Saturday 29 August 2020

Curlew Sandpipers and Bonaparte's anniversary (27-29 August)

Saturday 29 August. I took Cookie up to Beeding Hill and we walked over towards Thundersbarrow, up to Truleigh Hill and back on the lower route. I saw 4 Buzzards, a close adult Hobby, 4 Kestrels, Peregrine, 2 Ravens, 150 Swallows, a Lesser and 9 Common Whitethroats, Redstart (badly), 2 Whinchats, 9 Wheatears, 8 Yellow Wagtails and 4 Yellowhammers. I also heard, but failed to see, a calling Crossbill that sounded close.Back home a tweet from Alan Kitson that there was a juvenile Curlew Sandpiper again on the Adur opposite the airport had me grabbing my telescope and I was soon down there to see a dog running amok in the water and small waders flying everywhere. Fortunately they didn't seem to go far and after 5 minutes the dog lost interest. Scanning I saw 59 Ringed PloverKnot, the juvenile Curlew Sandpiper and 22 Dunlin while 20 Turnstones flew under the railway bridge. 
Whinchat on Beeding Hill

another Whinchat nearby


Swallows feeding over Beeding Hill


and resting along the fence line


don't look now but we are being watched

just a man and a dog

Meadow Pipit near Thundersbarrow

Swallow and glider over Truleigh Hill

Bagot Goats on Beeding Hill, part of a working flock of conservation grazers

Bagot Goat giving Cookie the evil eye

juvenile Curlew Sandpiper on the Adur

with Dunlin



Friday 28 August. David Buckingham took me up to Oare where we had an enjoyable day despite a few heavy showers not all of which we dodged. Although I'd seen Curlew Sandpipers at Pagham the previous day the views had not been great and I was keen to see more. We saw at least 8 Curlew Sandpipers amongst the plethora of waders on the lagoon, 2 moulting adults and 8 juveniles. Later along the muddy foreshore we saw a different adult with two juveniles making a total of 9 or 11. I was also keen to see the returning Bonaparte's Gull as it was exactly 43 years since I'd seen my first, swimming around on Saltholme Pool in what was then Cleveland. It was Bank Holiday Weekend and I was in North Norfolk with friends when we decided to drive up overnight. I chose to sleep for what was left of the night stretched out in a bus shelter rather than squashed up in the back of a car. It was a brilliant bird and that gave excellent views. At Oare 43 years later there was no sign of the gull on the mud by the slipway although the tide was high. Few gulls were on the lagoon and we concentrated on the waders before returning to the sea wall. A prolonged search of the mud, now quite extensive, failed to produce the gull so we walked around the reserve. Scanning the lagoon from the east DB picked out the Bonaparte's Gull swimming between and behind some Black-tailed Godwits but it soon flew back towards the slipway. It was still there half an hour later giving good views on the mud - a very smart bird and nice to mark an anniversary from my first. We also saw Turtle Dove, an adult and 2 juvenile Water Rails, 5 or 6 Avocets, 225 Lapwings, 350 Golden and 220 Ringed Plovers, 17 Whimbrel, 800+ Black-tailed Godwits, 4 Knot, 11 Ruff, 200 Dunlin, Snipe, Common Sandpiper, 500+ Redshank, Common Tern, up to 4 Marsh Harriers, a superb adult Hobby, Raven, Sand Martin, 2 very shy juvenile Bearded Tits, a Cetti's and 4 Reed Warblers, 2 Whinchats, 2 Wheatears, 7 Yellow and 30 Pied Wagtails. An enjoyable day and a pleasant change from more familiar sites in Sussex. 

the lagoon at Oare

juvenile Curlew Sandpipers and adult Dunlin at Oare



a moulting adult Curlew Sandpiper

rather tatty male Marsh Harrier over Oare

adult Bonaparte's Gull at Oare








Thursday 27 August
. Disappointed not to see a Curlew Sandpiper on the Adur I decided Pagham was a better bet and arrived at Church Norton soon after 08:00. The tide was still quite high but an increasing amount of mud was visible although three hours of looking from the benches and hide proved unsuccessful. I decided to try from the spit where I eventually found a very distant juvenile Curlew Sandpiper out in the harbour although it soon walked out of sight. Objective achieved but in the most unsatisfactory way. I drove to Halsey's Farm and walked along the North Wall to White's Creek. After some scanning I picked out another juvenile Curlew Sandpiper, a better view but still distant and by now it was raining. Other birds seen at Pagham included 17 Great Crested Grebes, 6 Grey Plover, Whimbrel, 53 Black-tailed Godwits, 4 Knot, Common Sandpiper, 5 Greenshank (including the short-billed individual), 14 Mediterranean Gulls, 4 Sandwich Terns, 23 Cattle Egrets, Kingfisher, 50 Sand Martins, 100+ Swallows, single Willow Warbler and Chiffchaff, 11 Blackcaps, 3 Garden Warblers, single Sedge and Reed Warblers in bushes, 3 Spotted Flycatchers, a Whinchat and 11 Wheatears.

Wheatears at the North Wall






the short-billed Greenshank in White's Creek

its short bill doesn't seem to stop it finding food








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