Tuesday 2 April 2024

A Few Surprises

 Feb 5th Strumpshaw Fen

I was on the hunt for plants. My mission for the year is to find as many plants at Strumpshaw and draw them, while also plotting out where about they are and how abundant they are. My plant ID knowledge is still not very good, but I wanted to try anyway. Cherry plum blossom and hazel catkins were out, giving us a hint that spring was around the corner. Snowdrops were now covering the woods as well as clumps of soft rush and I discovered probable male ferns. Walking along the river, I failed to see the barn owl in its box this week and the red-throated diver that had been spotted on the river in recent weeks. I did however, see buzzards, marsh harriers, a heron and 2 Chinese water deer.

At Reception Hide, a snipe was the real highlight of the day as I had to constantly find it for visitors as it moved about amongst the open area of cut reed stubble to the right of the hide. It was sometimes easier to spot when it was bobbing, but other times it made itself difficult to spot while it was sleeping. Other than the snipe, there were greylags, mute swans, a coot and marsh harriers.

Snipe (Feb 5th), Red-breasted Goose (Feb 10th),
Weasel (Feb 12th), Cranes,
Otter prints & Witch's Butter 

Feb 10th Cley

It was feeling warm at the coast today. I felt kind of overdressed in my coat as Mum and I visited Cley.

We started our visit at the hides where hundreds of unsettled lapwings took to the air, swirling around like a shaken snow globe accompanied by an almost deafening chorus of "pee-wit". There were also smaller numbers of avocets, godwits, ruff, redshank, teal, shoveler and shelducks.

After spending some time in the hides, I then split up with Mum and made my way to West Bank to look for some twite and a red-breasted goose. When I got there, the twite had gone and the goose had moved to North Scrape. So, I had to make my way there across the beach and to the blind that's overlooking the scrape in question. Before I got there, a kind man gave me an early peek at the goose through his scope from the beach. It stood out amongst the large gathering of brent geese on the scrape. I managed to get a few photos from the blind before it took off with the brent. I was so lucky! Also seen were several pintails, the odd curlew and a little egret.

Feb 12th Strumpshaw Fen

A chilly start, but warmed up to be a nice sunny, spring like day. I arrived around 7:45am and was greeted by the sight of an otter out the front of Reception Hide swimming away from me. I had to get round a flooded section of road to get to Strumpshaw this morning. So I was really worried that the reserve was also flooded. Though Fen Trail to Tower Hide was closed, the Fen Hide wasn't. The only flood issue here were a few puddles leading to the hide.

My morning pre-shift walk wasn't that interesting. Not even any new plants to draw. However, when I got back to Reception, I noticed a couple of men looking at something by the pond behind the feeder area. It turned out to be a weasel!! It poked its head out of a hole a few times before making a dash to a log pile nearby. In 2016, I tried to get a photo as part of a Strumpshaw challenge but failed. It wasn't until a year later when I managed to get a slightly blurry photograph of one. This time, I was much happier with the results. Weasels are tricky animals to get a photo of.

Also today was a snipe, 8 coot, 28 greylags, a Canada goose, 4 mute swans, a few marsh harriers and buzzards at Reception, a heron at Fen Hide and a great white egret on the way to the reserve.

Feb 19th Strumpshaw Fen

I managed to get a lift in to Strumpshaw this morning and once I got out of the car around 7:30am, I was greeted with the sound of bugling cranes! I could hear them as I went for a walk in the woods. I also found one clump of primroses in flower for me to draw up later. As I made my way to the pumphouse, I was able to see a barn owl in its box. When I reached the pumphouse itself, I noticed two large birds flying over the river heading towards Buckenham. Cranes!!! I wonder if they will nest at Strumpshaw again?

At Reception Hide, I got back after a sudden rain shower and didn't see much out of the ordinary other than swans, greylags, a pair of Canada geese, some coots, mallards, marsh harriers and buzzards. I went back into the woods to show two visitors the witch's butter and scarlet elfcap fungi and heard treecreepers, siskins and song thrushes. I also saw a great spotted woodpecker and reed buntings.

Feb 26th Strumpshaw Fen

Floods were on the road for a 3rd week in a row and two of the three hides were closed off due to the paths being underwater. After getting another lift in, there weren't many places to walk around this morning. All I could do was walk down Sandy Wall, along the river to pumphouse and into the woods.

I started my way down the Sandy Wall when a woman showed up behind me from nowhere, pointed out a barn owl flying over the meadow and then she left the same way she came from. So random. The owl, though, hung around a lot longer. It even perched on a post very close by to me beside the path. The bushes were obscuring my camera's view for a perfect shot and it seemed to be obscuring the owl's view of me also  as I managed to creep to within a few metres from it! I still failed to get a photo by the time it saw me and took off, sadly.

