Tuesday, 4 February 2025

Blashford, Blackwater Arboretum etc

Not the best of days being pretty grey but mostly mild and dry. Whilst there was nothing desperately exciting, the sheer numbers of waterfowl, mostly on Ibsley Water, were nice to watch - probably more Shoveler than I've ever seen here - and good numbers of Pintail and Wigeon. Goldeneye were in double figures with some nice displaying males  and the long-staying Black-necked Grebe was easy to find in the vicinity of the now collapsed Osprey post. Raptors were Buzzards, Red Kites, a single Peregrine over the lichen heath and a cream-crowned Marsh Harrier flushing ducks in the north west corner of Ibsley Water.

Round at Goosander hide six Goosanders included an adult male, lots of Pintail here and a typically photogenic Great-crested Grebe successfully fishing on several occasions. Always the way when the camera is at home!!

Ivy Lake was quiet with just 200+ Teal and slightly more Wigeon plus a few other duck spp. Highlight here was the two Kingfishers, male and female, sparring with each other and staying in view for a long while. Several other species, Redwing, Goldcrest, Treecreeper and Nuthatch showed well - the 12×50 Swaros really coming into their own for frame filling images.

Below spring Catkins and a phone camera shot of some of the wildfowl in front of Goosander Hide.


























Later at Blackwater Arboretum very few birds; no Hawfinches. But some spilt bird food in the carpark was attracting several Coal, Blue and Great Tits plus singles of Marsh Tit and Nuthatch. The rain was getting heavier by 15:35 so I and another birder gave up.

It transpires that my previous visit here produced 12 Hawfinches but that was almost fifteen years ago to the day!!

Wednesday, up and away from Cadnam fairly early - I didn't think I could do justice to a £16 breakfast so yesterday's banana, a Belvita biscuit and tea in the room was order of the day.

A clear and still morning started with two Woodlarks singing overhead as I stepped out of the car, with one landing in the nearest tall birch twice over an hour and continuing to sing and give prolonged scope views until driven off by three Greenfinches! At times they were so high as to be difficult to pinpoint; you always think they're perched up rather than directly above you! As usual the 'backing track' was provided by Mistle Thrushes.

For the most part the next hour was birdless with the conditions not suitable for raptors; not even a Buzzard rose up out of the trees and the only large birds being one or two Ravens and 15+ Stock Doves.

Finally, as I thought of leaving, a single Hawfinch perched up in the nearest tall trees straight out and gave extended scope views in good light making up for yesterday's dip.

A brief stop at Cockleshell on the way back was too low a tide for waders and waterfowl but eleven Harbour Seals were hauled out in the usual place.

A brief local walk between chores found a single Chiffchaff in the vicinity of the tennis courts and in excess of six hundred Brent enjoying the refuge field.  Finally, irate Herring Gulls alerted to a Sparrowhawk dodging between the houses.

Wednesday, 22 January 2025

GWH

S.A.D is setting in as always at this time of year, driven in part by the reminder of glorious sunny, blue skies in Spain over Xmas. And here we are with continuous grey skies and rain AND another named storm on the way!!

Still, a nice coffee and a cheese and bacon pastry cheered things up a bit.

So here are a random selection from GWH.

Plenty of Snowdrops out and some Winter Aconite (both below). A quick catch up with Richard and ground staff who fielded some questions and pointed out the four new hybrid Elms, hopefully DED resistant.

A single kite and heard only Green Woodpecker, Nuthatch and Redwing were about it for birdlife; a couple of Kestrels on the way back into Petersfield and a Grey Wagtail over the shops.

Tonight a talk from Oliver Smart should feature some good pictures. (P.S and it did!!!)

















Tuesday, 21 January 2025

First divers of the year

IC's early posting on the WhatsApp group of two Great Northern Divers off Rainbow Bar prompted me to pop over to Hill head for  the morning where it didn't take too long, on a gorgeously flat Solent, to find first one and then the second, just inside the Darling buoy. Further looking produced two then four Velvet Scoters which were joined by two Commons and all in the same field of view as the divers.

