After dark
#BWKM0 ND&B garden challenge
DAY 14
We are now entering into one of the most exciting times of year to be birding. Spring has been creeping up on us and, according to the weather forecasters, most of us are going to be receiving a southerly airflow accompanied by warm temperatures by Sunday. The birds are, of course, already on the move, many silently passing over us out of sight. But overnight it is possible to pick up some of these nocturnal movers by call. I gave it a go yesterday evening, sitting on a bench in the dark, and was staggered by the results.
At the moment we are blessed by a big reduction in noise pollution. Less traffic noise, little aircraft noise, fewer people gallivanting around. Add to that a calm, cloudy night (as it was last night here in Banstead) and you have the recipe for success. I have lived in our current home since 1987, and have, over the years, picked up the odd wader calling at night. But last night I added three new birds to the garden list - they are all documented below. The previous three additions were spread out over three years.
April sees a large number of waders on the move. As we reach mid-month it should be possible to hear them from any garden in our collective. A still night, a bit of cloud and a lot of patience should reward those who sit out and listen.
OUR COMBINED TOTAL IS 114 SPECIES We still seem to be missing Little Owl, Kingfisher, Firecrest and Brambling.
Today's additions are : Osprey and Treecreeper.
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New entries
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Garden firsts
Steve G (Banstead, Surrey) is up to 53 species courtesy of a remarkable night-time vigil that produced Brent Goose, Coot, Gadwall and Moorhen. A morning Greylag Goose and afternoon Long-tailed Tit paled in comparison but are still worth as much to the list.
Arjun D (Wallington, London) also fared well after dark, with his noc-mig set-up recording a skein of Brent Geese, Redshank and a Coot, taking his score to 45.
Dave B (Chatham Islands, Pacific Ocean) might only be on 17 species, but they do include Weka, Parea, Chatham Island Warbler, New Zealand Pipit, New Zealand Fantail and Tui!
Isaiah R (New Malden, London) now finds himself on 42 species.
Mark D (Dorking, Surrey) has joined the Swallow club. 45 species.
Debbie S (Portland, Dorset) was able to report a few migrant thrushes in the 'Seamist' garden. Shades of things to come...
Wes A (Capel, Surrey) had no additions, but was consoled by 85 Redwing moving NE.
Oscar D (Chiswick, London) was working outside this morning and the by-product of this was adding Marsh Harrier (low north-east), Red Kite, Rook and Redwing to his list. 45 species.
Richard P (Charmouth, Dorset) watched two Ospreys (one of which below) power up the valley and over his garden. Share them out Richard! Not in the same league but a Bullfinch raises him up to 50.
Seamus E (Thornton Cleveleys, Lancashire) a list of 20 species, including Pink-footed Goose, Coot, Oystercatcher and Curlew.
Ian W (Merton Park, London) so far on 31 species.
Ed S (Farncombe, Surrey) with his Common Snipe now reaches 66 species.
Seth G (Uig, Skye) has had a shag. Sorry that should be Shag..... 27 species.
Michael R (Battle, East Sussex) has added a few overdue species to his total of 41 but they did include two Crossbills.
Josephine S (Leatherhead, Surrey) was delighted to see a Jay today, not a regular species in her garden.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Early league table (Top 10 species seen)
This is just for a bit of fun, who's recorded the most species so far. Remember, the overall winner will be based on their percentage score, so a high species total will not necessarily win it. Or you could be like me, laid-back and just enjoying the ride with no hope of winning anything... it is, after all, the taking part that counts in #BWKM0
Matt P 70
Ed S 66
Wes A 63
Chris P 60
Martin C 58
Steve G 53
Richard P 50
Sam B 48
Mark D 45
Oscar D 45
(some of this data may be not up to date)
DAY 14
We are now entering into one of the most exciting times of year to be birding. Spring has been creeping up on us and, according to the weather forecasters, most of us are going to be receiving a southerly airflow accompanied by warm temperatures by Sunday. The birds are, of course, already on the move, many silently passing over us out of sight. But overnight it is possible to pick up some of these nocturnal movers by call. I gave it a go yesterday evening, sitting on a bench in the dark, and was staggered by the results.
At the moment we are blessed by a big reduction in noise pollution. Less traffic noise, little aircraft noise, fewer people gallivanting around. Add to that a calm, cloudy night (as it was last night here in Banstead) and you have the recipe for success. I have lived in our current home since 1987, and have, over the years, picked up the odd wader calling at night. But last night I added three new birds to the garden list - they are all documented below. The previous three additions were spread out over three years.
April sees a large number of waders on the move. As we reach mid-month it should be possible to hear them from any garden in our collective. A still night, a bit of cloud and a lot of patience should reward those who sit out and listen.
