Friday, 13 February 2026

13th February - Hayling Island, Hampshire

There has been a Snow Bunting at East Head on the Selsey Peninsula for quite a while but in the last few weeks one has been appearing at Black Point on Hayling Island.  It was reported yesterday while I was watching Bittern and Otter, so I decided to go this morning to try and catch up with it

Leaving Four Marks it was quite thick fog and this did not clear until coming down from Butser Hill on the A3.  I made my way to the Sandy Point area and then walked around the promenade.  The tide was falling but the sea was quite rough with quite a large swell.  Cormorants were perched on the groyne markers, with waves breaking behind them.


On the water just offshore was an immature Shag.



The Snow Bunting had been present along the causeway that leads from the Lifeboat station to the Sailing Club.  I walked the area but could find anything other than two Linnets amongst the grass on the dunes on each side of the path.


It seems the Snow Bunting commutes across the channel to the East Head Area in West Sussex.  It also seems it does this in the afternoon.  Yesterday it was seen flying back.  Nevertheless I decided to walk around Black Point, the tide now well out and it was possible to walk the beach.

Coming around the point there were two Sanderling on the tide line and I couldn't resist them.



A dog came close but the Sanderling didn't seem concerned and stood their ground.


Scampering away along the tide line.



Finally managing to catch one with both legs off the beach.



I just waited and they came towards me.






Walking back around the beach the waves were impressive out in the channel.

Brent Geese flying across the channel


I stood around and waited but there wasn't any show.  There was a distant Great Northern Diver in the channel, too far for the camera.

With rain coming I decided to walk back to the car and drive around to Northney.  The Cattle Egret that have been found at Warblington have moved away.  This is due to the lack of cattle at Warblington and a large herd at Northney Farm.  I parked in the tea room car park and watched as Mediterranean Gulls called and flew over and they a flock of Cattle Egrets.


Seven at first.


The flock increased with thirteen.  There have been reports of over fifty!

I went back to Black Point and did another circuit out on the water there were five distant Great Northern Divers and four Slavonian Grebes.  However this was an afternoon that the Snow Bunting decided not to commute across the water.  Never mind, there may still be time to get it another day.

12th February - Blashford Lakes, Hampshire

A drizzly morning so I decided to head back to the hides at Blashford and another chance to get better views of the Bitterns, yes there are two there now.  I walked from the car park with the news that no Bittern had showed yet this morning, but I was a little more confident as I had the thermal imager.

It was rammed in the car park and I could only get a seat at the back of the hide, but was able to walk around and view the reed bed.  Nothing on the right hand side, but I found an image on the left side, pretty much in the same place I had found one on Saturday.  I watched the image and was confident it was a Bittern and eventually was able to see it through the bins.  It then moved out of view and I lost it.  Then another Bittern was located on the right hand side, again though not showing well enough for any photographs.

Then a little later there was an amazing five minutes in the hide.  First the Kingfisher appeared, perched on one of the reedmace heads, but I couldn't get through the scrum to get a photograph.  Then the Bittern on the left flew up and across the reeds in front of the hide.  I wasn't prepared and I doubt I would have got through the scrum to get to the window.  But I did see where it landed, close to the other bird and in the reeds.  The quality of photograph not much better that on Saturday.


Then the reason why the Bittern flew out became clear as an Otter appeared in the left hand channel, chewing on, what looked like, a small Tench.


There were reeds in the way but I did manage to get what I consider to be my best photographs of Otter.



It was a fight for space in the hide with window access prime real estate so it was a full on fight to be able to get a clear view, unfortunately the reeds wouldn't move so they crept across the head and body.


It is still evidence of a fantastic view of an enigmatic british mammal, one that many have yet to see in the county.


I am not sure of the age but the broad head might indicate this is amle.  Possibly one of the cubs seen with the mother last september from Ivy Lake South.


Sightings have significantly increased since last autumn and hopefully they will continue to do so.


The Otter then dived and you could follow it in the water by the trail of bubbles on the surface.  This time coming up with a reed stem draped across the muzzle.


