Friday, 29 May 2009

The Story So Far

A total of 174 species was recorded in Hertfordshire by 29th May 2009
(LGRE Total = 153 species – 29 May - those marked in blue)


Birds marked with an asterisk (*) are of unknown origin, most likely escapes from captivity

1) Great Crested Grebe
2) Little Grebe
3) BLACK-NECKED GREBE
4) Sinensis Cormorant
5) EURASIAN BITTERN
6) Little Egret
7) Grey Heron
8) WHITE STORK*
9) Mute Swan
10) WHOOPER SWAN*
11) Greylag Goose
12) Canada Goose
13) Barnacle Goose
14) DARK-BELLIED BRENT GOOSE
15) Common Shelduck
16) Ruddy Shelduck*
17) Egyptian Goose
18) Mandarin Duck
19) Mallard
20) Gadwall
21) Pintail
22) Shoveler
23) Eurasian Wigeon
24) Common Teal
25) GARGANEY
26) Pochard
27) Red-crested Pochard
28) Tufted Duck
29) COMMON SCOTER
30) Common Goldeneye
31) SMEW
32) Goosander
33) RED-BREASTED MERGANSER
34) Ruddy Duck
35) OSPREY
36) Red Kite
37) MARSH HARRIER
38) HEN HARRIER
39) MONTAGU’S HARRIER
40) Common Buzzard
41) Sparrowhawk
42) Kestrel
43) Hobby
44) PEREGRINE
45) MERLIN
46) Red-legged Partridge
47) Grey Partridge
48) Common Pheasant
49) Water Rail
50) Moorhen
51) Coot
52) Oystercatcher
53) PIED AVOCET
54) Ringed Plover
55) Little Ringed Plover
56) Lapwing
57) DOTTEREL
58) European Golden Plover
59) Dunlin
60) WOOD SANDPIPER
61) Common Sandpiper
62) Green Sandpiper
63) Common Redshank
64) Common Greenshank
65) BLACK-TAILED GODWIT
66) BAR-TAILED GODWIT
67) EURASIAN CURLEW
68) WHIMBREL
69) Woodcock
70) Common Snipe
71) Jack Snipe
72) RUFF
73) Black-headed Gull
74) Common Gull
75) MEDITERRANEAN GULL
76) Herring Gull
77) Yellow-legged Gull
78) CASPIAN GULL
79) Lesser Black-backed Gull
80) Great Black-backed Gull
81) LITTLE GULL
82) KITTIWAKE
83) GLAUCOUS GULL
84) ICELAND GULL
85) GLAUCOUS-WINGED GULL*
86) LITTLE TERN
87) SANDWICH TERN
88) Common Tern
89) ARCTIC TERN
90) BLACK TERN
91) Stock Dove
92) Woodpigeon
93) Collared Dove
94) EUROPEAN TURTLE DOVE
95) Common Cuckoo
96) Tawny Owl
97) SHORT-EARED OWL
98) Barn Owl
99) Little Owl
100) Common Swift
101) Common Kingfisher
102) Ring-necked Parakeet
103) Green Woodpecker
104) Great Spotted Woodpecker
105) LESSER SPOTTED WOODPECKER
106) Skylark
107) WOODLARK
108) Sand Martin
109) Barn Swallow
110) House Martin
111) Meadow Pipit
112) SCANDINAVIAN ROCK PIPIT
113) WATER PIPIT*
114) Pied Wagtail
115) WHITE WAGTAIL
116) Yellow Wagtail
117) Grey Wagtail
118) Wren
119) BOHEMIAN WAXWING
120) Dunnock
121) Robin
122) Common Nightingale
123) Common Redstart
124) BLACK REDSTART
125) Northern Wheatear
126) Stonechat
127) WHINCHAT
128) Song Thrush
129) Redwing
130) Mistle Thrush
131) Fieldfare
132) Common Blackbird
133) Garden Warbler
134) Blackcap
135) Lesser Whitethroat
136) Common Whitethroat
137) Sedge Warbler
138) Cetti’s Warbler
139) Western Reed Warbler
140) Grasshopper Warbler
141) SAVI’S WARBLER
142) Willow Warbler
143) WOOD WARBLER
144) Common Chiffchaff
145) Goldcrest
146) Spotted Flycatcher
147) Great Tit
148) Coal Tit
149) Blue Tit
150) Marsh Tit
151) Long-tailed Tit
152) Nuthatch
153) Common Treecreeper
154) NORTHERN GREY SHRIKE
155) Magpie
156) Jay
157) Jackdaw
158) Rook
159) Carrion Crow
160) COMMON RAVEN
161) Starling
162) House Sparrow
163) TREE SPARROW
164) Chaffinch
165) BRAMBLING
166) Linnet
167) LESSER REDPOLL
168) Goldfinch
169) Siskin
170) Greenfinch
171) Bullfinch
172) Reed Bunting
173) Yellowhammer
174) CORN BUNTING

SAVI'S WARBLER still present




The reeling male SAVI'S WARBLER (pictured above) is still present at 70 Acres Lake this morning, visible distantly from the footpath on the west side.