Heading up to the pumphouse, I couldn't believe my luck again as I saw two large birds flying over the woods. Cranes! Again! They were more distant this time, but were heading towards Buckenham just like the week before.

The rest of the morning wasn't quite as interesting. Staff were working outside the Reception Hide in the reedbeds and in the far channels at the other end of the broad was a strange machine that's like a floating digger, called a Truxor, which was digging up the reed edges. So it was rather empty on the broad besides a few coots and marsh harriers. I went to look for plants, but couldn't really find much.

March 4th Strumpshaw Fen

Misty start, but at least everything is back open again, so I decided to go to Tower Hide while the mud was still hardened up by the cold. It was still bad and it really wasn't worth it. However, I did get to hear two bitterns booming (well, one booming, the other grunting). This was possibly the earliest I've heard them do so in all the years I've volunteered here. I also heard the drumming of woodpeckers and saw great crested grebes on the river and one at Reception Hide.

There was more work going on outside reception as the Broads Authority were using the Truxor to dredge out the edges of reedbeds much closer to the hide. The broad was almost quiet of birds due to it. However, above them, the sky was full of birds of prey (about 20+ of them) including 2 red kites and many marsh harriers and buzzards. It was quite a spectacle.

As I wanted to check on a few things, I went for a short walk along Sandy Wall. First, I found one Clark's mining bee by the start of the path. Then I noticed a kestrel hovering above the path and dived down and perched on the path's wooden border, clearly catching something. And then I found what I wanted to find, coltsfoot in flower. They were in bud earlier due to the mist and as they react to the sun and that it was now sunny, a few of them had opened their yellow flowers in response.

Returning from my walk, I went to check on the content of the trays of what a school group had caught during their pond dipping session. The children were very excited when I picked up a newt from a tray and held it in my hand. They wanted to hold it too. I obliged and they were more than happy.

Truxor (March 4th), Waxwing,
Sanderlings, Bar-tailed Godwit
& Brambling (March 13th) & Great Crested Grebes (March 18th)

March 6th - 7th

I was preparing for work when a sudden pain emerged in the left side of my abdomen. It was a kidney stone! My second ever and my first in 6 years. It wasn't quite as bad as my first one, but still painful as hell. I managed to keep myself fully medicated with pain killers that I was able to keep myself away from the hospital until the next morning. After nine hours in hospital, waiting around for a scan and taking my first ever suppository to numb the pain (a weird experience, that), the small stone came out naturally on its own I was able to go to work on the 8th, though feeling rather bruised and in pain down there afterwards. 

March 11th Strumpshaw Fen

It was my 38th birthday and it was a dull, gloomy day for it. The best thing I could muster as a birthday highlight was hearing the boom of a bittern near Fen Hide and woodpeckers drumming in the woods. There was a large flock of siskins feeding on the cones of alder trees and daffodils were in flower. From Reception Hide, it was rather quiet, though I did see a great crested grebe, coots making nests, a sparrowhawk, marsh harriers, greylags, Canada geese, a shelduck, 2 gadwall, a few mute swans and mallards.

March 13th Titchwell

I had a week off from work to celebrate my birthday and as both my parents were both off on this particular Wednesday, we decided to visit Titchwell. When we got to the entrance, we discovered that there was a crowd along the drive into the reserve. We had to dodge the photographers to get in. But what were they snapping photos of? WAXWINGS!!

We parked the car and walked back to join them for a better look. There were 6 of them and sat in the trees right above our heads! They were beautiful and didn't seem that bothered by us, despite what an RSPB volunteer says as we got told to stand back from them, even though it was these birds that decided to perch above us. So, whatever. I got my photos and left.

Leaving the waxwings, the rest of the reserve had nothing else that could really top them. There were plenty of black-headed gulls, a few Mediterranean gulls, avocets, black-tailed godwits, redshanks, dunlin, brent geese (a large gaggle of them), teal, curlew, grey plovers, 3 pintails (2 males, one female), oystercatchers and pied wagtails on the pools and saltmarshes. Marsh harriers and a red kite in the air. And on the beach, the tide was really far out and Dad and I walked on this old peat bed full of un-rotted bits of trees covered in mussels. By the shore, bar-tailed godwits, sanderlings and turnstones.

We had a late picnic by the feeders when we got back, where a brambling showed up. Then I ended the visit by checking on the tawny owl that was still asleep beneath the same ivy covered tree as last time I visited in January.

