Saturday 9 June 2018

Gulling

We were out in the national forest yesterday morning in a well planned effort to ring Black-headed Gull & tern chicks. Four of us set off in a small motorized craft. Huge thanks to the Forestry Commission and rangers, without whom this would have been impossible.

Moving around the island carefully & methodically we used up the 100 E rings we had in no time at all! Despite our best efforts to match rings to the number of chicks estimated from the shoreline, there were still a number of ringable age that we had to leave. We also located and ringed 6 Common Terns.

Newly hatched Black-headed Gull chick (the egg to the right was in the process of hatching). At this age and size however this was too small to ring but lovely to see nonetheless.

Common Tern chick.



Saturday 12 May 2018

It was all Yellow

When the drizzle came earlier I was expecting Swifts and hirundines galore. Well, there were lots of hirundines but none coming low enough to catch and as for Swifts were concerned ... none, which was a surprise this far in to May.

I did however catch a Pied Wagtail and two Yellow Wagtails (male and female). The female was just beginning to develop a brood patch, so I expect she will be breeding in the crop fields to the east where several pairs nest each year, supported by the relatively abundant insect life found around the filter beds. Nine Yellow Wags were on ste this evening.



Saturday 21 April 2018

Much binding in the marsh

First visit of the year to our reed-bed site. Excellent numbers of Reed Bunting both on site and ringed, along with first Reed Warblers, Lesser Whitethroat and 3 Cetti's Warblers.



Sunday 18 February 2018

Three Amigos


Andy has been working with Forestry Commission in the National Forest for some time now. This has included general conservation work but also bird ringing. Two of the fields at one site are superb in the winter for Snipe and related species, so it was time to organize a mist net session to catch and ring the visiting waders.

Waders generally have superb eyesight, so there is little point trying to catch in fixed nets during daylight. The team therefore assembled yesterday afternoon with a view to setting nets and then catching just after dusk. Once we were happy the conditions were right, we set off to encourage any birds on the ground in to the nets and quickly extracted three species. From left to right above (which is also smallest to largest): Jack Snipe, Snipe and Woodcock. Remarkably this is the second time we have managed the same feat at this particular site.

Update 19th Feb. I also posted the above image on Twitter; it has already received over 36,000 views! The power of social media; just wish I'd written something profound, perhaps about the plight of waders and habitat loss.