Tuesday, 5 February 2019

1,000+ Red-throated Divers!


Kittiwake
Another very gloomy day, made interesting by the sheer numbers of birds off shore.
08.15-11.00 & 13.10-15.30 from the fishing boats with DW, MH, OL
Brent Goose: 496E    1W
Shelduck: 1W
Red-throated Diver: 1,018W      4E
Great-crested Grebe: 114 on sea
Fulmar: 9W
Gannet: 306W
Cormorant: the now usual 1,000s present
Turnstone: 8 around
Great Skua: 1W
Black-headed Gull: 1,000+W
Kittiwake: 431W
Guillemot: Many present + minimum of 1,000W
Razorbill: 8+

The 2 Whooper Swans were still present at Cockles Bridge, nearby at Green Hop Farm the 3 Cattle Egrets. Once again no grey Geese at Scotney during my visit. On Walland the Bewick Swans were still present at Horses Bones Farm.
Late afternoon on Burrowes the drake Smew with 3 Goosanders but very few Gulls came into roost.




Sunday, 3 February 2019

Owl and Harrier No Show!

A wander around the reserve this morning with CP, saw of note a Chiffchaff by Dengemarsh Hide, 3+ Bearded Tits from the viewing mound, the Smew nearby and 2 Dartford Warblers plus all the other usual species. When we were near the car park I got a call from SO telling me he had found a Tundra Bean Goose, with several Greater White-fronted Geese with the feral Greylags on the Sward at Scotney, a few minutes later we watching them in excellent light conditions.  
 Distant Smew, hopefully better in the next few days like the ones below a few years ago.
Tundra Bean Goose at Scotney
Greater White-fronted Geese at Scotney
This afternoon I stopped at Bretts Marina on my to Galloways for an afternoon Owl and Harrier watch, the usual Little Owl was in its favourite place at Lydd Camp and on the lake 3 Goosander showed distantly. The Owl and Harrier watch at South Brooks was a non event as no Hen Harriers, Short-eared Owls or Barn Owls were seen, a single male Marsh Harrier and 2 Peregrines were some compensation.
Little Owl at Lydd camp
3 distant Goosander on Bretts Marina


Saturday, 2 February 2019

First Smew of the Winter and A Crane!

First thing this morning the 2 Whooper Swans flew into into the Kale field at Cockles Bridge after spending the night on Cooks Pool, they returned to Cooks Pool at Dusk.
A chilly walk along the front of Scotney saw very little of note, the usual 20+ Dunlin, 8 Redshank, 3 Ringed Plovers, 5 Curlew, c50 Golden Plover and c100 Lapwing. With the cold weather I thought there might have been a Woodcock or 2 in the places I have found them before but no luck. At the fishing boats there was no change from the last few days except for fewer Razorbills. 
I went back to the reserve after hearing news of a drake Smew on the reserve, I cant believe I twitched a Smew at Dungeness! Many thanks to Pam for braving the cold walking around the reserve to find it on the New Excavations, hopefully if it stays it will settle down and allow some images. I must admit I didn't think we were going see a Smew this winter on the peninsular.  
1 of the 3 Cattle Egrets still present
Early afternoon one of the three Cattle Egrets was being very showy near Boulderwall. This bird is often on its own as the other 2 seem to chase it away but tolerate a Little Egret hanging around with them. 2 Great White Egrets were nearby at the coral. 

Common Crane at the end of Cooks Pool
Mid afternoon I was in the VC with RW & SM having a warm up while waiting for the Gulls to come into roost, when a visitor came in saying he'd seen a Common Crane from Cockles Bridge and showed us a photograph of it on his phone, needless to say we quickly headed off towards Cockles Bridge, but only had to go as far as Cooks Pool as the bird had already relocated there. I'm sorry I only know the finders name as @naturebotherer on twitter, so thank you for sharing so promptly.
The Crane was quite flighty, it flew to the hay fields for a while before heading back towards Boulderwall, I think it eventually settled for the night in the coral area.
 Common Crane over the hay fields illuminated by the red glow of the setting sun 


Friday, 1 February 2019

No Cold Weather Movement at Dunge!


32 of the 34 Bewick Swans that were at Horses Bones Farm this morning
A drive around Walland in very damp dreary conditions found the Bewick Swans still insitu, nearby at Midley a few each of Yellowhammers, Reed Buntings, Tree Sparrows and Chaffinches were feeding in the stubble. Along Caldecott lane c30 Corn Buntings and sizeable mixed flock of Fieldfare and Redwing. At Cockles Bridge the 2 Whooper Swans were still in the Rape field and the 3 Cattle Egrets were in the sheep field along with a Little Egret and Great white Egret. A Dartford Warbler was behind the fish hut with a Stonechat per OL.
Some of the c30 Corn Buntings along Caldecott Lane
Some of the 100s of Guillemots that littered the sea off the fishing boats
At the fishing boats again 100s of Guillemots and Razorbills, 70+ Red-throated Divers, smaller numbers of Gannets and Kittiwakes, 5 Turnstones not forgetting the 1,000s of Cormorants. A high count this year of 1,725 Great-crested Grebes in Lade bay per DS. The fact that all these birds are hanging around I guess means the bays hold a plentiful supply of food.
Red-throated Divers passing the fishing boats
This afternoon watching Burrowes was very poor, as apart from roosting Cormorants only a few Gulls came in to roost.

