Showing posts with label robin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robin. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Long Overdue!

Well I am so far behind with all this blogging business yet I have so much to show and tell! The photos in this post are in fact from the very beginning of Feb! I have contemplated just posting about up to date things but I quite liked these photos. I'll save stories from volunteering for another post and in the mean time I'll just leave you to have a little gander at these. I do hope you are all okay and enjoying the less wet weather :)

Walking at Seasalter on 1st Feb
Redshank and oystercatchers

Screwing his eyes up really tight while he sticks his snout in the sea to retrieve....

....An empty can of 'tropical guava' flavour energy drink. Delightful.

Pouncing and leaping

Wader tracks

Monster tracks

Our Minnis Bay and St Nicholas at Wade walk on 2nd Feb
From left to right: Oystercatcher, turnstones, redshank, and in front common sandpiper (?) followed by more turnstones.
Update: poss common sandpiper is in fact a dunlin in winter plumage - thanks to Stewart :)



Hummingbird Robin

Pondering

...a bit closer

...taaadaaa!

Getting his beak right into the home made fatty mealworm block

...and retreat

Off he goes with his beakfull

Finally - pretending to be a sparrow or a tit of some variety

Spring weather arrived early...

The usual visitor to the fat balls

A lovely bee on the pretty purple crocuses

Our resident pair of collared doves

Pretty pup enjoying the February sun

A few photos from my volunteering expeditions during Feb


Sheep on the marsh in the project area

A couple of mute swans wandering the marsh

A swan's webprint vs my wellie print

Sheep with a cool hair do!

Love walking Bracken just before it gets dark - such gorgeous lighting.



Pheasant feather I think




That is it for now folks. In the past week I have been on an amphibian survey and ecology course and a biological recordings course. Both very interesting and useful. To top my week off I am going to Cornwall with my Mum for 6 days. Very excited! Lots of lovely things planned so fingers crossed for decent weather.

I hope you have all been enjoying the sunny spells and been out making the most of it! Hopefully I'll catch up with you all soon and post some more recent photos :)

Saturday, 8 February 2014

A Quest for the King

A few weekends ago mum and I set off to Sevenoaks NR - our favourite place to meet up with my auntie and cousins. It was really quite chilly so we wound down our car windows so we could chat and ate our picnic lunches in the warmth of the car, whilst still having a lovely view of the nature reserve's wildlife garden.

Once our food had been consumed we donned our wellies and set off along the lakeside path. There were lots of twittering blue tits, great tits, long tailed tits and siskins were out in force too. A very high pitched call alerted us to the presence of our smallest bird - the goldcrest. I got great views and tried to show my auntie and mum where it was. I managed the photo below - not the sharpest image but nonetheless a 'record shot'. 

Goldcrest

Our walk up to one of the hides was interrupted by another high pitched call - but this time it was not that of a goldcrest, but a treecreeper. A charming little bird. My auntie and cousins had fantastic views of this bird that they hadn't seen before and I managed a couple of photos too.

Pretty well camouflaged don't you think?!

Treecreeper

Once the treecreeper had disappeared off to scale up a different tree, we went into the hide, which was empty and sat and identified some of the birds which were on the lake. There were great crested grebes, lapwings, coots and moorhens a plenty, cormorants, teal, mallards and a goosander.

Moorhen chase

Some more birds illustrating wonderful camouflage

Lapwing

Goosander and Coot

It was lovely to be outdoors and observing these lovely birds with our family, but the bird we were really looking for had eluded us so far. We had previously seen this bird zoom past in the blink of an eye, but the kind of sighting we were really after, was a nice perched still view! Not too much to ask?

Then, whilst walking towards the hide where the bird we were looking for is often seen, I spotted it! Then I doubted myself. I had lent my bins to my auntie and pretty much straight away she locked onto it. The King of our rivers and streams! A fabulous view of it perching! It was quite far away though - hence the noisy and not very sharp photos. But hey I'm not complaining!   


Kingfisher

As we arrived back at the visitor centre this  lovely robin greeted us, singing its beautiful melody.
When we checked the visitors book for a list of the species seen so far that day, we noticed that the goosander had not yet been recorded, so I (very proudly and nerdily) asked if I could write it down! I had the photo to prove it, otherwise I don't think I would have been believed. A great few hours spent birdwatching with my family :)




Now, as I promised I'll disclose a bit more information about my new trainee position. I've been there 4 weeks now, which has flown by! As I wrote in my last post, much of my time is spent outdoors, walking the marshes. Part of the 'vole reversal' project on the North Kent Marshes is monitoring/controlling mink populations. American mink were brought over to this country to be farmed for their fur. When people started asking question about the welfare of the mink in these farms, the farmers let a lot of them go and animal rights activists played their part too. Little did they know what a huge problem this would be for 'ratty'. In Denmark and Sweden mink fur farms still exist and they likewise have problems with escapees and consequently large scale control programmes. We have a number of mink rafts which contain a clay pad which enables us to track whether there are any mink in the area. Most of the time it is actually water voles which are using the raft as a toilet! The photo below was taken early one morning whilst checking a raft.



