YEARLISTING IN 2016

Compared to most recent years, when for example I recorded 165 species in the county in 2011, 187 in 2012 and 173 in 2013, this has been a particularly poor one with just 157 species recorded by mid December - one of my worst years on record

YEARLISTING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE

It's all over - 2012 has come to an end. I managed a total of 187 out of the 198 species recorded all told in Buckinghamshire - 94% of the total - probably my highest-ever annual tally.

The current record is 191 species achieved in 2006 and held jointly by both Rob Hill and Simon Nichols



Wednesday 23 October 2013

CATTLE EGRET

For the past week, this CATTLE EGRET has been ranging between gardens in the Stokenchurch and now Chinnor areas, at the west end of the county


Sunday 13 October 2013

Another local mega whilst I'm off twitching......

Warren Claydon discovered a EUROPEAN STORM PETREL at Calvert BBOWT Lake this afternoon allowing all of the county's birders an opportunity to see this mega-rare bird in the county - the first in two centuries. It was on view for about an hour allowing everyone of the county's birders to see it (bar me of course) before it flew off.

A juvenile COMMON SCOTER was also discovered at Weston Turville Reservoir early morning (before relocating to Wilstone) whilst 4 eclipse RED-BREASTED MERGANSERS touched down for a short while at College Lake BBOWT (where also HEN HARRIER, MERLIN and RING OUZEL were sighted)

To cap it all off, a juvenile NORTHERN GANNET flew west over Buckingham at 1600 hours

Not a day to have been out of county

Friday 11 October 2013

A second bout of serious REDWING passage on the Hills

FRIDAY 11 OCTOBER
 
A very strong NE wind was blowing from dawn with the skies clear again. I pitched up at IVINGHOE HILLS NR again early, counting REDWINGS as they came over from 0732 until 1044 hours. Not quite as good as yesterday's passage but still an impressive 2,586 birds logged in just over 3 hours. A higher percentage of FIELDFARES though, with 105 today.
 
Rather surprisingly considering the weather, it was raptors that were excelling - a juvenile (probably female) MARSH HARRIER patrolling Gallows Hill for some considerable time, eventually disappearing from view towards the Transmitter Field at 0915; a juvenile MERLIN that appeared from the NE over Gallows and persisted in harassing Meadow Pipits for a period before recommencing westerly migration; some 4 Eurasian Sparrowhawks (presumably all migrants) and 5 high-flying and clearly migrating juvenile Common Buzzards, both pale and dark morph causing confusion amongst observers. A single WOODLARK came in high uttering its diagnostic liquid call-note as it went overhead and rapidly SSW, along with 2 male Pied Wagtails, a handful of Meadow Pipits, a Jay and a paltry 3 Chaffinches. Resident birds included a pair of COMMON RAVEN and up to 5 Red Kites.
 
With the onset of heavy cloud at around 1045, Redwing passage seemed to seriously tail-off and little happened over the next hour. I relocated to PITSTONE HILL where 590 REDWING were most likely reorienting birds flushed out from Inkombe Hole by ramblers.
 
MW and Francis Buckle had watched several RING OUZEL fly towards STEPS HILL so with migration floundering, I decided to 'bash' the hills for migrants, utilising the upper path. Mike and Francis chose the lower route and inadvertently flushed RING OUZELS out of the Hole and up towards me - a total of 7 eventually being logged - all rather drab first-years and favouring the blossoming Whitebeam trees in which to feed. Some 5 Mistle Thrushes were loosely associating with them, whilst 5 or so Song Thrush were of the grey Continental variety. A cracking flock of 5 BRAMBLING were also noted but very little of anything else.
 
By midday, heavy rain had set in and I concentrated my efforts on WILSTONE RESERVOIR (TRING). New in on the mud were 2 DUNLIN whilst 5 of last night's 7 BLACK-TAILED GODWITS remained in Cemetery Corner. A flock of 227 Lapwing and just 2 EUROPEAN GOLDEN PLOVER were commuting between the stubble field opposite the Cemetery and the reservoir whilst just 1 juvenile RUFF was to be found.
 
Still lots of wildfowl feeding (too windy to carry out meaningful counts) with 4 RED-CRESTED POCHARDS together (see pix) and 22 NORTHERN PINTAIL noteworthy and 13 Lesser Black-backed and 3 Common Gulls in amongst the loafing Black-headed Gull throng.
 

A single SCANDINAVIAN ROCK PIPIT was moving between the Jetty and the NE corner of the reservoir, with 2 Common Chiffchaff in the East Hedgerow. Little Egrets were down to just 7.

Wednesday 2 October 2013

RUFFS at Manor Farm

Jason Chalk had 25 RUFF land briefly at Manor Farm this afternoon