On Friday morning, when Janet and I were putting up the nets, the bird was again singing in the same place, we were both sure it was marsh warbler, so I phoned the only person who be out and about at this ungodly hour - Dave Elliott - who had already done a lap of Chev. By the time DE had arrived and we got back down there it had shut up - maybe we had disturbed it? We hoped we might catch it, but didn't.
So a text from DE on my mobile which I left in the car and only rediscovered at lunchtime today reads...marsh warbler singing in same place you had it (Saturday evening)...So, in a car with buggered windscreen wipers, I heads down there, Neil Osbourne had been there 40 minutes without luck, he and Tony went, I gave it another 20 minutes or so, then went back towards the road were JF and I had first heard it, shortly after I heard it, once the several sedgies had piped down, singing from the alders and hawthorns near the small pond (yes Stewart...the one were the travellers shit...). Get in! I would never offuv ticked it on song alone, so it was great to see it and nail it. First patch tick of 2008
Recent year ticks
117 spotted flycatcher
118 blackcap
119 little tern
120 ruff
121 redstart
122 MARSH WARBLER
One of Thursday's spotfly's
Friday's Ringing
chaffinch (2 ringed, 1 retrap)
dunnock 1
redstart 2 (m, f)
common whitethroat 1f
reed bunting 1f
sedge warbler 1
Friday's reed bunting
Thats the queerest Reed Warbler I've seen. Did you count the piles of Gyppo's crap? Its probably degraded by now. The flies it attracts will be good Marsh Warbler bait...
ReplyDeleteIt was like a fuggin pikey turd minefield when I used to ring down there !!
ReplyDeleteNice one on the marshy warb... a top find !! Wish I could get one at Newton....
Doh! amended......
ReplyDeleteThe best thing the NT ever did was put the mounds in to keep the filthy bastards out.