A key part of the project is contacting and maintaining contact with local farmers and landowners. They are given advice on how they can manage their ditches to benefit wildlife and our main focus - the gorgeous water vole. 

As part of my trainee position I have a bursary which allows me to attend study days and short courses. They all have to be linked in some way to water due to the nature of the project I am working on, which is no problem for me! I have been booking courses on freshwater invertebrates, algae, amphibian ecology and grass and rush ecology. All of which I am extremely excited to attend!

On Monday I went on the first of my study days which was on water birds. It was quite informative, I learnt some tips about how to identify the differences between gulls and some other general facts. The course was held at Mote Park in Maidstone so it focused on ducks, swans, grebes, geese and gulls. We did also see little egrets and a kingfisher.

Last Tuesday when we had a meeting with a member of a local conservation group, it was bright and sunny and I saw a small tortoiseshell fluttering about in the hedgerow! It found a sunspot and settled to sunbathe.

Small tortoiseshell (from my phone)

Below are water vole footprints on a muddy bank also seen on Tuesday. The mild weather that we have been receiving means that they still venture out to feed, rather than staying in their burrows in a sleepy state.

Water vole footprints
A beautiful example of a badger paw-print in the mud along a farm track can be seen below. One of the other trainees recently took plaster of paris out with her and took moulds of badger prints to give to the education team! Great idea! They came out really well.



There are always lots of bird prints, lots of them starlings, and the obvious heron prints which are huuuuge! Not sure who these belong to.. any ideas?!



We have also been hearing lots of birdsong. The skylarks seem to have been fooled into thinking it is spring. We encounter a fair few ascending and singing their hearts out. To have January as my earliest record of skylark song only really indicates what the future may bring in terms of possible shifting seasons. Other birds we see include large numbers of curlew, lapwing and a few snipe. Marsh harriers, buzzards and kestrels are often seen too.


That's it for now folks, I hope you've enjoyed reading about my recent jaunts and a bit more about my traineeship! I really appreciate all your kind comments, it makes blogging so much more rewarding when you hear from like minded people! I am going to set aside some time in the evenings this week to catch up with you all!

Peace and Love to you all and I am sending dry thoughts to those of you affected by this ongoing wet weather!

Friday, 1 March 2013

A dedication and a mystery

First of all, I would like to dedicate this post to my Granny, she was a wonderful grandparent, and she died 7 years ago today. She loved birds, especially robins and today I was going to try and take a photo of our robin that visits our garden, but the weather is a bit iffy so the photo below is one I took back in the autumn. I always remember peering out of the window in the back door, trying to see which birds had visited the bird table. Usually there was a very naughty squirrel stealing the food my Granny had put out! I do believe she had a water pistol to squirt at them! Fond memories indeed x




Well in addition to the handsome robin, here are some other garden friends who are always a pleasure to watch flitting around in the trees, fighting over the food and trying to establish some dominance.

Blue tit

Blue tit

Great tit

Great tit

Collared doves in their nest (are these chicks?)

Charm of goldfinch


Wren (a bit blurry)

Great spotted woodpecker

Female house sparrow

Male house sparrow

I think I could watch the garden birds ALL day!


As you may know it is also St. David's day today and my mum always makes sure we have some lovely daffodils. This year accompanied by pussy willow.





We also seem to have a mystery on our hands....

Usually our fat ball feeder hangs nicely from a branch on our smaller tree. The starlings and the great spotted woodpecker make it swing about a bit, but they have never caused it to fall off the branch.

A couple of nights ago, I let the pup out for a final wee before bed and the fat ball feeder was still hanging as per. Came down in the morning and it wasn't there... I thought maybe it had been a bit windy in the night, but when I went out to put it back up it was too far away to have been blown down, and it was underneath the wildlife log pile mum created a while ago... I was a bit puzzled! Put it back up etc. only to find the next morning exactly the same thing had happened, and it was actually wedged underneath the logs and branches. I've been having a bit of a think about who the culprit could be but haven't come to any conclusions. I've never seen a squirrel in our garden so I doubt that could be our mystery creature. I don't think a cat would have done it, as there have always been cats around and the feeder has been up for quite a while without any trouble. So, I'm stumped!

Here are my 'crime scene' shots!

Usual hanging position

Normal visitor

GSW on feeder

Where has it gone? Who is responsible?!

Wedged under the logs and branches


If anyone has any idea what it could be, please do comment below :) Or maybe I should stay up all night and find out for myself! Or it could just be that I want it to be something other than a cat!!