Category: Blog

  • 25th April 2021 – Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire

    25th April 2021 – Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire

    Inspired by my trip to the Forest of Dean with the travel company Naturetrek I felt I needed a return trip. We spent the morning at Nagshead. I must confess I saw nowhere near as many birds without a guide but we still had a splendid time.

    We were greated by a pair of Greylag geese with three goslings at the Nursery Pond but I struggled to photograph them against the light.

    Greylag goose and goslings

    Down at the lower pond we spent a good while watching a pair of pied flycatchers doing what flycatchers do. I wish we had had a telescope as they were a joy to watch. We could easily see the pair of Mandarin ducks but they too were difficult to photograph as the light was very bright. (Yes, photographers are always complaining about the light.)

    A pair of Mandarin ducks
    A pair of pied flycatchers
    Pied flycatcher
    Pied flycatcher
    Female Mandarin duck
    Male Mandarin duck

    Out of the blue we bumped in to some friends in the car park as we were about to leave and stayed and enjoyed sitting with them at the Nursery Pond over a coffee. Trips into the countryside and meeting friends: what more could you ask for?

    Before heading home we stopped at Cannop Ponds and enjoyed seeing more Mandarin ducks and some tufted ducks. We also spent some time near a feeder where there were nuthatch, chaffinch, great tits, blue tits and (I believe) marsh tits.

    Female tufted duck
    Male tufted duck
    Marsh tit
    Blue tit
    Nuthatch
    Chaffinch
    Chaffinch
    Great tit
    Robin above a brook where I saw grey wagtail and dipper and heard a kingfisher
  • 20th April 2021 – Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire

    20th April 2021 – Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire

    What a splendid day! I had subscribed to my second ever guided bird watching trip (my first was in the Western Cape in South Africa – oh what memories) with the nature travel company Naturetrek. Not as exotic as the trip in South Africa but I was not at all disappointed.

    Our guide, Oliver Smart, was superb. His audio skills were outstanding which led to lots of sightings. He was particularly adept at setting up his scope quickly and gave each of us a good opportunity to see a wide range of birds. This was particularly rewarding as many of the birds were quite distant and my 100-400 mm lens wasn’t always capable of getting a shot. At times I wish I had had my 200-600 lens but by the end of the day after 8 hours in the field I was glad I had not lugged that around with me.

    We met up in the Forest at RSPB Nagshead at 9 a.m. The first section of our walk was down to the Lower Pond. En route we saw sparrowhawk, greylag goose, blackcaps, robins, blue tits, great tits, long-tailed tit, chiffchaff, willow warbler and heard a great spotted woodpecker. At the pond we had frequent sightings of pied flycatcher, treecreepers and a mandarin duck on the pond.

    Long-tailed tit
    Pied flycatcher
    Pied flycatcher
    Mandarin duck looking very exotic in the middle of the forest

    We then followed the short circuit around the reserve where we added to the list nuthatch, chaffinch, buzzard, song thrush and mistle thrush. We had a glimpse of a pair of stock dove too. The great spotted woodpecker were all around but I didn’t manage to see one here.

    At the end of the the circuit we stealthily made our way up to the Campbell hide. The hide was closed due to Covid-19 restrictions but we were able to stand beneath the hide and, because we had approached so quietly, we saw fallow deer, both male and female blackcaps, wren, chaffinch and treecreepers.

    Male blackcap
    Female blackcap
    Treecreeper
    Female chaffinch

    After Nagshead we made our way down the track and back to the village of Parkend. In the middle of an enclosure of yew trees we were looking for hawfinch. We did manage one sighting and could see it really well through Oliver’s scope. However I couldn’t manage a decent photograph as it was in deep shade.

    Embarrassed to publish this photo of a hawfinch but hey ho at least I saw one

    We wandered down to a nearby stream in search of dippers. Overhead there was a buzzard and a sparrowhawk and we regularly saw jackdaws and house sparrows. At the stream we instantly saw a grey wagtail and could hear dippers beneath the bridge. Very soon the dippers emerged in search of food for (I presume) their young.

