Friday, 4 October 2024

Norfolk Autumn Migration Tour for Oriole Birding - 4th October 2024

A beautiful autumnal sunrise greeted the day with the lack of wind allowing the calls of Pinkfeet to drift across the landscape.  I could hear Red Kites whinnying and two headed off inland on the same line as several Marsh Harriers and a few Meadow Pipits seeped overhead.



After breakfast we headed all the way down to Breydon Water to try and catch the tide before it came full in but although we were an hour early, all the mud was already covered and the waders were up roosting.



However we had a good little session down there and found several Knot, Greenshank and two Spotted Redshanks amongst the hordes of Redshanks and Black-tailed Godwits and several; other wader species.  A female Sparrowhawk shuffled things up a bit but the three Spoonbills barely twitched but somehow all moved with the incoming waters without us noticing!





Little Egrets were actively feeding on the saltmarsh and Redshank and a few Curlew came to join them and Meadow Pipits and Reed Buntings were disturbed.  Three Bearded Tits noisily called as they bounded over our heads! Small White and Red Admiral fluttered by and a Wall Brown was a great find as it nectared on the Sea Aster. I looked for Colletes but could not see any.

Curlew


Onwards to Hickling where lunch was taken to the sound of our first Cranes and many Pinkfeet and a Tawny Owl gave a long tremulous hoot from somewhere towards the Broad.  I spent some time checking for moth leaf mines around the car park and also fund some funky Sawfly larva on some of the Sallows.

Sawfly larva

Guelder Rose

Our walk down to Stubb Mill was delightful in warm sunshine.  Migrant Hawkers and Common Darters were present in still very large numbers and I was pleased to find a single Willow Emerald too.  There were a few Hoverflies and Hornets and a good spread of Butterflies with all three Whites, Peacock, Red Admiral, Wall Brown, Small Tortoiseshell and Speckled Wood while a large pale Caddisfly species was emerging in some numbers and fluttering over the reed beds.  Long-winged Coneheads were still singing and I found one female in the grass which was alive with tiny Wolf Spiders, many of which were starting to climb up stems in preparation of a mass ballooning session.



Common Darter

Common Darter

Migrant Hawker

Migrant Hawker

Willow Emerald 


Helophilus pendulus

The gall on Creeping Thistle of the fly Urophora cardui 

Dock Bug


A small bee - possibly a Lasioglossum

Wall Brown

Wall Brown

A small Oak Eggar cat

The Common Cranes put on a grand show with two groups of four and one of three before we even got to the mill and eclipsed once at the platform with 19 in a snaky line that circled the marsh a couple of times before landing.  Who knows if this was a different group or not? All the while the magical bugling drifted across the marshes with the underlying susurration of the light breeze through the reeds and as usual was the highlight of my day.





Common Cranes

Great White Egrets were lumbering around and I reckon six were seen and a vast flock of about 1000 Pink-feet were disturbed from way off near Martham Broad before passing overhead and the air was so still at that time that their wings thrummed and hummed and could be aurally felt through the cacophony of yipping.  It was an afternoon of special moments.

Great White Egret

Great White Egret






Pink-feet 


Sound up - Simon Millin

Also down at the Mill we found two very smart but tardy Whinchats flycatching from the same bramble and two male Yellowhammers calling jauntily from one of the Hawthorns.  We walked back to the sound of more Geese and Cranes and the three Koniks making the most of the sunshine while a Hobby became our surprise third this week.  Marsh Harriers and Buzzards were omnipresent and I counted 13 Med Gulls up hawking with kettling Black-headeds.








A final coffee back at the centre and then the journey back across the county for one last slap up meal at Briarfields.

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