Thrush Rush
Dungeness October 1982
I return to the coastguard lookout and shelter from the
howling SW wind by leaning against the east facing wall. Huddling up to the
brickwork I have a fairly good view over the turbulent sea, although the
braking waves are hidden from my view by the shingle bank. Because of the
reluctance of the wind to drop below force 6 or out of the westerly quadrant
land-bird observation has been difficult and not an option that I have taken up
these past few days. As some form of compensation I’ve been drawn to the sea.
Not a great deal of bird movement is apparent but enough to keep my interest.
But, even if the birds are absent, the seascapes are not. I find that after the
initial discipline of counting the few species on view, my mind reaches a state
of calm and I lose myself in the cold greys and greens of the spume-laden sea.
Rollers rush in to collide with the shingle beach and although that moment of
collision is hidden from me I can hear its climax and see the spray cresting
the ridge. Banks of black cloud sitting menacingly offshore announce their
intention and add drama to the panorama set out before me. Who needs birds when
there is all this on offer? I’m lost in a sea-induced trance. Then a wing,
whose feather patterning is formed of geometrically perfect triangles of black,
buff and white, rises above the shingle bank and as quickly as it appears dips
down out of sight. God, I know what that is! I break cover from my isle of
calmness and run directly at the sea, exhilarated not so much by the bracing wind
as by the juvenile Sabine’s Gull that I know will be down by the breakers. And
there it is. Larid perfection. It hangs in the air facing into the wind, only
yards offshore. I feel vindicated for spending all this time staring at the
sea, privileged to be having this one-to-one with such a scarce bird and proud
to have found it. My thought is of the birders back at the observatory and of wanting
to share this moment with them. Jogging back to the observatory in Wellington
boots, heavy coat and carrying a tripod with scope does not allow Olympic
qualifying times but those gathered are soon on the beach, courtesy of
Martin Male’s car and his extreme driving skills. Alas, his Formula One-esque
driving doesn’t make up the time that was needed. The gull has gone.
I’m standing at the crest of the moat staring into a
darkness that is filled with the calls of thrushes. It won’t be light for at
least half an hour and yet these unseen birds appear to be pitching onto the
open shingle abandoning the drizzle-laden air. There must be thousands of invisible migrants hidden from view. My excitement is palpable –
you cannot buy days like these, you cannot ‘twitch’ them, they cannot be
ordered for you to experience. It’s a case of being very lucky or indulging in
a day-by-day vigil at a coastal hotspot and even then this sort of spectacle
isn’t necessarily an annual event. The light is slowly building and shapes are
slowly becoming discernable, the shadows morphing into identifiable forms. They
are mainly Blackbirds but plenty of Song Thrushes and Redwings as well. Each
clump of cover I approach explodes with birds, startled black and brown bundles
of feathers scattering in all directions. They fly a short distance before
pitching down into vegetation already populated by other thrushes, causing
brief moments of confusion as they squabble for the right to stay in their
chosen cover. An hour after dawn the thrushes are still pouring in but a new
sound is increasing in intensity above us, that of Chaffinches. A steady
trickle of these finches is making way in unhurried fashion above us, the
trickle soon becoming a torrent as they move north-west. Like war-time bomber
convoys they make unhurried and orderly passage overhead, this being far
removed in character from the chaotic flocks of thrushes that are still
punching their way through the more sedate finches. By 10.00hrs the Chaffinch
stream is exhausted and the thrushes reclaim our attention. My estimates for
the morning are Blackbird (5,500), Song Thrush (3,000), Redwing (2,000), and a
staggering 10,000 Chaffinches. There has also been at least 40 Firecrests caught
up in the movement. Nothing remotely rare but who needs rarity with a spectacle
like this played out before you. (The two Pallas’s Warblers and the flock of 33
Cranes that I will see later in the month are events that will be remembered,
but not with the intensity of this arrival).
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