24 April 2021

Comings and goings at Napton

Napton, with its small reservoir and locally significant hill, has proven itself over many years to be the most productive part of my patch for migrating birds.

The reservoir in particular acts as a magnet for new arrivals, as well as those gathering to leave or  simply passing through on their way to somewhere else. 

My two April visits, while contrasting in conditions, both lived up to this billing.

A low single figure temperature and biting NE wind made my first trip, on 2 April, a demanding one. Fortunately, it was immediately apparent that some early summer visitors hadn't been deterred. 

A flock of 50+ hirundines swooped low over and around the water, mainly Swallows with a handful of Sand Martins and at least one House Martin.

Three Chiffchaffs sang out around the reservoir, these having been back in the area for a good couple of weeks (this year's first being on 14 March at Leam Valley reserve).  

Perhaps best of all, in a patch not noted for its wading birds, was a Common Sandpiper (or possibly two), bobbing and darting from bank to bank as it made its way around the margins.

A fortnight later (14 April) and it was all change. The weather was transformed to warmth and calm, and the hirundines no longer swarmed across the water (having no doubt dispersed in pairs to their local breeding territories). 

In their place, at least two Willow Warblers had arrived. This was a welcome surprise, since I don't hear the beautiful call of this bird anywhere near enough on my patch, it's numbers having declined markedly in the 20 or so years I've been here.

Another bird which should be much more common than it is is the Yellow Wagtail. Decades ago this would have been a reasonably reliable summer sighting across Warwickshire's farmland, but the few that we have left now are best spotted during spring and autumn migration in hotspots like Napton and (especially) nearby Draycote reservoirs. A single bird running along the bank here was enough to remind me why these sparkling little yellow and green gems are such a favourite of mine. 

The final sign of the twice-yearly wonder that is bird migration came not in the form of a new arrival but as preparations for a mass departure. As if from nowhere 100+ Common Gulls descended on the reservoir, wheeling over the water in a tight ball for 10 minutes before heading off. These are birds which have overwintered inland (perhaps on this very site) and are now on their way back to the coast for summer breeding - almost certainly the last of the patch's winter visitors to begin this return trip.

Aside from the comings and goings of migration there have been plenty more sights and sounds to enjoy at Napton in early April: a Red Kite soaring eastwards to avoid the attentions of mobbing Jackdaws; three pairs of elegantly courting Great Crested Grebes; a small flock of Meadow Pipits; pairs of Grey Heron and Cormorant; and handsome male Reed Buntings in and around the reservoir's substantial reed bed.

16 April 2021

We're all patch birders now...

My last birding challenge – to see 200 species in a year – came to ‘a juddering halt’ in April 2018 as a result of a few changes in my personal and professional life. My latest birding challenge was triggered by changes of an altogether more global and profound nature – the Covid-19 pandemic and the ensuing lockdown. 

The first UK lockdown began on 23rd March 2020 and continued, in one form or another, for much longer than any of us ever imagined. The consequences were vast and varied; in many ways this was a shared and common experience and yet, at the same time, everyone’s lockdown was unique and personal to themselves. One thing which did seem to bring people together was nature, as increasing numbers used their daily one-hour allowance for outdoor exercise to connect with the world around them as a refuge from these strange and frightening times.

On a personal level, the lockdown meant my birding world shrunk from the county, the country and occasionally even the world, right down to the core of my local patch – only those areas which could be reached in a walk of an hour or so. In practical terms this means the mid-Warwickshire village of Radford Semele; the fields and farmland to the south and west; the Whitnash Brook local nature reserve; a short stretch of the Grand Union Canal; and, as restrictions eased a little, Newbold Comyn and the Leam Valley nature reserve. 

Kestrel, Radford Semele
A churchyard Kestrel
Remarkably, these restrictions were to prove instrumental in one of my most interesting and enjoyable birding years of recent years. As the family walk became a pivotal part of our daily routine, every detail of the natural world around us was noted and savoured, day by day, week by week. As a result, my birding diaries now have have page after page of local records where they might normally have held just a few sections, dotted among the accounts from further afield. 

