Some interesting reports of waders over the weekend at Titchfield so I decided to go back and see if they were still around. After checking in I walked around the sea wall. The tide was out and the rocks were showing and these created rock pools that the Common Terns were fishing in.
I went to the Meon Shore hide once more and in front of the hide on the small island the Common Tern was still on the nest as was a Black-headed Gull, but there was a very young Black-headed Gull chick that was out in the open and very much in danger of being picked off by a Lesser Black-backed Gull.
One of the Black-headed Gulls had taken one of the perches close by and was constantly calling.
Some more antics from the Common Terns, this time one flies in to the small island in front of the hide and immediately started calling.
I walked around to the Pumfrett Hide, but stopped at the new pond that is now visible after the clearance work last winter. There were Black-tailed Skimmers and in the reeds I found a Southern Hawker.
At Darter's Dip, the Small Red-eyed Damselfly was still present sitting once again on the pond weed.
From the hide you could just about see two Little Ringed Plover through the heat haze on the mud at the northern end of the scrape, there was a slo a Common Sandpiper catching flies on the edge of the water. On the posts on the south scrape a Sandwich Tern was amongst the Common Terns. Two House Martins were also collecting mud on the south scrape.
The heat haze was a big problem for photography so I went back to the pools to see if I could find the Norfolk Hawker, and it wasn't hard to find, and it soon settled on the reeds.
I walked back to the Meon Shore and it was now very hot. I stopped at the new pond and watched the Southern Hawker chasing the Black-tailed Skimmers. At one point the hawker pushed the skimmer into the water and seemed to be trying to push it under, but the skimmer got away.
Finally the Southern Hawker settled on one of the perches.



















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