Total Number of Species Recorded in 2011
2010 saw a total of 196 species recorded in Bedfordshire. Of this total, LGRE recorded 183, closely followed by Jim Gurney and Steve Blain on 181, Lol Carman on 180, Martin Palmer on 179 and Bob Chalkley on 177.
In 2011, a total of 452 species was recorded in Britain and Ireland of which I recorded just 69% (312); Bedfordshire recorded 204 species (of which I saw 94% at 191), Hertfordshire 192 (of which I saw 88.5% at 170) and Buckinghamshire 192 (of which I recorded just 86% at 165)
In 2012, I came fourth (on 168), following Steve Blain (177), Jim Gurney (174) and Martin Plamer (171).
In 2011, a total of 452 species was recorded in Britain and Ireland of which I recorded just 69% (312); Bedfordshire recorded 204 species (of which I saw 94% at 191), Hertfordshire 192 (of which I saw 88.5% at 170) and Buckinghamshire 192 (of which I recorded just 86% at 165)
In 2012, I came fourth (on 168), following Steve Blain (177), Jim Gurney (174) and Martin Plamer (171).
Monday, 28 November 2016
Grovebury on a roll
MONDAY 28 NOVEMBER
Well GROVEBURY PIT is on a roll! After last
week's juvenile GREAT NORTHERN DIVER (still present today but mobile &
elusive), Saturday saw a PIED AVOCET appear briefly with Lapwings and today at
lunchtime, a cracking pair of SMEW and 5 immature/female COMMON SCOTERS remained
present. Unprecedented rarity action at this little-known site! The PEREGRINE
pair were showing well too, sitting on one of the sand spits.....
Thursday, 24 November 2016
A GREAT NORTHERN DIVER for a second day and VELVET SCOTERS relocated...
THURSDAY 24 NOVEMBER 2016
Had some great fun with Johnny Lynch at
GROVEBURY SAND PIT in BEDFORDSHIRE, where the juvenile GREAT NORTHERN DIVER he
espied yesterday afternoon was still present and afforded the two of us a
fabulous swim past - see my photographic efforts below. Did a full inventory of
the site whilst I was there with 22 Great Crested Grebe logged, Grey Heron, 18
Cormorant, 99 Atlantic Canada Geese, 12 Mallard, 8 Common Teal, 28 Wigeon, 66
Tufted Duck, 39 Northern Pochard, 6 Moorhen, 202 Coot, 4 Lapwing, 2 PEREGRINES
(male & female), 22 Lesser Black-backed Gulls and an adult Great
Black-backed Gull.
I later joined Jim Gurney at ARLESEY BLUE LAGOON
mid-afternoon where the two wandering juvenile VELVET SCOTER, miraculously
located the following morning after departing Gypsy Lane West by the location's
regular checker Andy Grimsey, were both showing well, diving frequently on the far
side of the boating lake.
Tuesday, 22 November 2016
A local Mega: VELVET SCOTERS at Broom GP
Thanks to a conversation with Barry Nightingale
this evening, he and I agree that today's two immature VELVET SCOTERS at Gypsy
Lane West, Broom GP, represent the 11th county record and 20th-21st individuals
and the first in 25 years!! An excellent find by Jim Gurney and seemingly the
same two immatures that were recently present at Willen Lake South Basin on
7th-13th November but where have they been in the interim?