The Little Hadham area

Quiet around Little Hadham: Highlights today: 1 EUROPEAN TURTLE DOVE purring near Much Hadham Golf Course, 1 singing CORN BUNTING at Trims Green, several YELLOW WAGTAILS scattered around and that's about it. Been out on my patch for two whole days: 42 species but nothing unexpected apart from over 1000 PAITED LADY butterflies this morning at Hadham Hall on the A120 (Jono Forgham)

Wednesday, 27 May 2009

Amwell Sightings this evening

At Amwell this evening: all very quiet: 3 LRP, 2 Ringed Plover, 3 Redshank, 1 Little Egret, 250 Swift, 2 Hobby, 2 Shoveler (Graham White)

All status quo on the Bird Sightings front

The singing/reeling male SAVI'S WARBLER is still present at the extreme east of the county, occasionally showing in the reedbed at the west side of 70 Acres Lake, Lee Valley Park, whilst a few EUROPEAN TURTLE DOVES remain on territory and an arrival of SPOTTED FLYCATCHERS took place at the weekend.

All Tring Reservoirs Bird News is available on my Tring Blog at

http://birdingtringreservoirs.blogspot.com/

Saturday, 23 May 2009

North Hertfordshire Farmland

Friday 22nd May - 7 Corn Buntings (singing) - Baldock to Wallington Rdplus 1 Yellow Wagtail, 2 Pr Linnet

Saturday 23rd May - Deadmans Hill nr Sandon - 1 Red Kite, 2 Pr Grey Partridge, 1 Yellow Wagtail, 4 Buzzard, 1 Corn Bunting.

Mike Ilett

Wednesday, 20 May 2009

Summary of sightings 6-20 May

A WHIMBREL and 2 DUNLIN was noted at Amwell NR on 9th May, with three separate MARSH HARRIERS passing through Wilstone Reservoir, Tring, on 10th. A ringtail MONTAGU'S HARRIER was at Sandon on 10th, with an influx of BLACK TERNS involving 5 at Wilstone on 11th-12th, 7 at Amwell on 13th (along with 12 ARCTIC TERNS), 4 at Tyttenhanger GP on 13th, 17 at Wilstone on 13th, 6 at Hilfield Park Reservoir on 13th, 1 at Aldenham Reservoir on 13th and 11 at Wilstone on 14th. There were also 2 LITTLE TERNS at Wilstone Reservoir on 13th-14th, with a further bird from midday on 14th.

New TURTLE DOVE

There is a EUROPEAN TURTLE DOVE in Datchworth for at least the second year running. It was found by Mick Craig last weekend, and i went to look for it this evening. It was purring from a tree at the back of the cricket pitch near the pavilion, and then flew to the opposite side of the green and purred from a TV aerial (David Booth)

Monday, 4 May 2009

Migrant Waders - WOOD SANDPIPER and WHIMBREL

Solitary WHIMBREL flew NE over Bedmond at 1325 hours. Also some northerly movement of Swift, Swallow & Lesser Black-backed Gull.

Selected breeding records: Chaffinch & Song Thrush nests found at Garston in past couple of days; Long-tailed Tits carrying food at Bourne End & Berkhamsted Castle on Saturday; fledged Mistle Thrushes near Bedmond today (Colin Everett)

Received a call from Jim Rudland at 3.00pm to say that he had found a WOOD SANDPIPER in front of the viewpoint at Amwell. I got down there at 5.10pm and watched it for 10-15 seconds during which time it was calling most of the time, clearly unsettled. It then flew off and towered above the island before heading out over Easnye Wood and away.

Nice to get one by 10 seconds for a change rather than miss one by 10 seconds as is usually the case (Alan Reynolds)

LEE VALLEY PARK SAVI'S WARBLER

Ian Kendall discovered a reeling male SAVI'S WARBLER in the Lee Valley Park (Hertfordshire/Essex border) late evening on Thursday 30 April. It was reeling from the extensive reedbed on 70 Acres Lake at TQ 367 031 and sang constantly from 1900-2100 hours. Although all of 70 Acres Lake is currently claimed by Essex County Council, with the new border now following the canal, for a very long period prior to this political change the border followed the River Lee, almost a mile to the east - so in essence, this bird is politically Essex at this time but may revert back to Hertfordshire later in the future (I tend to agree with Graham White and Adam Wilson and others that for constant recording of birds in this area, we stick with previous arrangements, particularly when one considers the many years of data collated from Cheshunt GP in the Hertfordshire Bird Reports).

