I know its been a while since I posted
here, but there is a good reason for this, the need to protect a rare
nest.
As my regular, well only reader will
know, I moved to an upland area nearly two years ago. I arrived in
the Winter so the first spring and summer I was just finding my feet
here. As the landscape could be used to film Wuthering Heights, it
should tell you exactly what it looks and feels like. Also where the
village I live in is rather exposed the default setting for the
weather will uncombe your hair the moment you step out of the door.
I rather quickly discovered that there
were Curlew in the area. This is a bird of concern and the RSPB
estimate there are less than one thousand pairs nesting in the UK.
So this spring when I realised I was seeing at least a couple of
pairs that appeared to be nesting, I started to investigate.
While the weather has been less than
clement this summer, the spring started out as being rather good.
Therefore, early in the year I was rather surprised to find three
definite nests and another possible nest. But then came the rain,
and a bit more rain, and more than a bit more rain, so much that I
was waiting for someone to open a beach resort here.
When I was able to look again, I
discovered six Curlew nests. With its curved beak made for probing
in wet mud, the rain had delayed breeding but it also made spotting
the Curlews feeding rather easy, and tracking them back to the nests
was relatively easy. So I had over a half a percent of the British
breeding population on my doorstep.
However, while looking for one species
of bird and its nests you inevitably notice other things too. The
Lapwings and the Hare being two of the most numerous sightings. But
sight is not the only sense used and I was hearing a bird that I
could not identify. I am always cautious about identifying any bird
just from its song or call, as Starlings can and do mimic.
The effect of the weather, had its
effect most noticeably on the Kestrels as the rain was effecting the
activity of the mammals they feed on. They moved to the higher parts
of the land and locally that is often the road verges. After having
had several days of rain, walking into the next village and back, I
saw three individuals hunting over the verges. Then the following
day, while on the top deck of the bus retuning from a food shopping
trip I had a close up view of a Kestrel that had to manoeuvre out of
the way of the bus. It was a brief sighting but a spectacular one.
When a week latter I saw a Kestrel drop to the verge, I thought of
that sighting and I thought I would never see anything closer than I
had on the Bus. But as I crested the hill and walked along the road
I saw the Young Kestrel covering, trying to hide its meal from me,
with its wings as I walked past it less than four feet from the bird.
It was possible to tell that it was a
newly fledged bird as it still had the last traces of the gape
visible and there was another Kestrel very close by that could have
been one of its parents. It was when I had passed this that I heard
the call that I had been wanting to identify again, but this time
actually seeing the bird. A Ring Ouzel.
As I had things to do I could not stop
and watch but as I walked back I kept my eyes and ears open. It was
funny, but that day I had three offers of a lift back to the village
that I had to refuse. I am glad I did as I did see the bird again.
He was picking caterpillars off the vegetation at the road side.
I did try tracking the bird but lost
sight that first time. But over a couple of days I repeatedly saw
him and what I latter realised was the female, and discovered where
they were nesting. It was because of this nest that I kept quiet
here, as had hoards of bird watchers descended on the area, the nest
of a very rare bird would have been disturbed, as well as the nest
sites of the Curlew. Further, by keeping quiet about this until “The
Glorious Twelfth” as I was asked to do by the Farmer, across who's
land I had to cross to get close to the nest, I got to see a seventh
Curlew nest as well as a Little owls nest too.
1 comment:
I took a few days to see this post, that's what happens when we don't post regularly. :) I am guilty as well!
I do love your posts as I so often can visualize myself there, although that was a funny bird name, I don't think we have those here!
Tree
ps hope I didn't lose access to my blog I was just re directed at sign in,
We do have curlews sandpipers and woodcocks. I am not sure if I have seen a curlew-how lucky to find so many nests.
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