Showing posts with label Migrant Hawker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Migrant Hawker. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 September 2018

Painted Ladies




I have been hanging on to this blog with the intention of adding a Clouded Yellow, as a way to finish off the butterflies for the year. Sadly they don't seem to be arriving in the usual numbers. I have only seen one and that was on turbo power disappearing into the distance.

The pictures are now starting to look a little dated with most of the insects coming to the end of their flight periods. So published now with, hopefully, a Clouded Yellow still to come.



Painted Lady



Painted Lady



Common Blue



Common Blue


Small Copper



Keeled Skimmer


Migrant Hawker


Broad-bodied Chaser


Black Darter




There are still a few Butterflies and Dragonflies around but this is really the end of another season. Time seems to go by ever more quickly.





Tuesday, 19 September 2017

Turtle Dove





It's always difficult when you get back from an overseas trip. You have an intensive week sorting out all the pictures and publishing the blog and then it is back to reality. There is no more finding ten life ticks a day. You just hope for the chance of a year tick or perhaps an exciting shot of a common bird and that very much sums up how it has been this past week.

My first days birding back in England doesn't look too bad on paper but seemed incredibly slow and unexciting on the day. On the 12th we did our usual circuit of Pagham Harbour. Nothing much had changed. Too much water in the Breech Pool so mostly ducks and no repair to the Ferry Pool so not enough water and very few birds.

On paper it gave me two year ticks, Whinchat and Spotted Flycatcher. All very distant and no chance of a picture but I suppose I should be counting it as a good day. Picture wise it was saved by a few Dragonflys that we found just south of the pumps at Ferry Creek. They were mostly Common and Red Darters but there were also a couple of Migrant Hawkers.



Migrant Hawker


A return a few days later and at least the North Wall was showing signs of life. A good few Bar-tailed Godwits and Redshanks out on the creek along with returning Wigeon and Teal and a few distant Pintails.

Four noisy Greenshanks flew into the back of the Breech Pool and we found three Spotted Redshank amongst the Godwits at the other end of the pool



Four Greenshanks on the Breech Pool




Spotted Redshank


However, the bird we had come to see was a ridiculously confiding juvenile Turtle Dove. It had spent a few days by the Visitors Centre at Pagham completely unfazed by the people around it. Even having read reports of the birds behaviour it still came as a bit of a shock when you realised how easy it was to approach.







Either it has spent a lot of time around people that have been feeding it or it has never seen a human before and does not realise how dangerous we can be.






Lets hope it picks its migration route carefully.....






.....or those brave hunters on the island of Malta will have another easy target.





Friday, 7 August 2015

Brown Hawker




There was not much doing on the birding scene today so we went to have a look for Brown Hairstreaks at Tillets Lane Fields. There were lots of the usual browns about and a good number of Purple Hairstreaks that were staying up in the trees, but no sign of the Brown Hairstreaks. Tillets Lane Fields themselves were looking a little overgrown and unloved, except by the dog walkers that is.


Looking for an Essex Skipper but this one is a Small


Slightly faded female Silver-washed Fritillary

With nothing very exciting on show at Tillets Fields we decided to look in at New Bridge near Billingshurst, a new site for us.  It looks promising, we saw Banded Demoiselles, Brown Hawkers, Darters, and a Migrant Hawker.


Banded Demoiselle

There were a few Brown Hawkers about and for once they were landing although only for a few seconds at a time.


Slightly out of focus Brown Hawker

and below the same Brown Hawker with a female but they flew before I could get a clear shot.


Brown Hawkers


We saw the Dragonfly below up in a tree. It was too small to be a Southern or Common Hawker which only really leaves a Migrant Hawker but I would really have liked a clearer picture of it.


Migrant Hawker

Next stop was Lords Piece. Dave had picked up an Emerald Damselfly there a couple of days ago but we could not find any sign of them today.

I spent a long time trying to get a decent picture of the Black-tailed Skimmers but, as is their way, they were all putting down on the mud where it was hard to get a clear shot of them.


Black-tailed Skimmer

There were still a good number of Broad-bodied Chasers about and some of them were still in good condition.