OUR COMBINED TOTAL IS 114 SPECIES We still seem to be missing Little Owl, Kingfisher, Firecrest and Brambling.
Today's additions are : Osprey and Treecreeper.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
New entries
Seamus E (Thornton Cleveleys, Lancashire)
Garden list of 67 species.
Highlights: Coot, Dunlin, Common Sandpiper, Mediterranean Gull, Tree Sparrow
Ian W (Merton Park, London)
Garden list of 86 species.
Highlights: Goldeneye, Marsh Harrier, Turtle Dove
This brings our 'garden collective' up to 44.
Garden list of 67 species.
Highlights: Coot, Dunlin, Common Sandpiper, Mediterranean Gull, Tree Sparrow
Ian W (Merton Park, London)
Garden list of 86 species.
Highlights: Goldeneye, Marsh Harrier, Turtle Dove
This brings our 'garden collective' up to 44.
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Garden firsts
Arjun D (Wallington, London) - Brent Goose, Redshank and Coot
Steve G (Banstead, Surrey) - Brent Goose, Greylag Goose, Gadwall and Coot
Ed S (Farncombe, Surrey) - Common Snipe
Tony B (Woodford Green, Essex) - Rook
Oscar D (Chiswick, London) - Marsh Harrier and Rook
Reuben B (Tufnell Park, London) - Meadow Pipit
There have now been 40 garden firsts across the competition.
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Other news from around the gardensSteve G (Banstead, Surrey) - Brent Goose, Greylag Goose, Gadwall and Coot
Ed S (Farncombe, Surrey) - Common Snipe
Tony B (Woodford Green, Essex) - Rook
Oscar D (Chiswick, London) - Marsh Harrier and Rook
Reuben B (Tufnell Park, London) - Meadow Pipit
There have now been 40 garden firsts across the competition.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Steve G (Banstead, Surrey) is up to 53 species courtesy of a remarkable night-time vigil that produced Brent Goose, Coot, Gadwall and Moorhen. A morning Greylag Goose and afternoon Long-tailed Tit paled in comparison but are still worth as much to the list.
Arjun D (Wallington, London) also fared well after dark, with his noc-mig set-up recording a skein of Brent Geese, Redshank and a Coot, taking his score to 45.
Dave B (Chatham Islands, Pacific Ocean) might only be on 17 species, but they do include Weka, Parea, Chatham Island Warbler, New Zealand Pipit, New Zealand Fantail and Tui!
Isaiah R (New Malden, London) now finds himself on 42 species.
Mark D (Dorking, Surrey) has joined the Swallow club. 45 species.
Debbie S (Portland, Dorset) was able to report a few migrant thrushes in the 'Seamist' garden. Shades of things to come...
Wes A (Capel, Surrey) had no additions, but was consoled by 85 Redwing moving NE.
Oscar D (Chiswick, London) was working outside this morning and the by-product of this was adding Marsh Harrier (low north-east), Red Kite, Rook and Redwing to his list. 45 species.
Richard P (Charmouth, Dorset) watched two Ospreys (one of which below) power up the valley and over his garden. Share them out Richard! Not in the same league but a Bullfinch raises him up to 50.
Seamus E (Thornton Cleveleys, Lancashire) a list of 20 species, including Pink-footed Goose, Coot, Oystercatcher and Curlew.
Ian W (Merton Park, London) so far on 31 species.
Ed S (Farncombe, Surrey) with his Common Snipe now reaches 66 species.
Seth G (Uig, Skye) has had a shag. Sorry that should be Shag..... 27 species.
Michael R (Battle, East Sussex) has added a few overdue species to his total of 41 but they did include two Crossbills.
Josephine S (Leatherhead, Surrey) was delighted to see a Jay today, not a regular species in her garden.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Early league table (Top 10 species seen)
This is just for a bit of fun, who's recorded the most species so far. Remember, the overall winner will be based on their percentage score, so a high species total will not necessarily win it. Or you could be like me, laid-back and just enjoying the ride with no hope of winning anything... it is, after all, the taking part that counts in #BWKM0
Matt P 70
Ed S 66
Wes A 63
Chris P 60
Martin C 58
Steve G 53
Richard P 50
Sam B 48
Mark D 45
Oscar D 45
(some of this data may be not up to date)
Comments
I added three species to my lock-down list yesterday; House Sparrow, Lesser Black-backed Gull and Common Scoter! So, my lock-down total for the garden now stands at 23.
I sat outside last night with a beer for a bit, and at 2100 had a flock of Common Scoter calling, moving from west to east! Totally blown away, and a first for my garden!
Cheers,
Seumus
Seumus E Thornton Cleveleys, Lancashire
The ratio, currently stands on 55%.