When 'empty' doesn't really mean empty

I've just come back from a relatively lengthy spell of birding over at Canons Farm. As I left the place I tweeted out the following:

After a six hour stint, I'm off. There's only so much empty sky a man can take.

This comment was made due to a fair-sized dollop of disappointment - what with a southerly airflow, and plenty of migrants having been recorded elsewhere during the week, I really thought that we would be in with a chance of picking up some stuff. At least a Swallow, maybe a Willow Warbler and even a fly-through Marsh Harrier or Osprey. But none of these materialised (the last two species mentioned unsurprisingly). There were four of us out looking as well, so the patch was being well covered.

Empty sky? Did I really mean that? Looking at my notebook, that really was harsh. 10+ Common Buzzard. 1 Peregrine. 2 Greylag Geese (maybe not 'patch gold', but certainly 'patch bronze'), a smart male Brambling, a female Stonechat, a flock of 80+ Linnet, half a dozen Chiffchaff, and up to six of these...


We still get Yellowhammers. Not many places around the edge of London do. We had up to 50+ during the winter and maybe 2-3 pairs will breed. So, empty sky? Hardly.

Comments

Derek Faulkner said…
Stop moaning, I'd love to have Yellowhammers, we lost ours on Sheppey about 20 yrs ago. This Spring Migrant thing is the most frustrating time of the year, I've been our all day sometimes and seen nothing and had a friend pop out to the same place for half and hour and get them.
Saying that, I had a female Wheatear this morning.
Steve Gale said…
Not moaning Derek, far from it - celebrating our Yellowhammers if anything.
Unknown said…
I'd take a Yellowhammer for the local canal. Had one strong possible on a distant telephone wire a good few years ago but not good enough to 'have it'. That is a pleasure yet to come (I hope).
The yellowest yellow in UK nature I often think
Steve Gale said…
They really are fickle in their distribution. I'm guilty of taking them for granted sometimes.
Steve Gale said…
Yes Simon, them and the moth called Canary-shouldered Thorn
Unknown said…
Snap. I thought of that moth after reading Simon's comment.
Derek Faulkner said…
Surely a male Yellow Wagtail comes into the reckoning.

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