Broad-bodied Chasers


Broad-bodied Chaser

and this pair of Common Darters seemed oblivious of the camera gradually getting closer.



Common Darters


Common Darters


Common Darter

I was hoping that one of these would be a Ruddy Darter but they all show the yellow stripes on the leg which are diagnostic of the Common.


Common Darter


An interesting day out and a couple of decent pictures but in general the numbers all seem to be a bit down this year. Even the decent birds that are about seem to be boycotting Sussex.







Friday, 22 August 2014

Common Sandpiper


The autumn migration is underway and I have been trying to plug a few of the gaps in my year list caused by missing the birds during the spring. Wednesday saw a reasonably successful trip over to Pagham Harbour. I managed to pick up Little Ringed Plover and Green Sandpiper on the Ferry Pool and a Reed Warbler on the North Wall but they were all too far away for a picture. That left me with with just a butterfly and a dragonfly to show for the day out. So much for my first day back on serious birding.


Holly Blue

Migrant Hawker

I had not managed to find a Common Sandpiper on the trip to Pagham so Friday I took a couple of hours out and went to Arlington Reservoir. With the water in the reservoir low there were a surprising number of birds there, loafing on the exposed mud. The Canada and Greylag geese along with various gulls were the most numerous but there were other interesting birds as well.


Juvenile Egyptian Goose

This juvenile Egyptian Goose had me wondering for a few seconds until the adult, displaying the more familiar dark eye patches and white wing bars, came into view.

There were at least three Common Sandpipers on the dam wall. The first was very flighty but the other two gave good views. The pale edging to the wing feathers and barring on the back suggests the second bird is a juvenile.


Common Sandpiper

Juvenile Common Sandpiper

Other birds on the wall were a Ringed Plover, a Juvenile Dunlin, and the usual juvenile Pied Wagtails.


Ringed Plover

Ringed  Plover (the other side)


Juvenile Dunlin

Pale or warm brown fringing on feathers and silvery V on scapulars
 show this as a juvenile bird


There were lots of "little brown" birds in the hedgerows but I did not have time to stop and look for anything unusual. A pity really as I still need a Lesser Whitethroat for this years list.

Finally, ever wondered what goes into your drinking water. This pipe has been exposed by the low water levels. I am sure the water must be OK by the time it gets to you but it doesn't look very healthy.


Emptying into Arlington Reservoir




Sunday, 1 September 2013

Kestrel





Sunday and an early morning walk around Cisbury and the surrounding area provided a mixed bag of birding experiences. There were a lot of birds about particularly along the Monarchs Way. There were probably a dozen Wheatears and Whinchats along the fences together with Yellowhammers, Meadow Pipits, and I think Corn Buntings. I say I think because I had made the mistake of doing the walk the wrong way round and was walking into the sun at the key point where all the birds were. This meant trying to pick out birds from there silhouettes and destroyed any chance of getting pictures.

I did settle down at one point with the intention of waiting for the birds to come to me. Then the inevitable, the unmistakable sound of a mobile phone conversation and a couple appeared with seven dogs. They did put them on leads as they went past me but twenty yards further on they were running loose and flushing everything from the adjacent fields. I sat and listened to the telephone conversation for the next fifteen minutes until they had disappeared over the next hill half a mile away. The birds did return slowly but I could not get anywhere near them.

 I had a pleasant walk, saw a few distant Redstarts, but it was starting to look as though I would be heading home without any pictures for the blog. I tried the Dew Pond but there were no Dragonflies and my last hope was the Rifle Butts on the south side of Cisbury Ring.

There were birds there feeding on the seed heads but they were mostly Willchafs. Its always exiting to see the first few in the spring but by this time of year having to identify the differences between the two is starting to become tedious. This one was interesting though as it has black legs and yellow feet.



I'd call this one a Chiffchaff


I also managed a picture of a moth and a Migrant Hawker Dragonfly.



Lesser Treble-bar Moth


Migrant Hawker





Just when I had given up hope of getting a decent picture for the blog I was rescued by this female Kestrel, probably a juvenile, perched in a tree on the edge of the ring.