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We moved from Essex to North Norfolk in August 2006 and I have spent a lot of time since then photographing the nature around me, mostly close up and macro stuff. My "patch" is the 10Km square TG2035 though I spend most time between Overstrand, where we live, and Trimingham.



I also bird regularly elsewhere in Norfolk and volunteer at Cley.





I have a photo site at
http://overstrandnature.fotopic.net/ but wanted a bit more detail so I thought I'd have a go at a blog detailing what I see locally, as well as on trips abroad

Most of the photos have been taken with Canon digital equipment, or the new Panasonic Lumix DMC-G1. I still however mostly use a camera to record what I see, rather than set out to photograph something.


Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 February 2011

Trinidad and Tobago

Just back at the weekend from 2 weeks in T & T, birding mostly.  It was hot, sometimes very wet (even though the dry season has started) and hard work on the days with no guide - those guys earn every penny making sense of the chips, whistles etc coming from the wall of vegetation and then getting the target bird into view (most of the time - not with the Little Tinamou!).

Scarlet Ibises, Caroni Swamp
20th Jan

Arrived on BA via St Lucia from Gatwick and managed Carib Grackle and Kiskadee while waiting for the cab to Pax

21st

With a limping Kenny for our guide we walked the road near Pax, notching up inter alia 4 sp of Hummer and 4 Tanagers, plus the locally rare Chestnut collared Swift in a passing mixed swift flock
Greater Kiskadee
22nd

Showery and warm most of the day, the first part of which was spent at a cattle station, good for birds including several Yank waders and brilliant for butterflies and dragonflies. Then, after lunch on the east coast we birded the Nariva swamp area, scoring Azure Gallinule, Pinnated Bittern, Pygmy Kingfisher and at last knockings, Red bellied Macaws, two birds being all that's left of a huge roost which moved on 4 or 5 years ago.

Least Sandpiper, Agricultural station

Flame tailed Dragon, Nariva Swamp
23rd

Showery and warm again and a little closer to home going past Asa Wright into the montane forest along the tba Road for a good selection of birds, notable among which were Black, Grey and White Hawks, Chestnut Woodpecker, Collared Trogon and Grey throated Leaf Tosser. In some ways best of all however was the Blue Morpho butterfly elegantly gliding along the road. Traffic was however a nightmare and nearly cost us Speckled Tanager, which when we saw it well was much nicer than the book. Back home to an excellent dinner and a Spectacled Owl calling from outside the guest-house.

24th

After heavy rain overnight our morning visit was to the Arena lowland forest. Stacks of dragons to photograph and some good bids including Squirrel and Little Cuckoo and Crimson crested Woodpecker. Long-billed Starthroat as well while Violaceous Trogon completed the Trinidad set.


Violaceous Trogon
 After lunch at Pax and a photo session from the veranda we left at 4.00pm to go nightjarring but without a working flash! Nonetheless we did succeed in seeing bothe White-tailed Nightjar and Pauraque pretty well in the headlights as well as a stray Agouti


Purple Honeycreeper



Palm Tanager
  25th


  First stop Pont-de Pierre Wildfowl Trust inside the refinery for plastic ducks, Great Cowbird and Streaked-headed Woodcreeper, after which we toured theWellington area for waders, Saffron Finch etc. Our last stop was the excellent Caroni Swamp where the main highlight was the roosting herons and Scarlet Ibis, a pretty impressive sight, even if the greatest spectacle was when they were flushed by a local boat going up the main channel behind them. Less so the Common Pottoo but it was still gratifying to see provided the rumours it's stuffed are unfounded!
26th

A clear up day when we decided (rightly) that with Asa Wright looming the Arena area of lowland forest represented our best chance of new birds. So it proved with 10 ticks plus Little Tinamou. heard, other highlights being 2 antbirds, Ruby Topaz, a pair of Bat Falcons and Crowned Ant-tanager After lunch in a bus shelter by the cattle fields (seats and a cool breeze) the fields themselves were quiet in the heat but the Striped Cuckoo of two nights back showed beautifully to remove one frustration.


Smooth-billed Ani, Ag Station



Yellow-hooded Blackbird, Ag Stn
  27th

With no guide hired we pottered round near the guest-house with another couple (Steve and Jane) dodging heavy showers, not seeing much new but getting good views of Violaceous Trogon and Grey Hawk and a few photos both of pink and green dragons and also Blue-grey Tanager and stuff round the veranda feeders. Black Hawk over the valley was new from the veranda, while a sting from a single (fortunately) angry africanised honey bee was momenterily painful and sore. An early finish meant we scored tea and cake!