VELVET SCOTERS IN BEDFORDSHIRE
(21 recorded between 1983 and
2016)
1) A female at Chimney Corner CP on 19-20
November 1983 relocated on Brogborough Lake on 6 December;
2) A first-winter drake on Stewartby Lake on
19-20 & 24 December 1985 relocated at Millbrook Pit on Christmas Day and on
Lidlington Fishing Pit on 27 December, where it remained until 13 January
1986;
3-4) Two at Stewartby Lake on 9 January
1986;
5-6) Two drakes at Brogborough Lake on 30
January 1986;
7) One at Stewartby Lake on 14 April
1986;
8-10) Three drakes at Stewartby Lake on 26
December 1986;
11-13) Two drakes & a female on Stewartby
Lake on 20 November 1988;
14-17) Three females & a drake at Radwell
Pits on 23 April 1989;
18-19) Two drakes on Stewartby Lake on 21
November 1991;
20-21) Two immatures at Gypsy Lane West, Broom
GP, on 22 November 2016
Thursday, 11 February 2016
GREAT GREY SHRIKE still wintering at Henlow
Lovely morning for a walk round Henlow Grange, frosty underfoot with, sunny and
calm. GREAT GREY SHRIKE was again in the area just north of the sewage treatment
works, perching on fence posts of the two newish fields. It made one sally out
over the stubble, flushing a flock of 20 Skylarks before returning to its perch.
It the dropped into the longer grass at the base of the fence. I was expecting
it to again return to the fence but it never did. I did not see it fly away
despite watching where it had landed and could not re-locate it. How can it be
so elusive?
Spring would seem to be just around the corner: at least 4 Song Thrushes were singing; Mistle Thrush, Skylark, Corn Bunting, Chaffinch and Dunnock were also singing; at least three Great Spotted Woodpeckers were drumming; and Great Crested Grebes were dancing. Although there is no activity in the rookery yet.
Also seen were a male and female Stonechat near the market gardens where there were also three Yellowhammers and a flock of c.40 Linnets.
When I got home and totted up, I had recorded 55 species in a couple of hours.
It may be of interest to note that I have recorded Great Grey Shrike and Stonechat more often than Coot from my patch this year!
cheers
Roger Hicks
p.s. A Robin is nest-building in our garden in Henlow as I type this.
Spring would seem to be just around the corner: at least 4 Song Thrushes were singing; Mistle Thrush, Skylark, Corn Bunting, Chaffinch and Dunnock were also singing; at least three Great Spotted Woodpeckers were drumming; and Great Crested Grebes were dancing. Although there is no activity in the rookery yet.
Also seen were a male and female Stonechat near the market gardens where there were also three Yellowhammers and a flock of c.40 Linnets.
When I got home and totted up, I had recorded 55 species in a couple of hours.
It may be of interest to note that I have recorded Great Grey Shrike and Stonechat more often than Coot from my patch this year!
cheers
Roger Hicks
p.s. A Robin is nest-building in our garden in Henlow as I type this.
Sunday, 3 January 2016
Birding Bedfordshire in the heavy rain - LGRE highlights
Sunday 3rd January
2016
Spent the day in BEDFORDSHIRE, where heavy
rain curtailed most of the birding bar the last hour of
daylight....
Below is a list of the highlights, spent in
part with Stuart Warren & MJP...
GREAT GREY SHRIKE briefly in rain perched
high on the fragmented hedgerow on the opposite side of the railway line at TL
193 390 and viewable from the concrete track that leads to the sewage works - TL
192 390 (Poppy Hill Farm, NNE of Henlow)
Stuart & I put up 2 JACK SNIPES at G
& M Growers Pits (Broom), with 2 Teal there and a Meadow Pipit but no sign
of any Bearded Tits or Common Snipe. The early COMMON SHELDUCK was nearby at
Gypsy Lane East (Broom) but there was no sign of neither Peregrine nor Merlin in
the driving rain
Ten of the 13 LITTLE EGRETS were on show in
the damp field adjacent to Stockbridge Close in Clifton (situated at TL 173 390,
while at Upper Caldecote, I could only find 5 Yellowhammers, with no sign of
either Tree Sparrows or Grey Partridges.
At the Hatch Turn, most notable were a mixed
flock of 105 Common Starling, 39 Fieldfare and 8 Redwing, with not a single Corn
Bunting or finch flock in the Moggerhanger area.
I spent a while in heavy rain looking at the
entrance gate feeders at The Lodge, Sandy, but drew a complete blank on
Bramblings.
