Friday, May 22, 2020

Slowing Down

View from Kingsdon Hill, Colyton towards the Axe estuary (Copyright T D Wright)
Painted Lady, Colyton 21/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)
Red Kite, Colyton 20/05/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)

    Well, May often starts well but quickly slows down around here and lockdown has not altered that. I still managed a couple of waders on a rare visit to BHM on Saturday 16th. Little Ringed and Ringed Plovers were both present and 4 Curlew outnumbered the 2 Whimbrel for a change.
     A lone Red Kite brightened up my exercise walk to Colyton Hill on 20th. The next day, I saw my first Painted Lady of the Spring. Not much to report then but May can often have a sting in the tail!

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Coly Update

Dippers 12/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)


Dipper 12/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)
Common Whitethroat (Copyright T D Wright)


      Being concerned about our Coly birds after the recent pollution incident I took a stroll along it yesterday. It was great to see things looking more normal for mid-May with fledgling Dippers being fed by adults and other riverine birds about. Some Mayflies were on the wing but I didn't see any Demoiselles or Damselflies. Lots of Sand Martins still although I'm not sure if they are breeding birds. I will try to keep an eye on things and hope that some of you will let me know if anything comes to light regarding the river's condition and its wild inhabitants' welfare.
      Colyton Hill was disappointing today but there were birds about yesterday on the upper Axe. A showy Common Whitethroat was nice but star bird was a Turtle Dove settled in a ploughed field. I've had a few of these near Colyton before but they are getting rarer these days so who knows if we will still have them in the future? Mike Blaver found this one so well done to him on turning up so many birds on his exercise walks during lockdown. Let's hope he doesn't now start driving more and therefore misses all the birds!
Turtle Dove 12/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)

Monday, May 11, 2020

Kites, Hobbies, Worms and Flycatchers

Red Kite, Colyton Hill, 09/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)
Spotted Flycatcher, Colyton Hill 07/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)

Slow Worm, Colyton, 09/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)

     Well, Cownhayne was good for a while with another Whinchat on 3rd with Lesser Whitethroat, Swifts and myriad hirundines. On 5th, BHM held 2 Ringed Plover, 9 Dunlin, 7 Whimbrel and 2 Curlew. The Bar-tailed Godwit from 2nd was still present on the estuary.
     On 7th, a walk to Jobble's Lane produced my first Spotted Flycatcher of 2020 on Colyton Hill. The 9th was very warm and sunny and several Slow Worms were out on the tarmac around Colyton. As I climbed higher past Whitwell Lane I saw my first Red Kite of the year thermalling towards Colyton Hill. At last! Then, like Red London Buses they piled through en masse and I soon had double figures. Within an hour I counted 11 but just as suddenly as they started, they dried up. 7 Common Buzzards, 2 Kestrels and 2 Sparrowhawks added to the raptor count but I had to wait until Sunday to see my first Hobby from Colyton picnic site. Today (11th) I got more glimpses of Hobby from Clay Lane but how many are there? People from Rousdon to Southleigh and North to Axminster have also been reporting Hobbies as they pass through our neighbourhood so when that settles down we might work out if they are breeding this year. Stay ALERT, everyone!
Whinchat, Cownhayne 03/05/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)

Friday, May 1, 2020

Iceland Gull

Iceland Gull 1stWinter, Axe Estuary, 30/04/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)

