Numbers
Some of these birds may have doubled back, as a scan across the field towards Bramblehall Wood revealed a handful of perched birds on show. Slowly but surely, over a half-hour period, birds appeared out of nearby Yews and arrived from within the wood, and in time a clear 63 were perched out in the open. Before I could wipe the smile of of my face a single flock of 50 birds flew in and joined them! This was incredible. I scanned left and right along the woodland edge and was staggered to see more birds on top of trees... ones and twos breaking cover, other small flocks appearing from the wood, even more flitting over from Juniper Top. Wonderful. Again I had to ask myself how many were present? If I had to give a firm, 'no less than' figure, then 170 seemed fair - fair, but undercooked - there could be many more. I could only assume that the birds that had earlier made their way up towards Juniper Top had returned. The majority of the Hawfinches slowly melted back into Bramblehall Wood. I left the path with at least 50 still on show. Throughout my two and a half hours on site I did not see another birder.
This area is undoubtably favoured by Hawfinches. The map above gives an idea of where the 'Hawfinch hot-spots' are. Do those that I saw today include individuals from the 200 recorded on Juniper Top on January 30th - or is there a turnover of birds? As you can see, all of the sites are close to each other. Just how many birds there are in these wooded tops and valleys is anybody's guess. If I had to come up with a figure I reckon it would be close to 300 - but that would be but a total guess. At the moment Headley Heath seems to have fallen out of favour, the summit of Juniper Top is haunted by fewer birds, Mickleham Downs is still a reliable site and Bramblehall Woods is undoubtably the current hot-spot. There could be Hawfinches moving about from site to site, or just a lot of site-faithful birds popping up from their hiding places in front of a lucky birder. Below are my own personal observations since the invasion began.
2017 Headley Heath
A single on 10 October, 32 on 31 October, 26-35 on 1 November, 20+
on 6 November, 15 on 13 November, 12 on 4 December, two on 22 December
Juniper
Bottom, nr Box Hill
Six flew
north-west on 15 October
Nork, Banstead
Five (a four and
a one) flew east over the back garden on 16 October
Canons Farm, Banstead
A single flew
south on 25 November
2018 Mickleham Downs
c20 on wooded slopes due east of village on 9 January; six on 10
January; 10 on 13 January, 16 on 6 February, 40+ on 8 February
Juniper Top/Ashurst
Rough, nr Box Hill
Two on 10 January, 70+ on 29 January, 200+ on 30 January, a single
in song on 4 February, 110 on 10 February (part of Bramblehall Wood flock, see below)
Headley Heath
A single on 18
January
Bramblehall Wood
c20 on 4
February, 47 on 6 February, 17 on 8 February, 170 on 10 February
Ranmore Common
27, on 6 February, in Dorking Woods
27, on 6 February, in Dorking Woods
Comments
I've come across Hawfinch quite a few times myself and quite often I'm in a position to put other birders right on to the birds.
It does help that on one site, it's sometimes possible to view the birds without leaving the car.