At TL 094 487, opposite Octagon Farm, a
massive flock of Lapwing and European Golden Plover, click-numbering 538 and
2,007 respectively!
On Rookery Pit North, both GREAT NORTHERN
DIVERS were still present but none of the Scaup (a lot of Aythya's
though) and likewise a wildfowl busy Quest Pit failed to relinquish the 5
Red-crested Pochard MJP had seen there on New Years Day.
Dropped in to Stewartby Lake to join MJP and
his self-found adult winter MEDITERRANEAN GULL, with 38 Great Crested Grebe
there, 35 Common Gulls, 8 Herring Gulls and a single adult Great Black-backed
Gull; a single PEREGRINE was roosting on one of the chimneys (MJP had seen
4)
Brogborough Lake added 3 GREATER SCAUP in
with a relatively small group of Aythya's by the Cormorant islands - an
adult drake, a first-winter drake and an adult female (although NW tells me the
adult has a hint of a tuft indicating some outside influence) as well as 384
Coot, 43 Common Goldeneye, 8 Great Black-backed Gulls and 6 Argenteus
Herring Gulls.
I then rushed over to Upper Drakelow Pond in
Woburn Park, where MJP's 3 GOOSANDER were still showing and waking (2 drakes and
a female) before just arriving at a Woodcock roost for Martin to ring me with 2
Little Gulls!! I hastily raced back but alas to no avail - the light had gone -
all 3 observers having lost them (MJP, Pete Smith & Bob Hook)
Two LITTLE GULLS at dusk on Stewartby
Initially sheltering under a brolly,
I spent the last two hours of the day at Stewartby
Lake gull watchpoint with some success. After the downpour
passed through, the last hour was fine and almost bright.
The murmuration of Starlings over Rookery North
was brilliant but then I picked out not one, not two, but three Peregrines passing them, two of which
did a food pass. A fourth
Peregrine was atop one of the old brickworks chimneys as well –
amazing!!
Earlier I’d found a splendid
winter adult MEDITERRANEAN GULL, not too
large compared to the BHG’s so presumably a female, some dusking to head already
appearing, thickish red bill with pale distal end and nice white primaries and
tail etc. LGRE twitched the Med and one of the Peregrines successfully but then
left as did the Med just as Bob Hook arrived. Pete Smith was parked up in
the sailing club carpark and I was on the mobile to him when Bob saw the
Kingfisher zap past.
Late on, I found 2 LITTLE GULLS, nearer PS than Bob and I
and Pete managed to see them to - both with white wing tips and puny alongside
a couple of Common Gulls, one had a winter head pattern but the other already
had some extensive black to the ‘hood’. The light was fading now and
unfortunately when some late BHG’s arrived we lost them too view, only a few
minutes before Lee dashed back in the interim having scored with 3 Greater Scaup at
Brogboro’ and the pair of
Goosander I’d seen on Drakelow, Woburn Park earlier today.
Many of the few hundred BHG’s
lingered here merely for a ‘wash and scrub up’ before heading over the north
corner towards Grafham, ditto the likely 50
or more total Common Gulls. 2
Great Black-backs, 5 Lesser
Black-backs and 22 Herring
Gulls completed the 7 species gull roost tonight.
39 G C
Grebes were noteworthy, also 5 Dabchicks and a Little Egret.
At Eversholt Lake in the mire this
morning, I found a flock of 60-100 Siskins by the lakeside but failed to find
any Mandarin, Goosander, Woodcock, Raven, Bullfinch or Marsh Tit there or thro’
Milton Wood in very muddy, slippery conditions.