    Buzzard
    Dipper
    Dipper in flight

    From Parkend we made our way to New Fancy View where we had our picnic lunch. During lunch we saw bullfinch.

    There is a good gallery view at New Fancy View looking across the forest towards Cinderford. It’s a good place to look for goshawk and I did manage to see a speck in Oliver’s scope although it would have been more rewarding if it had come as close as the siskins which regularly flew overhead. We spent some time watching a common lizard basking in the sun.

    From here we drove on a little to Woorgreens Nature Reserve. On our way to the lake we saw a great spotted woodpecker. At the lake there were Canada geese, Greylag geese and mute swans. I gather that here in winter it is a good place to see goosander.

    Mute swan
    Canada goose
    Mute swan

    Around the lake we saw linnet and coal tits.

    Coal tit

    The light was getting gloomy by this stage as we made our way up to Crabtree Hill (not much of an incline really). It is here that a great grey shrike has been through the winter but has now moved on. We had plenty to see though, with a solitary swallow, stonechat, linnet, a tree pipit, blackbird, song thrush, mistlethrush and a green woodpecker. At the very end we came across a wheatear which I saw very clearly in Oliver’s scope and regularly flitting about showing its white rump. However, my one photograph of it was so poor it has been condemned to the recycle bin.

    Swallow
    Stonechat
    Stonechat
    Tree pipit
    Willow warbler
    Song thrush
    Mistle thrush

    We ended at 5 p.m. It was quite an exhausting day but extremely rewarding.

    Not only would I like to thank Naturetrek and their outstanding guide Oliver Smart but my four fellow birders whose company was most congenial. I’m sure they will have seen many more birds than I did, but without them all I would have seen fewer.

    Slideshow of some of the birds I saw

  • 18th April 2021 – RSPB Ham Wall

    18th April 2021 – RSPB Ham Wall

    How wonderful to breathe the countryside again. The hides at RSPB Ham Wall (on the Somerset Levels) were closed due to Covid-19 restrictions but we so enjoyed walking the pathways of the reserve and seeing some of our old favourites. Above all we loved listening to a whole variety of birds without the sound of motorways (or indeed any roads). As well as birds there were butterflies too with orange tips flitting here there and everywhere (and avoiding my camera), brimstones and peacocks.

    Marsh harrier
    Great white egret juggling with its prey
    Wigeon
    Common pochard
    Great crested grebe
    Blackcap
    Blue tit
    Frisky coots
  • 15th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    15th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    I made an early visit to Stoke Park and I was rewarded with a wonderful light and some lovely birds.

    2 little grebes
    Reed bunting
    Grrenfinch
    Duckling
    Cormorant
    Goldfinch
    Dunnock
    Chiffchaff
    Robin
    Willow warbler
    Blackcap
    Moorhen chick
    Little grebe
    (Bearded!) Blue tit
  • 13th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    13th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    After a period of dry weather it is now possible to visit Stoke Park without having to wear Wellington boots. This morning, in the sun, we spent a very pleasant hour chatting to people , seeing a few birds and hearing so many more.

    The highlight was the sun on our backs without a bitterly chill wind. Nothing very special in the way of birds but reed buntings, lots of ducklings, moorhen chicks, dunnocks, chiffchaff, willow warblers, wrens, green finches, gold finches, robins, cormorants, buzzards, long-tailed tits, mute swans and blackcaps were enough to keep us entertained.

    Very pleasant indeed.

  • 12th April 2021 – Greenbank Cemetery, Bristol

    12th April 2021 – Greenbank Cemetery, Bristol

    We spent a good hour again this afternoon in a local cemetery looking for a pied flycatcher. This time we were lucky and had views of it flitting from tree to tree for 10 minutes. Frustratingly I never had a clear view of it with my camera but I was quite happy to get a few shots.

    Pied flycatcher

    I did, however, get clear shots of a wren and a jay.