The bird was seen well by Mike Ilett and Phil Ball early the next morning and reeled almost continuously from 0400 to 0900 hours, becoming more and more intermittent to late morning. It became quite for most of the day but then started up again in the evening, and reeled fairly constantly from 1800 to 2100 hours. It was seen briefly on a number of occasions (LGRE et al).

This same pattern of events has continued on subsequent days with the bird still present on Sunday evening (3 May).

DIRECTIONS: Although 70 Acres Lake is served by two public car parks - at Fishers Green at TQ 378 032 and at Hooks Marsh at TQ 376 026 - please note that these car park gates are locked at 1930 hours promptly each evening and do not open until 0915 in the morning. Obviously with the Savi's Warbler being mainly crepuscular in its activities, it is best to park just outside the gates. More convenient is Cadmore Lane, beyond the railway (accessed from the A10 and Cheshunt High Street).

For Fisher's Green car park, leave the M25 at Junction 25 and continue north on the A10 to the first Waltham Cross roundabout. Turn right here on Winston Churchill Way to the next roundabout and traffic lights. Continue right at the roundabout on to Monarch's Way and at the next roundabout continue east on the A121 Eleanor Cross Road towards Waltham Abbey. After several sets of traffic lights and a McDonalds restaurant on your right, you will come to the Abbeyview roundabout and bypass. Continue round this until you reach the B194 in Waltham Abbey where you head north towards Holyfield. After 1.4 miles, turn left on the sharp bend towards Hayes Hill Farm and Lee Valley Park car park.

Once at the Bittern Watchpoint Hide (just across the bridge from the car park), follow the towpath west for 400 yards and then skirt left down the line of Poplars with 70 Acres Pit on your left and the canal/river on your right. After a further 250 yards you will eventually pass the lock and reach Post 24 and from gaps in the hedge 85 yards further south, the area of reeds and Willows from which the Savi's is reeling from can be overlooked. The bird is some 70-90 yards out in the reedbed and very difficult to locate. If it is calm weather, it may climb to just below the tops of the reedbed and be 'scopable. A 'scope is essential for viewing.

Previous Hertfordshire Records of Savi's Warbler

1) A male was reeling at Stanstead Abbots GP from 22nd-27th April 1979 (Howard Medhurst et al) (Birds in Hertfordshire 1979: 18)..

2) A male was reeling from a small island in 70 Acres Pit on 20-21 May 1981 (D.N.Clayden, John Fitzpatrick, M.J.Oakland et al) (Birds in Hertfordshire 1981: 49).

3) A reeling male at Rye Meads Sewage Farm from 2-5 May 1989 was trapped and ringed on 3rd (C. Cottrell) (Hertfordshire Bird Report 1989: 447)..

4) An adult male was trapped and ringed at the constant effort site at Wilstone Reservoir, Tring, on 14 July 1989 and found to be wearing a BTO ring (number E707693). Most remarkably it had been ringed just two months earlier (on 9 May 1989) at Brandon Marshes in Warwickshire (81 kms to the NW) and constituted the first ever control of Savi's Warbler in Britain (J.K.Baker, W.J.Peach & G.M.Tucker) (Hertfordshire Bird Report 1989: 447).

Sunday, 3 May 2009

GRAHAM WHITE HITS 108 SPECIES ON 'RACE DAY'

A wizz around the county yeserday found a rather poor total of 108 species, no notable migrants at all.

Started at Cheshunt GP at 2.00am with Nightingale (Savi's was singing in the territory stolen by Essex), then on up the Lee Valley gathering Gropper, Water Rail, 7+ Cetti's, Barn Owl etc.

Tring was dull (55 Common Tern, Cetti's, Ruddy Duck, Wigeon. The lower Colne added a pair of Red-crested Pochard, Shoveler and a pair of R-n Parakeets.

North Herts produced at least 9 Red Kites, 2 Ravens and a Marsh Harrier, as well as the usual partridges and buntings, and the only vaguely unexpected bird in the form of 5 Golden Plover.

Back in the Lee Valley, Amwell added Snipe, 2 Oystercatcher, 2 LRPs, 9+ Hobbies, Little Egret.

At Rye Meads, 2 Egyptian Geese, 10+ Hobbies, lower Lee Valley a Peregrine and yet more Hobbies.

The last time I did a Herts 'big day' (in 1992) we managed 111 (including Wood Warbler, Tree Sparrow, Pied Fly, Willow Tit, Hawfinch and Tree Pipit) - but bops were thinner on the ground (Graham White)

WHIMBREL at TYTTENHANGER on 1 May

A WHIMBREL was present in the sheep field at Tyttenhanger GP throughout the morning on 1 May (Steve Blake et al) but flew off strongly east early afternoon