March 18th Strumpshaw Fen

The bitterns were booming, the woodpeckers were drumming and the birds were singing. That included chiffchaffs and blackcaps, which I heard for the first time this year. It was a nice day and it felt like spring was here to stay. A lizard was sunning itself along Sandy Wall to prove how nice it was.

During my walk, there was a lot of bird and insect activity. Bearded tits were pinging, a green woodpecker perched on a tree in front of me along Sandy Wall, around 40+ fieldfares flew over my head and then over the river and meadow pipits were doing their parachute song flight displays in the meadows. There were many marsh harriers sky dancing also and nomad bees were investigating mining bee nest holes to lay their own eggs inside. Lesser celandines were in bloom in surprising numbers across the reserve (I thought they were buttercups) and I found a few sedges with tufts poking out.

At Reception, a pair of great crested grebes were displaying to each other. They'd face each other and mimic one another's movements from head flicks to back preening and eventually, they would press up breast to breast, standing upright on the water to give me a real show. Sometimes bits of weed was used. Coots were also building their nests and I saw brimstone butterflies flying around. 

It was a good day until I left for home when a pain in my left kidney started hurting. Another stone! This time, it was much smaller and not quite as painful as the one a couple of weeks earlier and I still went to work the next day. Thankfully, I still had plenty of meds from last time to help numb the pain and the stone disappeared by the end of my shift at work.

Chinese Water Deer, Muntjac,
Barn Owl, Tufted Sedge,
Snipe & Great Crested Grebes (March 25th)

 March 25th Strumpshaw Fen

Another good day. Bitterns were still booming, a barn owl was hunting by its nest box near the pumphouse, a red kite flew over my head, bearded tits were peeking out of the reeds at Fen Hide and I had two very close encounters with deer, one a muntjac and the other a Chinese water deer. These deer didn't seem to know I was there and came near me to within a few metres until they eventually saw me and ran. I also noticed that there were lesser pond sedges (at least I think they are) everywhere and I found some very pretty tufted sedge beside the toe dipping platform.

The grebes were displaying outside Reception Hide again as were marsh harriers and buzzards. There was also a little grebe, a snipe, 4 gadwall and I found my first forget-me-not of the year.


Sunday 4 February 2024

Ice & Storms

 Jan 8th Strumpshaw Fen

It has been three weeks since my last shift at Strumpshaw due to floods, Christmas and football. So I was glad to be back. However, it was a freezing cold return complete with sleet and hail. There wasn't too much around either to get excited about during my early morning walk.

The weather did not improve as the morning went on. At least it was a little warmer under the heaters inside Reception Hide. The highlights of the day were mostly outside the hide's door and by the feeders (which I filled up only to discover that they were half empty by the end of my shift, which suggest the birds were really hungry). This include a mixed flock of siskins and goldfinches with the odd redpoll amongst them. Also seen were pink-footed geese, marsh harriers and mute swans.

Redpoll (Jan 8th), Brent Goose,
Spotted Redshank, Brambling,
Sun Reflection On Beach & Snipe (Jan 14th)

Jan 14th Titchwell

The first big outing of 2024. My parents and I went to Titchwell and discovered and we discovered their 50th anniversary. I thought it would be fun idea to find 50 birds to celebrate. Amazingly, I managed to do so.

The highlights included a velvet scoter amongst a floating group of common scoter on the sea, bramblings on the feeders and a tawny owl hiding in a tree covered in ivy fast asleep. The other 46 were; brent, greylag and pink-footed geese, pintails, wigeon, a female goldeneye, tufted ducks, teal, mallards, coot, shovelers, gadwall, shelducks, a water pipit, bar-tailed godwits, dunlin, turnstones, common redshanks, a spotted redshank, curlews, linnets, herring, black-headed and great black-backed gulls, goldfinches, a snipe, reed buntings, red kite, marsh harrier, robins, dunnocks, blue, great and long-tailed tits, oystercatchers, grey plovers, little grebe, water rail, sanderlings, cormorant, moorhen, blackbird, magpie and carrion crow. A great day, though a very cold one!

Jan 15th Strumpshaw Fen

Another freezing cold day with ice and frost covering some parts of the reserve first thing. There must have been a high tide recently as the Fen and Tower hides were closed off due to flooding. My morning walk was reduced to just the woodland trail (which had many trees blown over due to Storm Henk) where I saw a treecreeper, found the first few snowdrops and spooked a large flock of bramblings, redwings, fieldfares and blackbirds. The rest of the morning was uninteresting except for a bittern making two appearances.