Thursday, 31 January 2019

Cormorants!

As I cleared the heavy frost off the car early this morning, I heard the familiar call of Bewick Swans flying out of the ARC over me to feed at Horses Bones Farm.  
Early morning at Cooks Pool, the Whoopers Swans roosting with the Mutes

 As I arrived at the sea watching hide wave after wave of Cormorants were flying past out of Rye Bay round The point into Lade Bay. The image above does not begin to show the numbers that swept past. I was trying to count them in blocks of 10 and believe a minimum of 9,000 birds were involved.
After that spectacle I wandered down to The Patch which was very quiet, probably because the boil was virtually non existent. Offshore plenty of Auks were tooing and froing, with a few Red-throated Divers and Gannets also 23 Brent Geese flew East. 
Brent Geese past The Patch
Razorbills and a Guillemot off the fishing boats this afternoon
MH joined me at the fishing boats this afternoon for a bitterly cold and fairly brief sea watch, which once again saw 100s of Razorbills and Guillemots tooing and froing and littering the sea while chasing Sprats, c50 Great-crested Grebes were feeding along with the omnipresent hordes of Cormorants, also 5 Turnstone on the beach and Grey Seal off shore.
Next stop the RSPB visitor centre for a warm up, where a Norwegian ringed Great Black-backed Gull JU850 was roosting. Details below.

CR-Code Black ring with white code: JU850 LBNW(JU850);RBM
Ringing Centre Stavanger Museum (Norway) Ring number 3039430
Species Great Black-backed Gull  Larus marinus 
Sex Unknown Age Pullus

Date Place Coordinates Observers Days/km/°
02.07 2014 Udvaare, Lindesnes, Vest-Agder, Norway 57°58'49"N 007°12'41"E Helberg, Morten -
22.11 2014 Boulogne-sur-Mer "bassin Loubet", Pas-de-Calais, France 50°43'38"N 001°35'14"E Petit-Berghem, Eric 143/884/206
01.07 2018 Udvaare, Lindesnes, Vest-Agder, Norway 57°58'49"N 007°12'41"E Helberg, Morten
Skår, Hogne 1460/0/0
31.01 2019 Dungeness, UK., Great Britain, Great Britain 50°55'51"N 000°56'16"E Casemore, Martin 1674/882/209
1w Caspian Gull
While I was in the visitor centre I saw a 1w Caspian Gull drop in front of Firth Hide, I quickly made my way to the hide, where fortunately the bird was still present and showing well.
Estonian ringed Common Gull P39J
Below are details of the above Estonian ringed Common Gull which David Walker and myself saw at The Patch on 29/01/2019. Many thanks to David for for forwarding the birds history to me.
Larus canus, white plastic P39J (ID= 7440)
ringed 7.06.2012 with an aluminium ring Estonia Matsalu UA9695 (on right tibia) as a chick in Kakrarahu colony (nest no. 545), Matsalu Nature Reserve, Estonia (58º46’ N 23º26’ E).
caught 10.06.2014 as a breeding female in Kakrarahu colony, nest no. 724. White PMMA ring P39J added on left tarsus.
observed 15.05.2015 in Kakrarahu colony, nest no. 620.
observed 15.05.2016 in Kakrarahu colony, nest no. 210.
observed 15.05.2017 in Kakrarahu colony, nest no. 409.
observed 15.05.2018 in Kakrarahu colony, nest no. 315.
observed 29.01.2019 at Dungeness, Kent, UK (50°55’ N 0°59’ E) by David Walker.


  
  

Tuesday, 29 January 2019

Myriads of Gulls!

Todays juvenile Glaucous Gull  showing who's the boss
Apart from a short lunch break I spent all day around The Point. There were many 1,000s of Gulls today presumably attracted by a huge shoal of Sprats, many of which were stranded on the tide line and collected in buckets by locals. I took a number of photographs of the the Gulls today but none convey the sheer numbers of birds present.
Another colour ringed Mediterranean Gull E794
a rather distant yellow ringed 1w Caspian Gull at The Patch X21A
 Great Black-backed Gull JWM42 ringed as a chick on 23/06/2018 at Anholt Ørken, Midtjylland, Denmark 
My first Little Gull of the year
A minimum of 60 Red-throated Divers were seen this afternoon, with 18 Mediterranean Gulls, 2 Little Gulls, 14 Razorbills, 100s of Guillemots, 1,000s of Cormorants, 4 figure numbers of Herring Gulls, Black-headed Gulls, Kittiwakes, Common Gulls, smaller numbers of Great Black-backed Gulls, a Lesser Black-backed Gulls, a minimum of 6 Caspian Gulls and 44 Brent Geese. 