        Well, my Lockdown Luck hasn't been too bad really. Even though I found out from 'Magic' Mike Blaver that I'd missed out on a pair of Garganey, I wasn't too bothered as I've seen plenty of them in our area previously. Steve's cracking female Ruff was showing really well last evening so I thought I'd probably have to settle for that. However, I did that thing of saying "Right, I'm leaving" but then having one last look at the estuary. One final scan. Corblimey luvverduck a blinking whitewinger plopped in amongst the bathing gulls by Coronation Corner! Immediately an Iceland Gull immature, it later became a first-winter when I checked my hastily grabbed video and pictures. The bill is the most obvious pointer to that, along with the darkish eye. Anyhow, see for yourself...
      The other video I took is too long so needs to be cropped for Blogger! If I can be bloggered. Anyway, try another still...
Iceland Gull 1stWinter, Axe Estuary, 30/04/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
      Incredibly, Steve Waite managed to see the bird without leaving his house! I'd put it out straight away on WhatsApp but nobody came down for it. I suppose they had all used their daily exercise and couldn't. I was glad to hear that at least one Seaton birder had seen it, albeit at some distance. It flew North, which makes me think that it might turn up at Torr or Chew next. Sorry I couldn't make it stay for everyone but you've all seen whitewingers here before and will again. At least it wasn't an even rarer gull species!
     As for other birds since my last update, Tuesday 28th was rain-blessed with waders and I was lucky to see 2 Grey Plovers with the 40-strong Dunlin flock. Also female Barwit, 3 Ringed Plover, 2 LRP and 11 Whimbrel. My second Swift of the year was with a massive throng of 3 hirundine species and along Cownhayne 4 Wheatears still remained. An amazing number of House Martins on this day included 50+ over Colyton WTW and 50+ on wires at Cownhayne farm simultaneously. Brilliant to see!
     I would say that May has been thrown down the gauntlet by a decent April. With all Whitford, Seaton, Beer and Coly Birders still confined to local 'exercising', what else will lockdown bring?

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Kitchen Sink Birding

Wheatear, Colyton, 26/04/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)

Today was one of the best days of lockdown! I saw some blogworthy birds without leaving the flat; from my kitchen window, no less! I heard a major kerfuffle from the gulls but could only see Common Buzzards, albeit 12 of them, in a large kettle rising to the west of Colyton. Lots of gulls and corvids with them so maybe there had been some good feeding opportunity over there. Flying through my binocular view were several House Martins which was great as over Bridge Marsh yesterday the swarm of Sand Martins and Swallows didn't contain any House Martins.
    Incredibly, the best bird of all was closer than all of these. I've seen Black Redstart on the Colyton rooftops before but this was my first ever 'urban' Colyton Wheatear! It performed alongside the House Sparrows and Goldfinches for half an hour. Very nice.
      Belated News From Last Sunday (19th) - I saw a distant raptor last week which I couldn't make up my mind about. I only have poor pics but here's a couple of them to peruse if you have the inclination. I just thought the jizz of this bird was not like the usual Buzzards. Therefore it could have been something unusual but I couldn't even string it as anything definite. If anybody wants to comment on it, feel free...
Raptor species, near Colyton 19/04/2020

Raptor species, near Colyton 19/04/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Poverty Lockdown!

    I have to say it's nice to see everyone else experiencing the same restrictions as me for a while. For three years or more I've been restricted in my movements by lack of money and no car. I've also tried to socially distance myself from people with coughs for years as I know that, as a zero-hours worker, I will not get sick pay if I can't work due to illness. To be honest, I'm doing many of the same things I normally do - walking around Colyton, cycling maybe as far as Seaton - so it's mainly the closure of the library and, horror of horrors, my "lockdown hairstyle" which have marked these times as distinct from others. I have a suspicion that the air quality has improved a little (which is good for my asthma) but the roads seem to be busy enough still.
    Anyway, what birds have I seen? Well, I haven't done too badly really. I've tried some areas of high ground near Colyton and have seen or heard some migrants; in places I tend to have all to myself in birding terms. The sight of a lone Wheatear in a field of Pied and White Wagtails, the sounds of a calling Cuckoo and a singing Lesser Whitethroat have all complemented the views from Colyton hill very nicely.
    As for Colyton itself, I have now seen all 3 hirundines around the town/parish and a single Swift. Best of all, however, was a very low Osprey which flew N over the town on a very grey afternoon. Two species of Owl have been calling at dusk.
Field near Colyton with Axe Cliff in distance (Copyright TD Wright)
    Another area I can legitimately explore is Cownhayne lane by bike. Often quiet, it suddenly burst into life after last weekend's fall and produced 2 Whinchat, 10 Wheatears and 4 White Wagtails among 20+ Pieds. From the end of Cownhayne, Bridge Marsh is viewable and supplied a distant cracker. A male Yellow Wagtail among the Pieds was also accompanied by a Whinchat on the dried-up pool.
Whitethroat, Axe Cliff, April 2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
    My fortnightly trip to Tesco in Seaton enabled me to add Knot, Barwit and many Whimbrel to my birding smorgasbord in a quick gander at the estuary. A quick walk up to Axe Cliff was combined and produced singing Whitethroat and Yellowhammer. Also Willow Warbler.
     That's the best of the edited highlights for now. I still haven't seen a Red Kite but did manage a Marsh Harrier near the A3052 one day. The less said about high-flying 'barn doors' the better.