It gradually made its way to the back of the inlet, but kept a check on th enoisy occupants of the hide.


The last view I had of it before it dived once more and seemingly swam away through the reeds.


The hope was that the Bitterns would return, but there were no thermal images within the reeds.  Eventually I decided to go and walk some other areas of the reserve.  I went around Ivy Lake and then along the causeway that goes between Ivy Lake and Rockford Lake.  In the wooded area there were wild Daffodils now in flower.


I found the female Red-crested Pochard at the back of Rockford Lake then went to the new screen to sit and have some lunch.  The view across the water here of the north hide also shows the amount of reed bed away to the left where the Bitterns could hide, well out of sight.


After lunch I walked to the Goosander hide where there were no duck at all.  I then walked to the Tern hide, the water levels in the car park having dropped since the weekend.  Once again the view from the hide was one of all water, all the duck, Wigeon, Pintail, Shoveler Tufted Duck, Pochard and Goldeneye were on the west bank well out of the north west wind that was blowing.

So I decided I would go back to the Ivy Lake north hide where I found it empty.  Another thermal scan showed it to be empty of bitterns, but I stuck around for forty five minutes so see if the situation changed.  It didn't, but there was in the reeds a Water Rail, a Goldcrest and the Firecrest once more.

With little else happening I left the hide and made my way back to the car.  As I queued in traffic to get on to the A31 I noticed a familiar shape coming from the south and it dropped low over the roundabout and headed north, a White-tailed Eagle clear on the look out for supper.

No killer shot of the bittern despite some great views briefly.  The Otter though made up for it in a big way.

Tuesday, 10 February 2026

9th February - Stoney Cross and Acres Down, The New Forest, Hampshire.

This winter hasn't been too bad got Great Grey Shrike sightings in the New Forest, before Christmas I caught up with one at Shatterford and then in the New Year there have been as many as reports from three locations.  Last year there were none throughout the winter.  Probable cause is the harsh winter conditions on the continent, driving some birds west.  With this in mind and a latest report of Saturday, I decided to try my luck with a bird in the Stoney Cross area.  This was somewhere I hadn't been before and the closest parking was at Andrew's Mare car park, I am sure there must be a reason for the name but I couldn't find anything.

From the car park I set off on a track that ran parallel with the A31 and passed to large ponds, whether they were always like this or the recent unprecedented rain had filled them I don't know, but they looked impressive.


The reports suggested viewing from Lucas Castle, there was no building just a hill, and again I could find any reason as to why this was called Lucas Castle.  What I did find out was that the area is renowned for ancient oaks and there were quite few running alongside Highland Water that flowed in the valley on the west side of the castle.  Several Mistle Thrush could be heard singing in the area, here one distantly at the top of one of the oaks.


I searched the area for well over an hour without any sign of the shrike.  It wasn't possible to go up the hill on the west side because the Highland Water was so high and impossible to cross.  There were plenty of dead birches in the area for it to perch on, but nothing.  During the search I had a Redpoll fly over and a menacing Goshawk heading west.


It was clear that the Great Grey Shrike was not in the area, I have had plenty of experience chasing these elusive birds, after a couple of hours I decided it was time to try my luck elsewhere.  With plenty of birds singing and there being some sunshine about there might be a chance to find the Lesser Spotted Woodpecker.  So with this in mind I decided to take the short drive to Acres Down.

From the car park I headed down the track towards the "usual tree", above me Long-tailed Tits were in the branches.



At the"Usual Tree" there wasn't any sight or sound of the Lesser Spotted Woodpecker.  The dead branches at the top though were occupied by Stock Dove.



So I tried for another favourite, the Tawny Owl.  As I approached I could see it at the hole, but as I raised the camera it saw mee too and slowly suck down.  No tea for me in his treetop house!


I decided against walking on and turned back and headed for the heath and Acres Down.  Passing through the holly trees there was a singing Firecrest and in the trees around the car park several Song Thrushes in song.

I never tire of the view once you have made it up the hill from the car park.