Offshore, and especially out towards Lee, there were lots of Great Crested Grebes, certainly into  three figures. A Male and female eider went west.

A brief walk up the east side found both Spoonbills feeding, preening and washing - a nice change from the usual white, sleeping blobs!!

Scanning the shoreline gulls failed to find Amy's Caspian Gull from yesterday.

Tuesday saw a brief Sparrowhawk slipping between the houses but no sounds from the pond's Water Rail, maybe due to the presence of the work party. The Tufted Ducks were into the 60s but just 10+ females. No Shovelers today

Saturday, 18 January 2025

Wednesday to friday

A brief trip to PB for a catch up saw little other than one of the adult eagles flying into its usual tree.

Friday was a shopping trip with Southsea Castle thrown in so, three Purple Sandpipers, one Grèat Crested Grebe and a male Black Redstart, the latter on the rocks before jumping onto the railings and dropping down into the moat. Across the road the new, temporary 'refuge' held 55+ Brent Geese plus a single Light-bellied Brent.

Back home the Water Rail was still present and calling but typically too far into the reeds to be seen.

No birding this weekend.


Tuesday, 14 January 2025

Monday and Tuesday

A shopping trip to Chichester was a write-off as the shops I had intended to visit were closed due to power outage!!

The Ravens were either silent or still absent from the Bishops Garden but the Peregrines were noisy with the male putting on a nice show before landing on the north-east side of the upper tracery.












After chores on Tuesday a stroll from the Cockleshell carpark to the south end of Swan Lake was quiet despite a flat calm high tide; sadly no divers.

The three Scaup were still asleep as were a couple of Teal; one of the Scaup is a 2cy drake now beginning to moult into its next plumage. Sadly, my phone's camera is very poor.

Thanks to PDW for his picture below taken a week after my visit.































Tuesday 7th, Thursday 9th

Tuesday saw a brief visit to Arundel which, after some cold weather, was very short of wildfowl, gulls and Snipe. A Kingfisher was very watchable but too far for pictures unlike this egret which was just 5-6 metres away. For the first time in many visits no Cattle Egrets nor Marsh Harriers















Thursday was mostly a lunch visit to GWH with nothing of note.




Sunday, 29 December 2024

Felice navidad!! Xmas in Extramadura









Day 1 Saturday Heathrow (Renaissance)

The run up the A3 was pleasant until just after the Ripley Services and the M25 Junction when things slowed. Luckily the inside lane (Heathrow) was slow but moving all the way to J14.

Unfortunately going in via J14 was a nightmare and I got well and truly lost!! In hindsight J15 and the M4 would have been better.

Eventually found the entrance to the hotel, parked up and checked in. A very nice bonus here was a free access to the Executive Lounge with free tea, coffee, cold drinks and snacks and, in the evening, free food and wine - basically as much as you wanted,

A clean comfy room  with a massive television was a nice place to spend the night.

Day 2 Sunday Heathrow to Madrid and on to Casa Rural Las Cantaras

Up early and a taxi to T5, expensive but very nice driver and a smart Mercedes to travel in.

Getting a printed boarding pass and passing  through bag drop and security was painless.

After arriving at the departure gate we were bussed to the aircraft- such a long journey we thought we were flying from Gatwick!!

With a strong tail wind we shaved half an hour off the flight to Madrid.

Again, entry and passage through the airport was painless but a ridiculously long train/tube journey to baggage collection. 

Eventually the group assembled but our half an hour advantage was destroyed when the hire firm only delivered one van. It was probably 50+ minutes waiting in a cold concrete carpark for the second van.

We were soon on our way through a fair bit of Madrid traffic which became much quieter away from the city and stayed light on all main roads for the week. The journey to the hotel was about 250 kilometres.

The sky was sparkling blue and cloudless today and indeed for the whole week other than a thick mist for an hour or so on Boxing Day morning.

A brief comfort stop/lunch at a roadside bar with coffee and a curious frittata sandwich saw our first of many Black Redstarts.

Day 3 Monday Extramadura



































Day 4 Tuesday Christmas Eve Extramadura

Today was Monfragüe National Park day. Plenty of Cranes from the van and a few Iberian Magpies flitted across the road èn route.