Friday, March 27, 2020

Crumbs of Comfort

    Well, it's not been a bad 24 hours under Lockdown Lite. Firstly, a lone redhead Goosander flew West along my road at dusk last night - a very good Colyton sighting and proof that the birds are not locked down and are on the move as normal. Secondly, my supplier (pusher?) of home-made baked goods delivered a muffin consignment as we all need a few tasty morsels to keep our chins up during the soft curfew they've imposed upon us.
     I'm off for my exercise now so if I see that Green Woodpecker again all well & good. Keep your distance, folks! At least 2 metres away from all birds; even if you have got a camera!

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Spring Unsprung!

Siskin, Devon, March 2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
Coal Tit, Devon, March 2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
Little Owl, Devon, March 2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
I've missed out on the waves of Spring migrants so far. Even spending time looking around the Yacht Club, Tramsheds, Bovis estate, Borrow Pit and Seaton Marshes yesterday failed to produce any migrants at all! (Unless you count a lone Chiffchaff singing at Borrow Pit which I don't as they overwinter).
       However, the signs of Spring are definitely there. At Sidmouth Road Cemetery today the Greenfinches, Chaffinches and Wrens were all carrying nest material. A Green Woodpecker looked magnificent in its Spring plumage. The primroses were out too. In the evenings the Little Owl is calling repeatedly. The Grey Wagtails are nestbuilding and displaying. Several species of butterfly have been on the wing.
       I don't mind waiting a little longer for the out-and-out Summer visitors and passage migrants. Just means more fun still to come. Which might help us birders get through this difficult time of Pandemics and Brexit shortages. Good luck, everyone.
   

Friday, March 6, 2020

Birding Poverty v Grinding Poverty

      In creating this blog - with its catchy title - I have been intending to discuss the issue of Birding Poverty. I think I may have invented this expression and it has accurately described my situation for the last 3 years. I think that the level at which one slips into BP is just a little step above the even worse situation of Grinding Poverty. I suppose if you go a whole year or 2-3 years without seeing a single new bird or 'lifer' you might consider yourself to be a sufferer of Birding Poverty.
      It may be that a birder who manages to combine a little minimum wage work with the addition of Tax Credits or Universal Credit will just about be able to keep himself fed, sheltered and clothed. However, as Helder Camara (I think) once said, human beings are not just stomachs. Above all, they hunger for dignity. In a birder's mind, said dignity can be happily supplanted by a few good birds.
     Therefore, I would define BP as a situation where a birder lacks the disposable income to travel very far from his front door in order to broaden the range of species observed and recorded, or photographed, by himself. The secondary component of this sociological malady is the fact that he will also find it difficult to justify his time spent birding to a non-birding government official. One might explain that mental & physical health are important and that time spent birding benefits both but we are living in stringent times.
     Occasionally, a birding contact with a car might offer us a lift to a birding location (twitchers usually won't as they are very competitive and delighted to exclude you from the Listing Stakes Handicap Chase). This is terrific and very kind of them if it enables you to see species that you're not going to see within walking/cycling distance of home. However, those kind souls often have busy lives and can't help you out too often. So how can you, the tick-deprived, go it alone?
     I would certainly recommend having a cheap, second-hand pushbike or working out how to utilise a cheap bus ticket to maximum effect. Those extra few kilometres can bring the likes of Purple Sandpiper or Dartford Warbler within the BP sufferer's grasping, lean-fingered reach. Also, the knack of being able to incorporate a quick 5 minutes of birding into the zero-hours day can reap dividends. I have, on occasion, glanced at a river or stream in an urban area and been rewarded with Dipper, Goosander or Grey Wagtail. Even an Otter once. Churchyards are also worth checking. A relatively small one on my jobhunting rounds has harboured Hawfinches, Treecreepers and Redwings amongst others. All without going out of my way or incurring extra expenditure too! I should be called Thrifty Birder sometimes as I use my occasionally unemployed cunning to maximise my chances of seeing wildlife with limited financial means. Time spent waiting for trains or buses need not be wasted as there is often some wildlife nearby to keep the Skint Naturalist interested.
    I could go on, but the point is made. Birds and other wild creatures are always nearby. You just have to make the most of what you've got available to you. It would be easy to beat your birding self
up when you can't go far due to lack of funds; especially when social media is constantly thrusting megas from all over the globe right in your face. Console yourself with the knowledge that your carbon footprint is lower than it's ever been and the likes of Greta Thunberg might say "Well done you!" if only they knew how few air miles or road miles you've clocked up in recent years.
    Lastly, protect yourself from ridicule by not keeping a year-list and by not publicising your life-list. Without that ammunition, the meanies can't rub it in by reminding you that a lifer for you was available last week in Cornwall and you didn't even manage to travel from Devon for it when other people twitched it from Scotland. Defiantly suggest that some of these blokes might like to try finding their own birds for a change!
    Now, I've been discussing this issue in relation to myself but I'm sure that I'm not alone. If you are reading this and finding some similarity with your own predicament, rest assured you have my sympathy. Please feel free to leave a comment if you have any suggestions as to how we can address the issue of Birding Poverty. To all of you who feel the grinding oppression of tick-deprivation, all I can say to that is "Don't let the listers grind you down!"  

