Thursday, 17 May 2012

One Stop Nature Shop Guided Bird Walk Report


7th May 2012

Summer-plumaged waders at high tide roost

  Another unsettled day of wet weather gave uncertainty to our walk this evening, fortunately it was a dry but cool evening at the high tide roost. On arrival the high tide seemed some time away. Had I got the tide tables wrong? It was a great relief to see the tide rapidly coming in, with the distant oystercatchers (350) on the furthest spit soon becoming unsettled, and moving closer to the second nearest shingle bar. Other small flocks began to fly in from The Wash and other species began to move over from the shingle ridges where they had been sheltering unseen from the cool wind.

  Unlike the earlier visit to the roost most species we began to encounter were in partial or full summer plumage, most notably at first were the stunning 300 grey plovers, then the 450 sanderling,  quite different in their rusty brown, black and grey plumage from the almost pale grey white birds we had seen on the earlier visit. The few bar-tailed godwits present were mostly still in winter plumage, but finally we did pick up the odd dark chesnut bird in summer plumage, along with 25 knot and 2-3 dunlin. The “local” birds also showed with ringed plovers and an oystercatcher located in the breeding cordons on their nests. There were some moments of panic as the roost rose quickly to the air, with the male sparrowhawk late on being the likely culprit.

  Other signs of summer were really difficult to detect due to the cold conditions other than a handful of swallows migrating west. a brave distant cuckoo heard over the golf course, and late on little, and Sandwich terns putting an appearance in, on what otherwise was a poor evening for any bird song.

  Out at sea we did mange to pick out a grey seal, 6 eider, a great crested grebe and close too dusk, two little egrets heading east. On our walk back the wind was unfortunately too strong to stand any chance of seeing the local barn owls.

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