After arrival we walked up the track to the little fort overlooking the site with Crag Martins being the best birds although very close Griffons were cool and the scenic views extensive. Sadly, small birds were, with the exception of the-now ubiquitous Black Redstarts, very elusive with just glimpses of Hawfinch and heard-only Firecrest and Short-toed Treecreeper.

A Blue Rock Thrush was, I'm sure, on the same rock as my previous visit and the two Rock Buntings which were feeding in the middle of the tarmac were maybe a 100 metres further down the road than last visit!! Sadly, they were flushed into the roadside scrub and so we left for a lunch park-up at the park HQ.

A short walk after lunch produced two obliging Thekla Larks, the only ones of the trip

The rest of the day was mostly more of the same with a few Red Deer and finally a distant and elusive Crested Tit.














Day 5 Wednesday Christmas Day Extramadura

Christmas Day started at the now usual time and saw us touring several garages in search of fuel. Luckily, the third one was open and we were soon on our way to Moheda Alta via the Campo Lugar steppe where we had a couple of Hoopoes and a distant group of distant Great Bustards. Decent extended scope views in the usual cracking light. 

Moheda Alta was quiet although numerous Cranes were quite close under the Holm Oaks and plenty of Iberian Magpies were on view. Dartford Warbler was best-of-the-rest.

Then on to the Palazuelo rice fields with various stops. The first produced Penduline Tits, always hard to pin down and frequently perching on the rear sides of bulrush, their presence given away by the heads being blown away in the breeze. Kingfisher showed well and a few Common Waxbills perched up - sadly we weren't able to catch up with another alien here in Spain - Red Avadavat. A distant Spoonbill for me was first of the trip.

A brief view of an Otter for me and a couple of others in the second bus was a surprise, my first since one at Minsmere way back.

The rice fields held a few waders, mostly LRPs and Black-winged Stilts with a few Green Sandpipers, Wood Sandpipers and Snipe.

An uninspiring location for lunch produced this fine African Mantis; the display board showing the local birdlife had been peppered with birdshot or some such!!

The rest of the day was mostly Cranes, storks, Marsh  Harriers etc














Day 6 Thursday Boxing Day Extramadura 

Below a couple of sunrise shots at Canteras.

Leaving here we quickly drove into heavy fog which threatened the morning's birding. A stop at a supermarket for provisions saw a number of confused Swallows perched up on TV aerials. After some discussion we discounted Plan B and carried on to Saucedilla as intended for some wetland birding, a good choice as the mist quickly burnt off.

 we explored the edge of a large reed-fringed wetland. A Western Swamphen was seen briefly a few times, along with a Water Rail, Little Bittern and another trio of wonderful Penduline Tits. We continued to work our way around the wetland, visiting a series of hides. Along the way, we got excellent views of many Zitting Cisticolas, Stonechat, White Stork and Cattle Egret. At one hide, a stunning Bluethroat was busily feeding out in the open, allowing all of us ample opportunity to appreciate its vibrant colours in the sunshine.

We then checked another area of pools and reeds, where we got exceptional views of a Squacco Heron, plus Kingfisher, White Stork and more Western Swamphens. We then returned to the visitor centre to visit the toilets there. While here, three Black-crowned Night Herons were spotted in some nearby trees, and we got fantastic views of them as they roosted. 

From here we headed North to a lovely picnic area adjacent to a small church in the countryside, and kept our eyes on the skies for raptors. Many Griffon and Cinereous Vultures flew over, and in the nearby scrub Iberian Magpies.

We had time to visit one more hide, overlooking a large pool with emergent dead trees, which was host to a nice  mix of birds including Bar-tailed Godwit, Black-winged Stilt, Ruff, Common Sandpiper, Little Ringed Plover and Teal, but perhaps best of all was an Otter with its two cubs. We were all able to observe them for some time as they played in the water and climbed up onto dead tree limbs before, eventually, they scampered up the beach and disappeared into the reeds

Back to base earlier than usual as some of us didn't want to walk around Trujillo.

