Monday, 20 June 2022

They Fly

 Monday June 20

A regular in the summer garden, this Four-spotted Chaser chose to spend the night in an egg box.



 
The best moth we have caught this weekend has been a macro sized micro. It had been  retained  overnight as it was a late catch from outside the MV trap, then kept for me to see and to identify. An Evergestis limbata, Dark-bordered Pearl.



Norfolk status
Rare migrant and suspected resident in a few counties, including Suffolk.

First recorded on the south coast of England in 1993.

New for Norfolk* in 2019 trapped at Haddiscoe 

Retained Specimen / Photograph will be Required.

Sunday 

We drove to Hickling for a late afternoon visit yesterday. Our first Norfolk Willow Warbler of the year sang from a tree near the Visitors Centre. Another sang and showed well near Whiteslea Lodge.They were everywhere in Scotland and  the Hebrides. Pam climbed the bank in order to look over Brendon's Marsh. The Glossy Ibis was missing, probably at Potter Heigham Marshes nearby.- as the bird flies. I refuse to say that a Reed Bunting sang, it called, as did a muted Cetti's Warbler. There was an obvious lack of odonata. We eventually found a Black-tailed Skimmer.It was distant, skittish, and kept landing amongst vegetation on the ground.

A candidate for worst photo of the year.

 

Moth trap opening here on Wednesday mornings is done as part of the Butterfly walk, but may be attended exclusively. We may go this week.


Thursday, 16 June 2022

Bee-eater Update

Thursday June 16 

Earlier this week, I was contacted by the NENBC, stating that the RSPB had requested that I temporarily take down my previous Blog entry  The birds must remain  secret until after the BBC had boadcast. the news on Thursday's Springwatch. 

Firstly

I had been careful not to identify the location

My Blog has a handful of readers only, invited by me, it's a private one

The address is in Welsh so that random seekers of bird Blogs do not easily find it 

 Questions

How on earth diid the RSPB get to know of it. How did the NENBC know of it.

Did they know, or was their name being used to add power to the request

Hundreds of Norfolk birders knew about the nesting site

News

There are 7 birds on site, excavation holes and chambers well under way. A platform has been erected and the site monitored and guarded, with an entrance fee of £5 divided between the farmer and the RSPB.

I have returned the information to my prevoius entry. I wish everyone success with the venture, - and hope that the birds are successful too. 

It has been suggested that my blog address was gained from links attached to other Blogs. If you have a link on yours, please remove it. I am very happy to share with anyone who asks me first 

 

NENBC Newsletter

We are really pleased to be able to tell you that the Bee-eaters that were reported in the club area at the beginning of the June decided they liked it enough to stay around and they have since been exhibiting all the signs of breeding at a quarry at Trimingham. For obvious reasons, we have had to keep this under wraps whilst the RSPB assessed the situation and the likelihood of breeding, sorted out access arrangements with the landowner, the cordoning off of the immediate area, a car park, a watchpoint, an on-site base for RSPB monitoring and all with the safety and well-being of the Bee-eaters in mind. Along with local Trimingham birders, NENBC have been involved with monitoring the site to date but now that all the RSPB protections are in place, the site is up and running for visitors. The site will be open from dawn until dusk and there will be a car park charge of £5 for visitors. This income will be split between the RSPB to fund the operation and the accommodating landowner. Access to the car park and the viewing area is at the eastern end of Trimingham and the eastern end of the quarry only off Gimingham Road – there is an in and out system in place. There is no access or parking along Middle Street which is the usual entrance to the quarry. Please be respectful of residents and other users whilst visiting. The RSPB will have a presence on site 24/7 but are looking for volunteers to help staff a watchpoint in a similar fashion to the Cromer Peregrine Watchpoint from 20th June. If you are interested in taking part to support us and the RSPB in this, the please let us know as soon as you can on nenbc@aol.co.uk and we will be in touch in the next few days. Fingers all crossed for a successful summer!


 

Sunday, 12 June 2022

Quarry Dwellers

 Sunday June 12


At the second time of asking - and with a lot of help from Pauline - we found our quarry. Both the place and our target birds. Reasonably local, four Bee-eaters have taken up temporary residence in a North East  Norfolk quarry.
A local farmer has mown an area of a meadow to allow parking, a distance away from their favoured area. Good to hear of a tolerant and co-operative farmer.  We parked in the field and waited for the birds to show on the telegraph wires below. Three of them obligingly did so, allowing me acceptable scope views. They even called. Such an evovcative sound. I hear it as PRRR PRRR, lovely memories of Mediterranean biding trips.

Unedited view taken with a 400mm lens

 


 Much edited 

 



One of the four birders at the bottom of the field, viewing the quarry through a gap in the hedge, returned to her car just as the three, then four birds flew onto the wires. Pam went to check that she had seen the birds,returning with some news.  Springwatch cameramen were here this morning filming, the results will probably be shown on Thursday evening. In the meantime, NENBC and the RSPB are co-operating to set up a 24 hour watch on the quarry. If and when that happens, I guess that the site will be made public.

Not only did P check that we knew about the birds, sending us good instructions, s
he also phoned to check that we had found the site. Thank you, it was very much appreciated
.