MJPalmer
Saturday, 2 January 2016
New Years Day with Martin Palmer Birding
Hi all,
had a day of two halves y’day –
brilliant in the morning but tailing off dramatically in the afternoon. Thanks
to directions from Stu Warren, I caught up with the Roger Hick’s Poppy Hill Farm
Great Grey Shrike and left there at 1.25 with my day’s species tally on 73 then,
in the next 3 hours, I visited Langford Mill, Gypsy Lane E + W, Broom Lake,
lanes from Southill to Houghton Conquest, Quest ClP, Chimney Corner South ClP,
Brogborough Lake and Stewartby Lake but only added another half dozen species ~
Long-tailed Tit, Greenfinch, Red Crested Pochard, Great Black-back and Goldeneye
then Feral Pigeon on Kempston Keep as I passed by at dusk.
Nonetheless, a very satisfying day
out – 5 raptors, 2 owls + GGS being one highlight; finding G N Diver and Scaup
on Rookery North being another and getting some great views of the c60 strong
flock of Lesser and Mealy Redpolls by Broom Village Pond being a third. Very
satisfying were a small flock of 3 mixed bunting sp with Linnets at Pasture Farm
entrance track south of Cardington. I totalled 79 species so (only) just pipped
Roger’s tally despite covering a good few more miles.
I could, perhaps should, have had at
least another 11 species to reach a magic 90 but I failed to find any Common
Snipe, Jack Snipe or Green Sandpiper at up to 4 suitable sites I visited,
neither, surprisingly, could I find any Red-legged Partridges, Stock Doves,
Kingfisher or Bullfinches, nor any Egyptian Geese along Harrowden Lane nor the
recent Pintail at Broom Lake.
My diversion to Poppy Hill and
Langford Mill meant I didn’t visit The Lodge so I could have had Brambling,
Siskin and, perhaps Raven and Woodcock there – there were none of the latter
pair in suitable habitat I visited in the Old warden area. A walk along Meadow
Lane/BSTW failed to produce the hoped for Chiffy and maybe Firecrest and I ran
out of “passerine” time to visit MVMP or MSTW for e.g. Chiffchaffs, Stonechat
and possibly Bearded Tit – also Water Rail. Overall finch numbers were very poor
throughout the day – apart from the Redpolls - and my only House Sparrows were
a few in Southill.
My list is below – Roger, I wonder
how many we got between us? Thanks to all friends I met out and about y’day and
messages of sightings from Pip, Richard, Steve, Martin G, Stu W etc All the best
to all for 2016,
Martin
- Great Northern
Diver
- Great Crested
Grebe
- Dabchick
- Cormorant
- Little Egret
- Grey Heron
- Mute Swan
- Greylag
- Barnacle
- Canada Goose
- Mallard
- Gadwall
- Wigeon
- Common Teal
- Shoveler
- Tufted Duck
- Greater Scaup
- Common Pochard
- Red Crested
Pochard
- Goldeneye
- Coot
- Moorhen
- Pheasant
- Grey Partridge
- Red Kite
- Common Buzzard
- Sparrowhawk
- Peregrine
- Kestrel
- Lapwing
- Golden Plover
- Great
Black-back
- Herring Gull
- Lesser
Black-back
- Common Gull
- B H Gull
- Carrion Crow
- Rook
- Jackdaw
- Magpie
- Jay
- Wood Pigeon
- Feral Pigeon
- Collared Dove
- Little Owl
- Short-eared Owl
- Green
Woodpecker
- Great Spotted
Woodpecker
- Skylark
- Meadow Pipit
- Grey Wagtail
- Pied Wagtail
- Great Tit
- Blue Tit
- Coal Tit
- Long-tailed Tit
- Treecreeper
- Nuthatch
- Goldcrest
- Wren
- Dunnock
- Robin
- Starling
- Blackbird
- Song Thrush
- Redwing
- Filedfare
- Mistle Thrush
- Great Grey
Shrike
- House Sparrow
- Chaffinch
- Greenfinch
- Goldfinch
- Linnet
- Lesser Redpoll
- Mealy Redpoll
- Reed Bunting
- Yellowhammer
- Corn Bunting
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)