The result of all this extra attention was a total of 72 bird species found on this little modest patch of land in just 12 months. This may seem to you a lot or a little, depending on your own local patch and experience. In my case, it was many more than I would have thought possible. I’m not going to try to capture here the day-to-day experience of building this list, but I will include just a few highlights. If nothing else, these might serve as an illustration – and perhaps a reminder to my future self – of what can be achieved on the most ordinary of local patches, away from the big and popular birdwatching sites. 

This selection of highlights in no particular order, but starts with the first surprise of lockdown, way back in March 2020. 

1. Golden Plover: I have in the past caught distant glimpses of Golden Plover flocks in winter fields around Warwickshire, but never near the village. Within days of lockdown starting we found a flock of 40+ birds in a stubble field less than half a mile of my home. 

2. Red Kite: Another bird that I have occasionally seen in Warwickshire but never very close to home. The first flew across the Radford Road early in lockdown, following the line of the Grand Union canal. As the year wore on we spotted others even closer to the village – culminating in the one that flew slowly outside my bedroom window just a couple of weeks ago! 

3. Mandarin Duck: It would have been a long shot to have anticipated this bird in Whitnash Brook or Leam Valley, but I’m sure I wasn’t the only one to be astonished to find a glorious male parading for several weeks along the Grand Union Canal near Sydenham Drive. 

4. Grasshopper Warbler: This was definitely a bit special – not just a lockdown treat and a patch first, but a lifetime first! Having eluded me on nature reserves up and down the land (not enough early starts perhaps), this fabulous little bird was found ‘reeling’ (the name for its high-pitched, insect-like ‘fishing reel’ song) and occasionally hopping up into view on scrub less than a mile from my house. This was a great example of the benefit of reduced traffic noise – who knows if I would have heard it at all if the nearby road had been full of traffic? 

5. Mistle Thrush: This bird is real favourite of mine, which sadly hasn’t been at all regular around the patch in recent years. But 2020 was the year in which a pair decided to nest near my garden and spend a lot of highly visible and noisy time patrolling a vast territory (typical for the species) which seemed to cover at least half the village plus nearby fields. 

Close to home -
a garden Sparrowhawk
6. Lapwing: With such a limited amount of standing water on my patch, wading birds were always going to be short supply. So I was pretty chuffed when half-a-dozen Lapwing flew lowish over my garden in early June. You can imagine that I was even more pleased the following February when I found an excellent winter flock of 66 birds feeding in fields at the farthest end of the patch.

7. Raptors: Birds of pretty are always thrilling, but encounters are often fleeting. As well as the aforementioned Red Kites, the increased amount of time I’ve spent on the patch has belped be connect not just with our ubiquitous Buzzards but also a pair of churchyard Kestrels, Sparrowhawks dashing around the village (and occasionally my garden), a Peregrine Falcon making its way towards Leamington (where we watched via webcam a pair successfully nesting and raising chicks on the town hall), night-calling Tawny Owls (although still none sighted), and a first-ever patch Hobby, flying low over nearby farmland. 

8. Starling, Fieldfare & Redwing: To underline the fact that many of my best birding moments haven't been about rare or uncommon species, this triumvirate of common winter birds were thrilling right the way through the darkest, coldest and most difficult months of the year. The winter gathers of Redwings (300+), Fieldfare (200+) and Starlings (well over 500 at some points) in the fields, hedgerows and treetops of Crown Hill were noisy, chaotic and marvellous to behold.

So these are just a few of the birding moments which have helped brighten a challenging year, but I could equally have picked others: the Whitnash Brook Little Egret; the nesting Lesser Whitethroats and Little Grebes; the lone Siskin; the ever-increasing number of Ravens; and even the village’s first Ring-necked Parakeet. All are birds I suspect I would have missed at any other time and in any other circumstances (except perhaps the parakeet – to be fair, that one made itself typically conspicuous to the entire village).

It hasn't all been birds!
There hasn’t been much of celebrate over the past 12 months, but ‘patch’ birding has been a continuous source of comfort, escape and inspiration to me. My aim now is to keep this love of local alive and, through that, to refocus this blog back on its original purpose (set all the way back in 2004) as the notes and diary of an enthusiastic, if occasional and very-much amateur, patch birder.