 

Wednesday, 8 June 2022

Emperor Update

 Wednesday June 8

The Emperor Moth caterpillars we brought home from Scotland - they hatched out in an egg tray plastic bag, are thriving. Pam is still changing their food twice a day, they are eating machines. Hawthorn and Birch form the bulk of their diet. We think that they may be in their final instar before pupating. They are in a zipped breeding cage made of fine netting.

I counted 39 of them on the surface.


                                 I counted

We've trapped some nice moths during the last few days, despite the rain. Lime Hawk-moth is always anticipated. We only trap one or two a year.


Bird's-wing

 


 Tortrix Viridana. Green Oak Tortrix

These micro moths appear in numbers during June and July. In very variable shades of green, many had to be rescued from the water lying at the bottom of the trap. A paint brush to cling onto, and then a few hours drying out on an egg box, and even the most desperate seem to survive. We had 19.

 


 




 

Sunday, 5 June 2022

Celebration Day

Saturday June 4 

We have been celebrating June 4 since 1967. Leaving a 10 month old Sara with her dad, back in the tent at Williams's Farm, Ogwen Valley, North Wales, Pam and I encouraged, cajoled, and led, eight teenaged girls into climbing Eryri (Mount Snowdon). There are several known paths of differing lengths and levels of difficulty. We set off on the PYG track thought to be named after the Pen Y Gwryg Hotel, noted for being Edmund Hilary and his group's training base before they successfully climbed Everest for the first time. The ceiling of the bar is lined with the wooden panels on which they all wrote their names. When I visited with North London Climbing Club, this is where we had our Saturday night meal - and used the washrooms.

There are other interpretations of the origin of the Pyg track's name, my favourite is that it passes over Bwlch Y Moch which is Pig's Pass in welsh. Anyway, at that time, the tracks were not clearly marked and I believe that we did parts of at least three of them. Miners track part of the way and the Llanberis railway track at the top. 

Three quarters of the way up, two girls decided that they'd had enough, downed their rucksacks and sat on a rock. We decided that Pam should continue with the other six so that they were not disappointed - not the best climbing etiquette, splitting groups. In our defence, we were on a clearly marked track by now. We still shouldn't have done it. 

Eventually, and very slowly, with much encouragement from me, the three of us advanced upwards, sitting frequently. When we reached the cafe, we got a cheer from the others - and tucked into the sandwich and drink an optimistic Pam had bought for us.

The view from the top was glorious, our knee, and other joint- jolting, descent of four miles, fuelled by the euphoria of success. We probably did more than an eight miles round trip, but the longest is only just over 9 miles.

We usually go out birding and have a nice meal. To-day we went to Weeting, Norfolk Wildlife Trust's Stone Curlew Reserve. We had intended going before Scotland as the birds are easier to see when one is on the nest and the other on guard duty. The grass is shorter too. My Rollator did not like the hidden roots and fir cones on the path to West Hide, often coming to a sudden halt which jarred my wrists and arms. Larger wheels with pneumatic tyres required, even though I have a designated cross country machine.

We saw two Stone Curlews, a juvenile allowed some laughable photos in distant tall grass. 

 



Together with two others, we searched for the Spotted Flycatcher, failing to see or hear any in the strong wind lashing the treetops. 

The nice meal? A home made Chilli con Carne washed down with a glass of robust Chilean Cabernet Sauvignon. I had Creme Caramel, Pam a Salted Caramel version of the same.

Thursday, 2 June 2022

No Snettisham?

 Wednesday June 1

 Indeed, we gave Snettisham a miss.

Wishing to visit as many habitats as possible, we started by going to Selbrigg. The feeding positions were all occupied by Grey Squirrels. The resident pair of Mute Swans shepherded a flotilla of week old cygnets, always a delight. Pam's photograph.


We  have heard Song Thrush since we've been home, one sang throughout our time at Natural Surroundings on Tuesday. This one, at Sculthorpe Mill, also showed briefly behind some twigs. 

 


At last, two Tree Sparrows in our usual place, maybe they haven't totally deserted after all.

 We probably saw fifteen Buzzards to-day. Five of them in the air together, low over the back lane leading to Abbey Farm. One took off from the lane verge, maybe guarding some food, the others joined it from surrounding trees. As did two Red Kites.

Owing to it being half term, with the Queen's Platinum Jubilee celebrations starting tomorrow, we curtailed our visits. Lunch was at Holme's first parking area hoping for warblers. Sedge and Cetti's Warblers obliged. We'd heard Blackcap and Whitethroat earlier. Our first Reed Warbler's more guttural song, reminiscent of that of a Great Reed Warbler, was also heard from some undergrowth.

Holkham Marsh was bathed in warm sunshine. Pam's photograph of the herd of Belted Galloways shows the western end reaching to the dunes and the sea.

 


At least three Spoonbills and a Great White Egret eventually showed, flying into and from their nests.  Cormorants huddled low in their large round bowls. Only Greylag and Egyptian and a Canada Goose plus Shelducks galore, Lapwings, Avocets and one Shoveller, on the marsh. 

The last coastal stop, before turning inland, was Wells North Point Pools. We had it to ourselves, the first time ever. Gadwall, Teal and several Redshanks were new for the list. As were the over a hundred motley coloured Black-tailed Godwits resting on the shores of the eastern pool. 

A most enjoyable birding day, enough birds to keep us happy, with a few mammals to add interest. Muntjac, Brown Hare, Rabbits and Grey Squirrels.