Monday, 28 January 2019

Afternoon Gull Roost!

This morning was taken up with hospital check up, but I was back in time for the afternoon Gull roost on Burrowes where higher numbers came in that of late. At least 2 Caspian Gulls came in as well as at least 3 colour ringed Gulls. At the moment I am only using my 7D MK11 coupled with 100-400 MK11 as it is far lighter than the 1DX MK11 & 400DO. 
 Decent numbers of Gulls came into roost this afternoon 
  Caspian Gull I've aged this as 5th cal year but could be wrong, I'm sure someone will put me right.
F5MT I last saw this bird on 04/12/2017

Sunday, 27 January 2019

Tough Going!

This weekend in fairly inclement weather at Dungeness, there were still 100s of Auks tooing and froing between the bays, with smaller numbers of Gannets, Great-crested Grebes, Red-throated Divers and Kittiwakes, not forgetting the 1,000s of Cormorants,
On the land the 2 Whooper Swans and 3 Cattle Egrets could still be found around Cockles Bridge and Boulderwall Fields along with 2 Great White Egrets, 100s of Wigeon, Lapwing, Golden Plover and up to 46 Curlew and a single Ruff, all often being spooked by Marsh Harriers and Common Buzzards. In general the reserve was very quiet with occasional sightings of Bittern and Bearded Tits at Dengemarsh and a red head Goosander late this afternoon on Burrowes.
On Walland the 35 Bewick Swans were still Horse Bones Farm though always distant, better views of nice flock of Yellowhammers, Reed Buntings and Chaffinches near Hawthorn Corner, while Caldecott lane held at least 20 Corn buntings as well as a few Fieldfare and Redwing.
A nice drake Goosander has spent the weekend on Bretts Marina with a Little Owl there also.
Scotney on the sward the c175 feral Barnacle Geese still with a few Greylags, if you get there at the right time c500 Golden Plover, c300 Lapwing, 20+ Dunlin and a few Redshank can be seen on the sward, but usually very little is seen as they seem to spook very easily.  

Friday, 25 January 2019

On a thoroughly miserable day around the peninsular I chose to go to The Patch this morning, despite spending an hour going through several 100s of Gulls that were present I was unable to find anything even slightly unusual among them, off shore a few Auks and Red-throated Divers were seen through the dire visibility, I eventually gave up when a single fisherman walked the length of the beach flushing all the Gulls and setting up directly in front The Patch hide. 
Just some of the 4,283 Cormorants I counted on Burrowes this morning
From Boulderwall a flock of 43 Curlew were notable along with a single Great White Egret but otherwise no change. When I got to Dennis's I was confronted by every island covered in Cormorants, as the weather was still poor I decided to count them, all 4,283 of them. The only notable bird was a 2nd cal year Great Black-backed Gull that was ringed as a nestling in Skotholmen, Fedje, Hordaland, Norway 60°47'17"N 004°42'33"E . on the 21/06/2018.
JJ314 Great Black-backed Gull
The 2 Whooper Swans can still be seen from Cockles Bridge, also 3 Cattle Egrets still foraging in that general area. At Scotney once again very little of note , 21 Dunlin being the highlight. From the causeway c350 Pochard on the ARC and another c200 Cormorants.

Thursday, 24 January 2019

 Whooper Swans
I had a plumber booked for a morning slot today 07.00-12.30, he arrived dead on 12.30 so that was the best part on my day gone. However it did mean I was at home when the Whooper Swans flew into the field very close to my garden, but as usual a dog walker went out into the field and flushed them. They only take their dogs out there so they don't have to clean up after them, they are certainly not out out there to enjoy the countryside as most the time they have mobile phones glues to their ears, or staring down at them.
Also from the garden this morning 2 Ravens, a Great White Egret, 2 Marsh Harriers and a Common Buzzard.
1 of 3 Cattle Egrets around today
Early afternoon around Cockles Bridge 3 Cattle Egrets were in the horse paddock in the company of a Little Egret, the usual Golden Plover, Lapwing and handful of Curlew was also present.
At Scotney it was very quiet again with small numbers of duck and the usual feral Geese.
I was watching the Little Owl at Lydd camp at 15.40 when the van turned up to take down the the safety flags, I quickly drove down Galloways then made a quick plod along the green wall to the mound to view Sooth Brooks, the light was already fading, so I was not surprised that I didn't see any Short-eared Owls or the male Hen Harrier, however 2 Barn Owls and a Merlin were nice compensation.