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Goshawks in Devon

Goshawk, Devon 01/03/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
Goshawk, Devon 01/03/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
Goshawk v Carrion Crow, Devon, 01/03/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
Goshawk v Carrion Crow, Devon 01/03/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)

Goshawk v Corvid, Devon, 01/03/2020 (Copyright TD Wright)
     Well, I got another lift from the kind ladies...which was nice! I really wanted to see Crossbills and one of the ladies called out some overflying birds which sounded like said pine-cone raiders but didn't stop. Never mind, we enjoyed Siskins, Yellowhammers, Nuthatches and GS Woodpeckers then found a quiet spot for lunch.
     Amazingly, we kept having our nibbling rudely disturbed by birds of prey and assorted corvids. I think Dave Boult knew we might see such things there as he'd met up with us to show us around an area I barely remember as it's years - decades even - since I've been there! Anyhow, we enjoyed the displaying Buzzards but the Goshawks were a rare treat for me these carless days. What was even more fun was the succession of corvid species - especially Ravens and Carrion Crows - which encouraged the raptors to barrel-roll, dive and climb in combat with them. I tried to get pictures but most were quite blurry. Even so, I think these few record shots are so extraordinary for me just now that they are worth blogging. I'll have to find some Crossbills round here...

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

The Finch Rump Effect: Beyond Brambling

Brambling, Lambert's Castle, 17/02/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)
Brambling, Lambert's Castle, 17/02/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)
       What is it with finches and rumps? Over the years I've gotten to know the white rumps of Bullfinch, Arctic Redpoll and Brambling. Yellow rumps have featured recently with the Seaton Serin and occasional Siskin. Historically, I once witnessed the purplish rump of Twite in the Outer Hebrides. On Monday, however, I checked about 200 green rumps at Lambert's Castle! They belonged to the ubiquitous Chaffinches that seemed to love the beech mast they were sharing with Coal Tits and various other life forms. I had welcomed the kind offer of 2 local well-heeled ladies to accompany them on the short drive over the border into Dorset as it's quite rare for me to escape my East Devon prison these days. We enjoyed the Redwings, Treecreepers, GS Woodpeckers and Nuthatches but were feeling a little disappointed that the enormous flock had not contained Brambling. Therefore, we retraced our earlier steps and tried the massive carpet of Chaffinches again. This time, they flew up into the trees and, lo and behold, among the green-rumped throng was a flash of white! We'd got one...oh actually two...no three! Suddenly, finches fell like rain and a broad sweep revealed that we had 5 Brambling, 3 of them males. Where were they at the first time of asking? They must be ranging around I suppose which makes me consider - just how many birds are in this whole area? It looks fantastic and must get more birds than we saw in 2 hours. Anyway, this was a shot in the arm for my birding self and I really needed it after being stranded in Honiton when everyone else was enjoying that rare gull the other day...
Bramblings, Lambert's Castle, 17/02/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)


Brambling, Lambert's Castle, 17/02/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)




