit of dropped cake.  A large flock of distant hirundines made landfall off towards Thornham Point.

Sanderlings


Pinkfeet


Red-throated Divers

Oystercatchers

Common Gull

We slowly walked back and the Pinkfeet flock chose to circled back to land and drifted west over our heads at which point the tell tale ‘nudge nudge wink wink’ could be heard and there were smiles all round – partly because of the Monty Python reference!

Pinkfeet

The Curlew Sandpipers and Phalarope were still on show and there were so many people on the reserve that I had not seen in an age which was good.  I spend so much of my time now not birding at regular birder haunts in the UK that it was good to reacquaint my self with so many ornithological acquaintances.

Black-tailed Godwit and Teal


Back near the centre we followed a Tit flock which contained several Chiffchaffs and Goldcrest and a Reed Warbler was heard calling but did not show while two immature Moorhens were feasting on Blackberries quite unkerned about us standing there.  We all had a relaxed final lunch in the car park, once again lounging under the apple trees before going our separate ways after a very rewarding few days in north-west Norfolk.

Moorhen

I walked back to Briarfields to pick up the van and the sheltered back trail was alive with Common Darters and Migrant Hawkers and I counted eight Wall Browns along with Peacock, Red Admiral and a very cryptic Painted Lady.  

Not sure what this blotch mines are on Osier

Wall Brown



Ivy Bee - Colletes hederae

Cryptic Painted Lady


A female Sparrowhawk sat up on the dead Elms and had a preen and a Hobby shot through.  The sky was darkening as I sorted myself out and by the time I had dropped the van off and then got to Norwich it was raining hard and six hours later it is still hammering down here in Lowestoft.

Tomorrow I have to repack before Mallorca and the sun once again beckons on Tuesday.

Saturday, 13 September 2025

Norfolk for Oriole Birding - 13th September 2025

The crew were all out on time and we were soon on our way to Snettisham in the hope of witnessing the wader spectacle. Unlike the biggest winter tides, there were not many people down there and wit glorious light we got to watch the tide come quickly in and push the thousands of birds up close to us.  




Unfortunately the off shore breeze kept the tide short of covering the mud but we still got see some amazing swirling, twisting, murmurating balls and snaky lines of shimmering Bar-tailed Godwits and Knot along with huge pied drifts of Oystercatchers, perfectly separated groups of roosting Curlew, even more socially distanced Ringed Plovers and a smattering of other species including stunning black-bellied Grey Plovers, Dunlin, Little Stints and even Sanderling.   















There were many BTO ringed Oiks and amongst the Curlew were multiple colour ringed and white flagged birds whose digits I did my best to read along with  OP (I think) - one of the Headstarted releases which, along with the yellow flag also has a radio tracker fitted to its back.

Curlew - OP - complete with radio tracker



I also saw several colour flagged Bar-tailed Godwits and Oystercatchers.  There were still quite a few sum plum Godwits and Knot too and a single Common Sandpiper was the first of the trip.  Sandwich and Common Terns were also keeping pace with the tide and we were fortunate enough to see two Little Terns (albeit Micro would have been a better name) along with two juvenile Black Terns that briefly settled before disappearing high and inland. Common and Med Gulls were also both new.

A Kingfisher flashed along the channel where a Harbour Seal watched us and flared its nostrils and female Sparrowhawk skimmed across in front less than a foot off the shingle in an attempt to catch one of the small Linnet flock.

Harbour Seal 

Great and Little Egrets were seen and Red Kites, Kestrels (nine on view at once!) and Marsh Harriers were on view near constantly with more Kites and Buzzards inland behind us.  Hundreds and Redshank and Black-tailed Godwits and a few Turnstone had gone onto the pits in expectation of a high tide and soon most headed back leaving just the Blackwits resting up.  A group of six Spotted Redshanks were keeping to themselves on their own private island and 43 Spoonbills were asleep on the bank with some Cormorants and Greylags.  Little Grebes snorkelled but there was little else on there.


Spoonbills

Black-tailed Godwits

mostly Black-tailed Godwits

Two Wheatears bounded around on the shingle sward outside and a couple of Reed Buntings came out of the Suaeda but once again there were almost no passerines whatsoever.  We began to walk back picking up a late Common Swift with some House Martins and Swallows and shortly afterwards two purposeful Ravens making their way inland beyond the pits.  Big raptors were constantly in view.

Suaeda maritima

Wheatear caught between Oriole and Naturetrek

Wheatear 

The tide had already retreated a long way and I was relieved to find a young male Peregrine desperately trying to secure some lunch.  It failed but did put on a grand show for us. A few paces further on three Turtle Doves got up off the beach and did a circuit and two flew right under our noses a short while later.  Rather sadly my first in the UK this year.  Everyone was very pleased to get such close prolonged flight views.  A herd of Fallow Deer were seen on the drive out.



Lunch and toilets drew us away (not necessarily in that order!) and I took us back along the crowded coast road to Holkham once again passing Cattle Egrets on the way.  The sky was looking ominous but we stuck to the plan of a walk along the inside on the pines and to be honest it was a delightfully calm, warm and relaxing experience.  As usual most people just walk through the Gap and disappear!



Red Kite

Red Kite


It was very quiet bird wise with Goldcrest and Willow Warbler added to the trip list as well as Treecreepers, Coal Tits and a few Chiffchaff.  There was not even one Sylvia tack.  Out on the dry fresh marsh it was all about Red Kites and Buzzards and few Muntjac.  I resorted to some quality moth leaf mine time with the crew and educated them on the micro wonders happening in so many of the leaves around us!  Another Common Swift flew lazily west with some Swallows which was surprising.

Work of a Megachile Leafcutter Bee


Honeysuckle

Fleabane

Wild Privet

Robin's Pin Cushion

Old Man's Beard

Ectoedemia heringella on Holm Oak

Phyllonorycter corylifoliella on Hawthorn

Stigmella aurella on Bramble

Stigmella ulmivora on Elm - underside mine exit holes

Acrocercops brongniardella on English Oak

Stigmella speciosa on Sycamore


There were plenty of Migrant Hawkers and Common Darters and a couple of Ruddy Darters too and a few more Butterflies with Wall Brown, Speckled Wood, Small White, Red Admiral and Comma all seen.  

Common Darter

Common Darter

Red Admiral 

Speckled Wood


We stood and quietly watched the view from the platform beyond the Washington Hide before retracing our steps in the now warm sunshine only to be greeted by a purple bruised sky with saturated clouds heading over the Holkham Estate accompanied but spectacular fork lightening.




Jackdaw


As we headed back to Briarfields we caught a few spots of the edge of the storm but had once again somehow managed to avoid getting a proper soaking.

As dusk fell as we headed for dinner a wave of mostly Swallows – all silent – headed steadily and suddenly across the car park and several hundred must have been involved and with a small vanguard was a lone Common Swift.  Could we have made it back to Titchwell before the Holkham bird made it this far west?

We had a very convivial final dinner and opted to spend our last morning back on the reserve where we would have our best chance of finding something new.