    Wren
    Jay

    The cemetery is a wonderful place for photographs and I look forward to returning with a wider angle lens than my 200-600 lens.

    Wood pigeon
    Female blackbird
  • 11th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    11th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    The common redstart was the incentive to wander over to Duchess Pond in the Stoke Park Estate (less than 500 metres from home) and we were lucky to see it again. There were lots of treats including our first swallows of the year, willow warblers, chiffchaffs, reed buntings, green finches, blackbirds, robins, a cormorant, 2 mute swans, Canada geese and dozens of ducklings of various sizes. I’m sure there were loads more to see but we were bitterly cold and the attraction of a coffee was too great to entice us to stay out any later.

    We saw the redstart early on but then had no other sightings of it
    The redstart gets its name from its red tail
    The first swallow of the year
    Some older ducklings
    Willow Warbler / Chiffchaff
    Reed bunting
    Cormorant joining the party
    Chiffchaff
  • 10th April 2021 – Greenbank Cemetery, Bristol

    10th April 2021 – Greenbank Cemetery, Bristol

    There have been reports of a pied flycatcher (and lots of willow warblers) at Greenbank Cemetery not far from Eastville Park.

    We went and had a look this afternoon but the closest we got to seeing one was looking at the photos of other photographers who had bagged some great shots in the morning.

    My consolation prize was a jay and a blue tit preparing a nest.

    Nevermind, I have been quite lucky recently. I also had lots of goldfinches in the garden when we got back.

  • 9th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    9th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    I went back to Stoke Park with my godson to see if we could see the redstart. With his sharp eyes he had no problem picking it out. I could only see it when it perched on the wire but he was able to see it scrambling in the grass and on an adjacent tree. We also saw a chiffchaff nearby. All around Duchess Pond there were robins who were much more obliging in posing for us.

    Profile of common redstart
    Front view
    Rear view
    Chiffchaff
    An inquisitive robin

    Quite a poser
  • 8th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    8th April 2021 – Stoke Park Estate, Bristol

    I have been rather frustrated over the last few days as I have seen reports of sightings of a common redstart on my local patch but knew I didn’t have the opportunity to go and try to spot it.

    This afternoon, with dwindling light (and a cold northerly wind) I found an hour to go searching. On turning up at the acknowledged spot I met other photographers who had seen it in the morning (with their proud photos). But nothing to see. I hung around in the cold without any success. Another birder claimed to see it across the pond, but all I found in my lens was a robin.

    Raised hopes but only a robin

    It started to rain so I set off home on two occasions but kept coming back. And then – voilà – my redstart appeared on the barbed wire. I fired a few shots and then it flew off only a few seconds after it arrived, never to be seen again.

    Male common redstart
    I’m sure it had spotted me
    Right profile
    Left profile
    Canada goose flying in the rain
    Lots of ducklings around the pond
    The robin came back to show off
  • 6th April 2021 – Eastville Park, Bristol

    6th April 2021 – Eastville Park, Bristol

    It was bitterly cold around the lake in the park and so we were quite pleased to spend time in the woods looking for birds. We really only managed to see two birds (which were making very loud calls) – a nuthatch and a great tit.

    Nuthatch calling
    More familiar pose of the nuthatch
    I thought I was back at school with the great tit shrilling “Teacher, Teacher”

    As we made our way alongside the lake on the way home it was good to see the Tawny Owl in its box on one of the islands.

    You could just see the male tawny owl in its box
  • 3rd April 2021 – Iron Acton, South Gloucestershire

    3rd April 2021 – Iron Acton, South Gloucestershire

    We had visited Algars Manor and Algars Mill gardens near Iron Acton just north of Bristol as part of the National Garden Scheme in March, and enjoyed the spectacular show of daffodils in the 2 acre woodland gardens which are bisected by the River Frome. We returned again for another NGS day and this time we were treated to another spectacular show: this time it was the turn of the camellias and magnolias to steal the show. The wood anemones and the fritillaries were pretty amazing too.