Wednesday, 28 November 2018

Nov 28th Strumpshaw Fen

A wet and windy day at Strumpshaw today
The sun did not rise as I made my way to Strumpshaw. It simply just went from darkness to gloomy grey, accompanied by a continuous curtain of water droplets that seemed to increase in volume and density by every passing minute. I was walking in the rain this morning. I was soaked! Making my way to Fen Hide, scaring eight pheasants along the way and making me jump in the process, the only thing that was on my mind was dry clothing. During my time inside the hide, the rain died down, but was then soon replaced by blustery winds that howled against the hide's wooden structure. I was feeling a little drier and I was kept busy watching two Chinese water deer, a family of mute swans, marsh harriers and several snipe braving the gusty conditions circling above me. They weren't the only ones as a female sparrowhawk and a large flock of fieldfare and redwings flew passed me as soon as I exited the hide.
Chinese Water Deer
Pheasant
Marsh Harrier
Mute Swan
Greylags
When I thought I was free of the rain, another shower appeared. In fact, it was like the rain and the wind formed a tag team and were taking it in turns all day. One minute, rain. Then it was wind. Rain. Wind. Rain. Wind... Sometimes it was both at the same time! It was proving to be another uneventful Wednesday at Strumpshaw ruined by the weather watching the ducks. Its days like this that I have to come up with interesting facts to make these birds more interesting than just seeing them do their usual thing. I know you, dear reader, are probably sick of me showing you the same old photos of them and what they were doing while I was watching them. So here's a few things a novice bird watcher might not know...

Coot
Teal
Teal are also known as cricket teal. This is because of the cricket-like chirped whistled calls that they make. They are also often known as spring teal, because of their ability to launch themselves out of the water straight upwards instead of doing a run up like other duck species.


Shovelers
Unlike other dabbling ducks that bob their heads under to grab something out of the water, shovelers feed in a very different way. They suck up the water and filter it through their uniquely shaped bill. Powered by the tongue, it pretty much acts like a pump that sucks the water in. The tongue can piston back and forth more than 10 times a second. Food particles get trapped in the bristles of the tongue and it gets carried to the back of the mouth to be swallowed. It is such an effective feeding method that it apparently is thought that a shoveler can suck up around 10 per cent of its body weight a day!
Gadwall
Gadwall are scarce breeders in the UK. It is thought that to boost their numbers, many of them were introduced into East Anglia. Though their numbers have increased in more recent years, they still aren't that productive in breeding and remain on the BTO's Amber list of British breeding birds.











Mallards


And finally, mallards are the most abundant duck species in the world. You can find them throughout the Northern Hemisphere from North America to Asia. In the wild, a mallard can live up to between 5-10 years, but the oldest known individual recorded was 27 years old!

Mallard hybrid

Wednesday, 21 November 2018

Nov 21st Strumpshaw Fen

Sunshine over the Pump House
It is starting to feel more like winter this week. It is much more chillier than it has been for much of November this year. Out on the reserve, there was a dead silence and there wasn't an awful lot to see from Fen Hide, except for a couple of Chinese water deer. Moving on to the river and the sense of emptiness continued, that is with the exception of one mute swan that swam up to the jetty I was standing on to meet me for a moment. Thankfully, the silence was broken on my way back through the woods. Birds seemed to surround me from every direction but were moving too fast for me to keep up with my cumbersome camera. There were wrens, robins, great, blue, coal, marsh and long-tailed tits, blackbirds, goldcrests and I noticed that the treecreepers were singing their trilling song for the first time since the spring.
Chinese Water Deer
Mute Swan





Bur-thistle
Robin
Marsh Tit
Marsh Harrier
Reception Hide was proving to be the best place to see wildlife on the reserve this morning. The broad was, as is normally the case at this time of the year, full of the usual cast of mallard, shoveler, gadwall, teal, coot and moorhen with the odd mute swan being chased by Cobber the black swan and a cormorant sitting on its favourite post to dry its wings. The marsh harriers are getting more frequent and were causing mayhem by testing the wildfowl's awareness of its presence by playfully chasing them around the broad. Two male and one female pheasant also paid a lengthy visit at the reed stubble in front of the hide.
Shoveler
Teal and Shoveler
Teal
Gadwall
Pheasant
Greylags
Buzzard

Otter
It was a very familiar scene to what I've been seeing week in week out. A broad full of ducks. However, if you learn to read the signs that they and the way the water ripples and moves, sometimes something better turns up. I was scanning the broad when I noticed the water at the far left channel was forming in an unnatural way. A wake, a trail of water was forming and it was leading right, along the far edge of the broad. It lead to an otter, which was continued to follow the reed bed and even hauled itself up onto the land momentarily before I eventually lost it behind the reedy islands. Several minutes later, thinking that it gave me the slip, the ducks close to the hide were suddenly on high alert. Then I noticed the otter's head popping out of the water behind the measuring post! It submerged before I could even take its photo and it was a further few minutes until I found it once more, this time swimming towards the far right channel where it was never seen again.