The Lodge
My RSPB volunteering took me to The Lodge today and while wandering round the reserve I thought "I bet I can tick Green WoodPecker here"... so I looked... and I did (first in a while) :)
While the point of the blog is to create a place to put my birding musings and finds... my mind frequently wanders.
My RSPB volunteering took me to The Lodge today and while wandering round the reserve I thought "I bet I can tick Green WoodPecker here"... so I looked... and I did (first in a while) :)
A couple of interesting garden items... firstly the return of Long Tailed Tits who turned up around the front garden... where do they disappear to in the summer?
We went away to Sutton, Lincolnshire in the Bambi, a few waders just about anywhere on th ebeach (Sanderling?), a few Swallows also still around. One of the best sites were some baby House Martins being fed in the nest which was on a dodgy looking toilet block in the Sutton car park. Not the best place for them really but offered superb views.
We went for a walk around Anglers Country Park today near Wakefield. This is one of my favourate local birding spots as, although it does have a hide, you can walk around the edge of the whole lake so on sunny days you can just sit with your scope and watch from any spot you like. It's a good job too as the wardens were doing some work around the hide (putting out rafts?) so there were scarely any birds around the hide at all. Fortunately on or above the rest of the place was packed with goodies... Canada Geese (around 140), Mute Swans (10-20), Greylag Geese (cf 10), Coots (dozens), Great Crested Grebe (again dozens, about 8 or so swimming together), Pochard (cf 20), Tufted Duck (cf 60), House Martins (dozens and dozens feeding over the water), Cormorant (flying over the water), Heron (flying over and landing to fish, Pied Wagtail (3 at various points around the edge of the water, Common Tern (fishing), Shoveler (3 with winter plumage so males and females look same), Common Gull (20), Black Headed Gull (75). Not a bad stroll.