Saturday, February 8, 2020

The Serin Heat

Serin, Seaton 05/02/2020 (Copyright T D Wright)
    It's got so cold in my flat (now that my last storage heater has packed up) that being outside seems infinitely preferable to wasting electricity on a noisy fan heater. Also, we actually got some calm weather and sunshine this week. So, when Steve Waite said he'd had a Serin along Riverside Way I felt justified in making a detour in the probably vain hope of seeing it. To my amazement, the moment I arrived by the patch of rough ground it visits it flew in! Luckily, the chap I was talking to was quite tall so I had to look up to converse with him. Otherwise, the tiny brown streaky finch may have eluded us when it piled into a weedy bank and quietly set about foraging...
Serin, Seaton 05/02/2020(Copyright T D Wright)

      It's not very often we get a rare passerine found in February here so well done Steve for bringing us all some cheer in the bleak midwinter. I'm surprised that it seems to have disappeared again though. Where is it now? It can't have gone far, surely? Perhaps it heard a storm was coming and headed for warmer climes!?

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Mediterranean Style!

     How curious! I was midway between the 2 halves of a jar of Food Bank Spanish Sauce on Wednesday(29th) when I got a message that Phil Abbot had broken the Axe record for Mediterranean Gulls with 56 at Coronation Corner. Gavin Haig then proceeded to break it again with 83 whilst I detoured from the town centre to try counting them flying past the tramsheds where the Common Sandpiper was still about.
    Amazingly, I soon had a group of 44 go by. This was followed by lots more between 3:15pm and 4:45pm. I'd breached the 100 barrier by the time Ian of the notorious McLean clan joined me but we still managed another 20 to take my total to 123. What the true number for the whole day would have been boggles the mind. Loads of BHGs, Commons, Herrings and GBBs also streamed by. I expect there was a smithsonianus in there somewhere but a fly-by in the twilight would be tough, wouldn't it?! An extraordinary day for us all and Mike Blaver kept seeing them from Tower Hide until dusk.
   I enjoyed some new potatoes and broccoli with my Mediterranean pan-fry that evening too!😋

Monday, January 27, 2020

Filling A Hole For Now

    Well, I got through the weekend by having a Food Bankish meal two days running. Tinned tuna, tinned sweetcorn, packeted pasta and a jar of sauce kept me going well enough to take a walk around Colyton. Not a bad thing to do just now, I must say.
    The cold snap we had last week seems to have affected the Cattle Egrets' habits. Only one flew South over the Umborne bridge with the Littles at dusk on Sunday so three of them must be feeding elsewhere or flying down earlier now. Dippers were about but I shan't mention their exact location. Two species of owl also made their presence felt.
    Wish I had more to tell but the only other news is that I have 2 pairs of binoculars for sale at £50 each. One pair is Helios from the mid-noughties, the other is Opticron from the 1980s! Let me know if you're interested - I need money for fresh fruit and other produce! Cheers for now...

Friday, January 17, 2020

Scraping Bits & Bobs Together

       One of the biggest problems with being a skint birder is that you can't travel anywhere to find new birds to report or comment on. Without the money for a car, even popping across to the Exe Estuary becomes a major expedition involving several buses or trains and more time spent travelling than birding. Thus, it befalls the birder bereft of money to either be very quiet on social media or to repeatedly mention the same overwintering birds which have been present on his doorstep for months now.
         Therefore, I can confirm that the 4 Cattle Egrets which have been passing over Colyton at dusk as per usual are my biggest birding thrill so far this year. I did take a walk along to Seaton Hole for the male Black Redstart one day - and I don't want to devalue a beautiful bird - but we did have quite a few in the Autumn and, anyway, I didn't find this one and had already seen many photographs of it. So I knew exactly what to expect. Which spoils my fun a little these days (I suppose I'm becoming a grumpy old birder; sorry about that).
        On a more positive note, a nice surprise this week was the intervention of Mike Hill who saw me at the bus stop, took pity on me and gave me a lift as far as Hillymead. Cheers, Mike & Cherry! As I was right by the entrance to Seaton Marshes there it would've been rude not to visit the hide on my way into town, wouldn't it? Well, that's my opinion so I re-acquainted myself with the Bar-tailed Godwit, a Greenshank and a couple of Dunlin from there. As I've recently been to Specsavers I also saw Black-tailed Godwits, Redshanks, Curlews, Oystercatchers and a Stonechat. The seafront has produced Common Scoter, GC Grebes, Gannets and a Razorbill.
        Apart from the usual raptor species and riverine birds, I suppose that's about it for 2020 so far. If I can find my way to a spot where anything more interesting occurs, I may post again soon. Otherwise, it could be a month or two! Roll on Spring, eh?