Pondhawk
 


Carmine Skimmer
  28th

Transfer day to Asa Wright but before we went a Greater Black Hawk near Pax was a bonus. We managed a short walk along the discovery trail before the rain started which overnight became torrential, no fun in tin roofed accommodation. Sitting on the veranda was productive with a few new species and some excellent photo opportunities.


White-lined tanager in rain
 


White-necked Jacobin
  29th
No let up in the torrential rain meant the oilbird cave visit as a bit tricky. We persevered though and had decent views of three birds – more were on view deeper in but the stream was swollen and neither of us fancied soaking feet crossing. The sun did eventually appear long enough to see Wattled Bellbirds after lunch, the excellent displaying White bearded Manikins and get caked in clay along one of the rather unkept trails. A real bonus was a Short-tailed Nighthawk flying up the valley last thing, as was the clearing weather which meant a better night's sleep.



Wattled Bellbird
 

White bearded Manikin
 30th

With nothing planned we strolled around, seeing both local woodcreepers again but not much else, while the night walk was also quiet, just a couple of tarantula species and a few creepies but no owls.



Tropical flowers, Asa Wright
 


Damselfly, Asa Wright
 

31st

Transfer day to Tobago meant sitting around the airport for 2 hours waiting for a 20 minute flight, then a long transfer along windy roads to Blue Waters, which was well worth it. Set in an idyllic bay with tropic birds and brown boobies flying past and green turtles swimming off the beach, the resort is pretty nice though the food was disappointing and expensive. Rufous-vented Chacalacas are fun if a little noisy. We met the famous Newton George in the evening to arrange our next day's birding.

  1st February

Up and away at 6.00am for a good mornings birding along the Gilpin Trace, personal highlightys being Blue-backed Manakin and the endangered White-tailed Sabrewing. The best bird was however a pigeon found on the way back, Scaley-naped, still regarded as a vagrant on the islands though NG has seen them before. One odd thing, few butterflies and no dragonflies seen at all, so maybe the neatly strimmed verges are treated with insecticide to keep the reported mossie problem at bay.


Rainforest, Gilpin Trace
 


Blue-backed Manikin
  2nd
The day started well with a breakfast tick, Red-footed Booby in the bay. After breakfast a walk through the nearest village, Speyside produced several Caribbean Martins, a couple of Yellow-crowned Night Herons and our first Tobago dragonflies, while a walk up the track above the resort after lunch produced several butterflies, a Ruby Topaz, Brown-crested Flycatcher and two of yesterday's ticks, White-streaked Antwren and Scrub Greenlet.


Blue dragons, Speyside
 

Yellow crowned Night Heron, Speyside
 3rd

We took the bus into Scarborough, which was interesting but not birdy. We did manage Eared Dove in the botanical gardens as well as Red crowned Woodpecker while a flock of 50 or so Royal Terns on the harbour entrance was a bonus but little other reward for 1 ½ hours each way on a bus.

4th


Early morning, Bluewaters


Home day prefaced by a walk up behind the resort in windy conditions, as a result there were few birds and fewer butterflies. After that a long taxi ride and a BA flight which left early but waited the extra time on Antigua before the transatlantic flight home to a windy but dry and mild Gatwick.

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

1st - 8th June

1st-8th June


A mixed bag of weather and lots of moths in the traps including record numbers of Heart and Dart, a few common migrants, our first ever White-pinion Spotted and Poplar Kitten and a couple of oddities which need a closer look.


White pinion spotted

A trip to Hoveton Hall Gardens in warm sunshine on 4th got our first Norfolk Hawkers, 4-spot Chasers, Black-tailed Skimmers and Emperors in UK as well as stacks of Azures and Large Reds, the latter also on our pond with a couple of BBCs.


Teneral Black tailed Skimmer

Birds have been interesting – I finally twitched the Cley Trumpeter Finch on its last day, didn’t do the Black winged Stilts but did make an evening dash to Cley last night for a new for Norfolk Blue-winged Teal and a bonus Spoonbill.