After dumping gear and taking some pain killers I went for a stroll out to and down the road with the hotel dog for company!! Quiet with just Golden Plovers, Crested Larks and a Dartford Warbler; the Little Owl was again perched up on the derelict building.









Tonight's evening meal was taken at Hotel Emilia in Trujillo, a little later than usual and a nice change of venue. (Photos below)






































Day 7 Friday Extramadura 

This would be our final day for birdwatching, so we planned to make the most of it. The plan was twofold. First, we travel back to the steppes, then in the afternoon head for woods, hills and freshwater. The day started well indeed at our first stop, where we had dozens of Great Bustards on the ground and in flight, some at close range, allowing brilliant views of this behemoth. Then we found two Little Bustards, on the deck this time and close to a Red Fox, which did not seem to upset them much. We travelled a little further down a gravel road, where we flushed some Golden Plovers and Stone Curlews. We stopped to try and see if we could see where they had landed, but had no joy. We did, however, find a dozen or so more Little Bustards, Calandra Larks, a huge flock of Pin-tailed Sandgrouse, and best of all an adult Spanish Imperial Eagle feeding on a dead animal on a distant hillside, with Ravens and Cinereous Vultures waiting on the sidelines. We watched the eagle for some time, before it took off and landed on a nearby water tower.

pped in a wooded valley, along the River Taonuja, where we got several brief views of the many Hawfinches in the area, and our best views yet of a pair of Sardinian Warblers, a species which had remained rather elusive all week. We then drove to the south-east of Trujillo, to the Alcorallin reservoir, seeing some Spanish Pond Turtles in a roadside pool on the way. Once we arrived, we set up at some picnic tables under the shade of the oak trees for lunch. The adjacent water had a few Shovelers, Common Sandpiper and a few Egyptian Geese, and the scrub held some Spanish Sparrows.

After having eaten, we ventured over to the reservoir proper, where we had the incredible sight of several thousand Shovelers feeding on the surface. It was quite the spectacle. Mixed in were Teal, Mallard, and Little, Great Crested and at least four Black-necked Grebes. Around the shoreline, we were able to pick up our only Black Stork of the week, along with Grey Heron, Great and Little Egrets and a few Greenshanks. We also had a very showy Iberian Grey Shrike hanging around us here. One member of the group was lucky enough to spot a Black-winged Kite, but it could not be relocated.

The day was nearly done, but we still had a little time, so we journeyed into an area of nearby steppe for one last chance for some new species. The fields here were packed full of White Storks and Cranes, some Great Bustards were seen in flight, and at our final stop we had a flock of Linnets and a lovely Peregrine perched on top of a pylon. We then returned to our accommodation






























Day 8 Saturday Las Cantaras to Madrid to Heathrow

Up earlier than usual for 7am breakfast and away on time still before any dawn light. An unknown mammal zipped across the road in the headlights; no idea, smaller than a fox. 

Brief comfort stop at a garage before arriving at Madrid airport with just cranes, storks etc on the journey.

Passage through check in etc was swift but there WAS a one hour delay due in part to Heathrow's fog but we made up time and were only half an hour late arriving.

A quick departure from the airport and back to the Renaissance on the Hoppa Bus (H5X).

The restaurant was closed due to Xmas staff shortage but a couple of beers (£6.50 each!) and a burger and chips in the bar was a nice end to the day and, as before, all the hotel staff were very pleasant and helpful.










Day 9 Renaissance to home.

An as-much-as-you-can-eat breakfast for £15 was really nice and made more palatable by the free overnight parking; effectively a free brekkie. Easy drive home albeit foggy at times, roads quiet and back soon after 10am with just a single Red Kite overhead.


Highlights:-

Number of Cranes, White Storks, Great Bustards, Calandra Larks and Pin-tailed Sandgrouse. Great views of  Bluethroat, Rock Bunting, Thekla Lark, vultures, Booted Eagle and Golden Eagle.

Good leaders.

Good group.

Lowlights:-

No Bonellis nor BWK 

For next time:-

Take scope and tripod, leave camera behind!!