Sunday 26 November 2017

Burton Dassett: Winter Random Square bird survey

This morning I spent two hours out and about around Avon Dassett, a few mile north of Banbury, participating in the BOS Winter Random Square Survey.  This involves spending 2 hours counting all the birds you can find in a 1km square.  Sometimes the two hours can drag a bit by the end, but this morning, in glorious sunshine, there were plenty of birds about, helped by a reasonable diversity of habitats within my allotted square - a leafy village, parkland, scrub, arable farmland, pasture and tall hedgerows.

Having spend a bit of time yesterday checking potential Hawfinch sites locally without further success, I was not particularly expecting to find any on the survey.  So it was a very pleasant surprise when, after about ten minutes, one popped up on top of a nearby tree, bathed in the morning sunlight, a great view but almost immediately it was off.... 

I managed to find a total of 38 species, including a pair of Ravens, a flock of about fifty Skylarks, five Yellowhammers and plenty of Redwings and Linnets.

Fieldfares have become noticeably more common in the past week or so, this bird was guarding an apple tree, fending off blackbirds when it could.

Fieldfare near Edgcote
Mute Swan, Wroxton College
Grey Heron searching for food in a field of winter wheat near Thenford
Edgcote Church and Yew trees



Sunday 19 November 2017

Banburyshire: Hawfinches around the churchyards

Churchyards are turning out to be the place to look for Hawfinches at the moment.  There have been regular sightings at Thenford churchyard near Middleton Cheney over the past couple of weeks; I managed a brief view of a flock of six flying over last Monday morning. This afternoon I had a look around the tiny churchyard at Edgcote near Wardington, another promising looking site with a couple of fruiting Yew trees.  Quite a few Redwings and Greenfinches were siting in the top of several mature trees surrounding the churchyard, then suddenly a Hawfinch appeared and started calling, and I soon realised another was sat just below it.  Not great views high up in the tree and partly hidden behind smaller branches, but I pointed my lens using the point focus setting and captured a record shot!  Then they few off, not to be seen again (as, sadly, tends to be the case with them).  What these two churchyards have in common are mature fruiting Yew trees and being located next to parkland estates with plenty of mature trees.






Hawfinch record shot - Edgcote Church







Edgcote Estate
Edgcote Estate
I managed some better photos at Bicester Wetland Reserve in the morning, where an immature Water Rail showed very well early on right in front of the hide.  Two Cetti's Warblers were singing, one in the small reedbed and one in the scrubby willows along the path towards the cattle field.  A large flock of tits and goldcrests contained a Chiffchaff that was not giving the classic "Hweet" call but a "Swee-oo", I had heard this call a couple of weeks earlier but this time got a decent view and it was clearly a regular Chiffchaff.  I heard a second Chiffchaff making the same call while I was out for a run near Wardington around midday today - it was fly-catching in a sheltered sunny spot.  Again, my attention was drawn by the unusual call, then I spotted the bird (no binocs this time!).  Much has been written about Chiffchaff calls, for example, in Birding Frontiers
Juvenile Water Rail feeding in the small area of cut reed in front of the hide
Excavator at work last week, expanding the scrape habitat - a Redshank dropped in straight away
a Mute Swan family has moved in
Wrens often show very well just below the hide

 
Water Rail, Bicester Wetland Reserve


Sunday 5 November 2017

Wroxton College - Hawfinch encounter

Autumn 2017 will be remembered as the "Hawfinch Autumn" I'm sure.  A remarkable influx of birds from the continent has enabled many birders to find this giant finches on their local patch and there has already been some great blogging on the subject.  Having stumbled upon my first local hawfinches at Tadmarton Heath a week ago, when I just managed to see two birds as they flew off and away, I was determined to get a better view. 

Hawfinches are notoriously shy birds, sometimes frequenting tree tops and often first located by their call, a sharp clicking "pix!".  They used to breed in Banburyshire - the last recorded nest was found in 1987 - nowadays there are very scarce visitors and seen less than annually.

I have focused my effort at Wroxton College, just west of Banbury, because clumps of mature trees around the grounds of the college are one of the most likely places to attract any passing Hawfinches.  The college, very kindly, allow access to the grounds during daylight hours, and it is a nice place to walk and enjoy the autumn colours. This morning was my third attempt to find Hawfinches at the college and I arrived reasonably early just as sunlight was starting to create a wonderful glow across the autumn foliage. After about 40 minutes I reached the bottom end of the park, below the main lake.  Looking up into the treetops, there they were: two very large finches with huge bills, looking quite settled, they then started calling, giving me time to capture a few record shots.  They dropped down a little bit into slightly better light, then down further into a large yew tree.  More calling ensued, then a flock of five Hawfinches burst out of the Yew and immediately flew off, not to be seen again that morning!
Hawfinch high up in the tree top
Two Hawfinches
This Hawfinch dropped down into better light for a brief moment
back lit Beech leaves
Beech tree
leaves floating in the lake
Raven calling
Mute Swan family (7 cygnets raised on the lake)
Yew berries (which Jackdaws were feasting on... until I pointed my lens in their direction)
Female Goosander on the lake today, also a drake Teal and Kingfisher
Female Green Woodpecker
Elsewhere......
Tadmarton Heath: bird feeders are up and the wild bird strip is starting to ripen, though maybe a bit late this year to produce much food so we are adding some extra seed.

Coat Tit approaching the feeders.
Bird food crop maturing
Corn Marigold still in flower
Wardington:  Still lots of Buzzards hopping around looking for worms
Bicester Wetland Reserve: Cetti's Warbler still singing from the reedbed though hard to see, also an eastern-race Chiffchaff heard then seen at dusk, hopefully this will stick around and better views gained.  Plus the usual flock of Teal, a few Shoveler and 8 Wigeon.
Bicester Wetland at sunset