Saturday, 24 April 2010

The last few days

With mostly chilly temperatures and northerly winds little exciting has happened. Several commoner summer migrants have come in including a couple of early Swifts on 20th but numbers remain low locally. Moths have generally been the same but we had garden record numbers of Common Quaker (35) and Hebrew Character (15) on 20th/21st. Brindled Pug and Early Thorn have both appeared briefly but are about 2 weeks later than norm and the first white butterflies are on the wing with Holly Blues and Orange tips. More photography opportunities with bees and bugs in the garden though.


Bombus pascuorum and Brindled Pug

Bird migration picked up yesterday (23rd) with the change to SE winds, highlights being another Red Kite, several Yellow Wags and steady numbers of hirundines. The moth trap last night had our second Pale Pinion of the year, so they are obviously getting commoner up here.

Friday, 12 March 2010

11th/12th March

11th March


With temperatures no higher than 5.1C the previous day and down to a meagre 0.8C overnight on the patio I was surprised to find four moths in and around the trap including Pale Brindled Beauty and our first Grey Shoulder Knot of the year.


Pale Brindled Beauty on post


Off to Cley where I met Andy and wandered round the reserve. Not many birds, three or more Ruff and a Spotted Redshank were the highlights with a few Grey Seals moving off the beach. It did however turn into a glorious day after an unpromising start so I took off for Morston late on for an hour to photograph the very obliging Spotted Red there. True to its reputation it showed really well and a little manoeuvring and patience got me some reasonable shots.

Spotted Redshank, Morston


12th March

After rain overnight, four moths of three species at the trap were OK but nothing new.

A walk to Incleborough Hill in the afternoon produced very little except a flock of goldfinches. Oddities were a ringed Dunlin on a puddle by the duck pond at East Runton and a semi albino Wood Pigeon in a flock by Sandy Lane, Cromer.

Thursday, 14 January 2010

Cley today

A pretty good day though the light was naff for photography, highlights being Kingfisher, 3 Water pipits and 7 Twite by the sluice along the west bank, 7 pale-bellied Brents shared between north scrape and Salthouse and a party of 6 Bewicks flying west along the coast.  Lots of Pinkfeet in the area as well, though mobile, plus a Cettis and Stonechat, so some insect feeders have made it through so far. The Marsh Harriers seem to be taking an interest in each other and a couple of Barn Owls showed along the grass banks off and on.  Waders were unexceptional but included a Knot on Pats Pool

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

Last few days

A bit of a catch-up from the last few days, with highlights including 12 Woodcock locally on 10th, nine of which were along the old railway line behind our house, 4 Roe Deer locally the same day and an impressive 250+ Fieldfares, with smaller number of Redwings, in the Southrepps area on 12th.  Less impressive, but interesting were the six Egyptian Geese on one local field which is a lot more than I,ve seen locally before.  Presumably they've been forced out of their normal haunts by the cold and snow?

Woodcock seem to be just about everywhere currently and one flew over the car from a garden in Cromer when we were passing yesterday.

I ordered a bat detector today, not that I'm expecting too many species locally but using them to i/d local grasshoppers sounds easier than crawling through the grass, at least for general surveys.  We'll see, if there are any grasshoppers left after this winter!

Tuesday, 5 January 2010

Titchwell etc

I've spent most of the last two days standing freezing on the viewing platform at Titchwell hoping the potential Pacific Diver would show, but it didn't, least while I was there. Some compensation though, with the Red Kite showing both days (plus another today south of the A149 at Stiffkey near the fen), Peregrine today, 30+ Snow Buntings and some glorious late afternoon light yesterday with no camera!

Roll on summer

Thursday, 31 December 2009

Cley 31st December 2009




My usual volunteer day at Cley NWT helping people with i/d stuff etc on the reserve. Highlight was a large immature female Peregrine attacking the winter Avocet flock with enthusiasm but little apparent success. Only having the Lumix G1 with me I contented myself with some ducky/wader shots before heading back to the Centre out of the cold. Roll on summer!

Tuesday, 29 December 2009

28th December - Stalham Broad

After a walk round locally on 27th, made the trip with Phil to Stalham Broad to add Ferruginous Duck to my Norfolk list, which, after a walk along an icy boardwalk, I did. It showed close-to by some tern rafts with a small flock of Pochard, tufties and Goldeneye.

There were good numbers of Tufted Duck on the broad as well as ca 20 Goldeneye, some Great Crested Grebes, Teal and Gadwall, while bonus birds were Kingfisher, ca 50 redpolls sp flying around and 9 Whooper Swans flying low NE calling as we got back to the main car park.