Initially it was quiet as I approached the view point, but soon I heard the rich flutey notes of the Woodlark's song.  It was though difficult to find the birds, they do sing on the wing or at the top of bushes, but I was only managing glimpses as the birds flew over singing.  I estimated that there must be at least six birds singing in the area.

The Woodlark s restricted to the southern counties of England and although its name suggests a woodland dweller it prefers the more open habitats of the forest edges and clearings and the sparsely wooded heathland that you find here on Acres Down.

I walked to the view point to have my lunch and the Woodlarks continued to sing around me.  As I walked away I stopped immediately as there was one on the track in front of me.  It was running iin and out of the heather on either side of the path.



The Woodlark is a streaky brown bird, with a beige-white eye-stripe, which meets across the nape (the back) of its neck. It has a well-developed crest on its crown, which is not always obvious. In flight the unusually short tail and broad, rounded wings are noticeable and its bobbing flight with closed wing-glides is characteristic.


Rather than follow the Woodlark down the track I moved to the side and followed it as it walked along the track.


While most writers have been inspired by the Skylark, the lesser known song of the Woodlark was and still is admired.  It was observed that the voice of the Woodlark was "richer and its notes are more varied than the Skylark" back in the late 1800s and Gilbert White gave his own tribute in the Natural History of Selbourne when Woodlark were common in that area.

High in the air and poised upon its wings
Unseen, the soft enamour'd wood lark sings


The Woodlark seemed to be quite happy with me to walk along with it and I was also blessed with some sunshine.



Head coming up from below the heather.





It was really nice to get some different shots of this little bird, it may be classed as an "LBJ" but has a beauty of it's own.


Then it was gone, away pst me and out over the heath.


Woodlark was definitely one of my target birds as I walked up the hill so I was pleased to have had such a good encounter.  Time was moving on, but I wanted to try one more time for the Tawny Owl.  Unfortunately it wasn't showing in it's treetop house.

Walking back to the car a Dunnock sat in the sunshine amongst the golden bracken and I couldn't resist it despite it once again being one of those "LBJs"!


A little further along a Song Thrush was scouring the leaf litter and wet soil.  Once upon a time these were common garden birds.  As a boy I can remember finding the remains of snails shells on prominent rocks in the garden.  Today they are more likely to be found in woodland and parks than gardens.  


Throstle, Thrushel, Thurshfield and Mavis are just a few of the names the Song Thrush has been called over the ages, man being drawn to those birds with beautiful songs.  They tend to be harder to see than the Blackbird, preferring to stay more hidden as they feed amongst the bushes and leaf litter, getting one in the open is not common and they are easily spooked like most thrushes.


Knowing the song is one of the best ways to find them.  The Song Thrush uses many different notes to make up its melody.  They key is to listen for repetition, they tend to repeat nots and musical sequences, usually three times.  No Song Thrush song is the same, but there is a pattern that once learned is unmistakable.


Another piece of folklore around the Song Thrush is to do with their nests.  They make a beautiful mud-lined nest.  As a boy I can still remember coming across a nest with its sky blue speckled eggs.. There is an Irish belief that the fairies made sure a Song Thrush built its nest low down near the homes in the grass, so that the Fairies would be able to enjoy the bird's song.  If a Song Thrush built its nest high up in a thorn bush it was a sign that the Fairies were unhappy and that misfortune would come to the neighbourhood.

One final fact on the Song Thrush comes from one of it's alternative names.  West Bromwich Albion football club has the nickname "The Throstles"  This is due to the fact that in the clubs first 22 years they were based at five different grounds around West Bromwich area before finally settling at The Hawthorns, their current ground, in 1900. The new ground bought with it the team nickname The Throstles, the Black Country word for Thrush, commonly seen in the hawthorn bushes from which the area took its name.

Aside from all this folklore surrounding the bird, it is a lovely bird to see up close and another of those dismissed because of the dour plumage.


Missed out on the Great Grey Shrike, the Tawny Owl was being shy and there was no Lesser Spotted Woodpecker, but some great views of Woodlark and a chance to enjoy there song along with a nice Song Thrush encounter.  Another great day.