A real sunrise poked through the curtains this morning! It was still and calm and outside I could hear Redwings, Robins, Dunnocks, Meadow Pipits and the winking of Pinkies. We made our east again after breakfast (passing seven Great White Egrets around Holkham on the way) and by 9.40 were at Kelling for a walk down to the water meadows. The cloud kept bubbling up but it was quite warm and the double hedge was full of insect life with many Migrant Hawkers and Common Darters, Red Admirals and a few Hoverflies and Bees and Comma and Peacock were both new additions along with a late Southern Hawker too.
Common Darter on natural solar panel - Julie Taylor |
Southern Hawker - Julie Taylor |
Migrant Hawker - Julie Taylor |
Peacock- Joyce Cather |
A large tit flock gave excellent views but contained no
waifs and a little further down we heard Chiffchaff and Goldcrest and found a
male Blackcap while a winter male Brambling briefly sat up for us. There were lots of Robins calling and a few
Song Thrushes but although it felt like there should be something else lurking
we certainly did not dig it out.
Once down by the open fields we found a flock of over 100 Linnets
moving between stubble and Bramble hedge where Stonechats kept an eye on
proceeding and made occasional sallies after flies.
The pools them selves were in the process of having a sedgy
haircut and only had a couple of Coot and Moorhen and literally dozens more
dragonflies – many of which were in tandem and egg laying.
Down at the sea some Brent Geese flew west in front of the gas
line platform just off shore but were, once again the only birds were saw over
the sea. It had really warmed up and we retraced our steps back to the Old
Reading Rooms where tea and ginger cake awaited. The overhanging Fig tree has at last been
discovered by Choeurutis nemorana – the pesky Fig Leaf Skeltoniser moth.
Revitalised with scrummyness we moved on to Salthouse for a
pointless look for ditch dwelling Bluethroat before heading to Stiffkey
campsite car park for lunch followed by a walk along the inside of the whole
length of the wonderful wood with its wind sculptured Oaks, Beeches and
Sycamores. We found a few parties of Tits and Goldcrests but the only Warbler
was a confiding Chiffchaff although it was actually the first we had seen
properly all week!
A Great Spotted Woodpecker bounded through and there were
plenty of Robins but no funny ones with blue tails while a quietly singing Mistle
Thrush posed on a sunlit branch and I took some nice shots although in fact I
never did…
We came back on the seaward lower path and I quickly found a
couple of Colletes halophilus in attendance at the Sea Aster before being
distracted by a great shimmering flock of spangly Golden Plovers who got
spooked by a Kestrel – cue more clicking.
Another scan and suddenly there was a Pallid Harrier out on
the edge of the saltmarsh. I shouted at the crew and quickly got everyone onto
her as she cruised back and forth before veering straight at us and even
stooped and dropped onto the recently re-landed Golden Plover flock. I switched to video and it said – ‘no card’
agggghhhhhh – I had spent all day taking pics with no memory card in.
Muppet. A frantic insertion of the spare
from my wallet and I began taking a few pics of her as she carried on hunting
to the east.
Pallid Harrier |
Pallid Harrier |
Pallid Harrier |
I shall leave the ‘is it the same bird as Sunday’ debate open. A Red Kite also put on a lovely performance over the saltings.
Pallid Harrier Sunday above and today below |
Colletes halophilus |
Feeling very pleased to have seen her so well and early in the afternoon meant that the plan could change once again and after finding some more bees to snap we packed up and headed off to Wells Wood for the chance of some scarce Warbler action. It was gloriously sunny and autumnally warm and we spent a happy time in the Dell where fortuitous entry point put us in the right spot at the right moment for the elusive and silent Greenish Warbler to appear in front of me. We had kept the high ground and this served us well as we were all able to watch it feeding at mid height and upwards in the Birches without craning our necks. It was a delightful little bird with silky underparts, a good supercilium and visible wing bar. With patience everyone got good views and the Wood Warbler appeared in the same tree a couple of times too which was good. A Yellow-browed Warbler called a couple of times and Chiffchaff and Blackcap made it a positive warbler fest after the paucity of our earlier efforts.
There was a good Tit and Crest flock too and an immature Redstart put on
a good show and some of the group had very close views of her on the ground
sunbathing at one point. A snoozing but
seemingly unharmed young Hedgehog was moved off the track side and out of the
way of stray feet and roaming hounds.
Redstart |
Hedgehog |
Redwings and four Brambling came out of the Birches too and
Siskins called above us while Robins continued in their quest to tempt me into
rash calls of scarcer cousins. We ambled
back hearing invisible Bullfinches and then decided to head back to North Point
for the chance of a Barn Owl as it was a lovely evening. It was not meant to be
but it was lovely standing their in the cooling air with the smell of distant
saltmarsh and the dry warmth of the dusty stubble fields filling our
senses. The duck on the pools were getting
restless and four Little Egrets and a couple of Snipe dropped in while the Greylags
were getting restless and mobile and I do not know where they go to inland of
here.
Greylags - Julie Taylor |
The odd small group of Pink-feet drifted over and Marsh Harriers
started to gravitate to the area along with a couple of Buzzards and Red Kites
but with no Barn Owls and dinner beckoning we left as two Chinese Water Deer
waded out into the lagoon and Brown Hares limbered up for the evening in the
fields.
I had everyone on Barn Owl alert still and thankfully I
spied one out over Holkham as we headed along the coast road and turned back
into Landy Ann’s in time to watch it hunting the fields with ghostly white precision.
A fine end to any day in the field.
Sounds like a great day Howard
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