Jan 17th Cley

Yet another chilly day and as I had a week off from work, my parents (Dad also had a week off, while Mum had the day off) decided to go out in it to Cley. When we got there, Mum and I went to the three main hides and there were many birds out on Pat's Pool, including many wigeon, shovelers, teal, a pair of pintails, avocets, black-headed gulls, the odd shelduck and a couple of dunlin. The pool itself was a bit icy. From another hide, we managed to spot a couple of snipe hidden in the grass.

While at lunch at the visitor centre, a red kite and a buzzard flew by the windows. After lunch, Dad and I made our way to the sea via East Bank, seeing a kingfisher fly past me along the way. The highlight though was finding a grey seal on Arnold's Marsh. Never seen one there before. It seemed happy enough hunting for fish in the shallow water. Also seen were stonechats, a heron, a little egret, lapwings, wigeon and two buzzards.

Jan 18th Buckenham Marshes

I went to Buckenham with Dad and as we were travelling up to the reserve, it began to snow! A light dusting of it covered the already frozen reserve. It made birds like snipe stand out like a sore thumb, and there were a lot of them. Also in the snow were a few thousand wigeon, a few lapwings, some teal, a marsh harrier, the odd swan and quite a few Chinese water deer. We also saw a hare on the drive over. The snow then started to disappear by the time we returned to the car.

Snowdrops (Jan 15th), Dunlin &
Grey Seal (Jan 17th) Snow At Buckenham,
Wigeon & Their Footprints In The Snow

Jan 27th Norwich

Due to a very strong storm, I was advised to stay away from Strumpshaw on the 22nd. That meant I had no opportunity to go out to do much other than work. Thankfully, this weekend was the RSPB's Big Garden Birdwatch, an annual national census on the UK's garden birds. As I don't have a garden of my own, I went to my parent's house to do the hour long survey. My parents were out visiting one of my brothers, so I had the place to myself. I started the survey just after 9am and I counted 3 blackbirds, a robin, a dunnock, 2 blue tits, a great tit, 2 long-tailed tits and, a big surprise, a male blackcap, which visited twice!

Jan 29th Strumpshaw Fen

It was still dark on my arrival to Strumpshaw, but it was to be a spring-like day. A barn owl was flying over the reedbeds and the river. After an almost pointless and very muddy walk to Tower Hide (though I did see shelducks, marsh harriers, Canada geese, mallards, swans and a heron), I made my way to the pumphouse and found the owl again peek out of an owl box fast asleep. I also spooked up a few snipe and saw a couple of Chinese water deer in the meadows as I was walking along the river.

During my shift, there wasn't too much about other than a coot (which I haven't seen on this broad for quite some time), marsh harriers, more swans, a heron, a water rail, a female reed bunting, a few gadwall and some mallards and not too much else. As it was the last day of the Big Garden Birdwatch and no one has done an hour here yet, I decided to do the survey of the birds visiting the feeder area. During the hour, I recorded roughly 5 great tits, 8 blue tits, 3 marsh tits, a coal tits, 4 chaffinches, 3 dunnocks, 2 robins, a blackbird, a woodpigeon, a pheasant, a jay and a grey squirrel.

Thursday 4 January 2024

Goodbye 2023

 Dec 4th Strumpshaw Fen

After a week away from Strumpshaw due to heavy rain and flooding, I returned and the weather was still lousy, but at least it stopped raining by mid-morning. It was a dull, grey day, but at least the floods resided.

I was given a lift to the reserve and the rain was at its most persistent, so I spent a good hour at Fen Hide. The marsh harriers were emerging from their roost with one looking rather soaked perched on a bush. I also saw a great white egret and a few pink-footed geese flying over and heard bearded tits.

Otter & Heron Eating Eels (Dec 4th)
Grey Seals & Pup (Dec 10th)
Dawn Rainbow & Sunrise (Dec 18th)

The weather improved but was still gloomy by the time I started my shift. It was the wildlife that provided the light in this dull scene in the form of a heron and an otter. The heron had managed to catch an eel in an open area of cut reed to the right of the hide. It then dropped and lost it after a few attempts in swallowing it down. Some time later, an otter appeared on the scene and found the eel a short distance behind the heron and took it away to eat a little further near the far side of the same area.

The otter took quite some time munching on it before swimming off again. However, it didn't end there. Near the end of my shift, the heron caught another eel. A real monster of one, far bigger than the one eaten by the otter. It became an epic battle of life and death between predator and prey. The heron kept stabbing at it until it managed to get its bill stuck within the eel's body. Eventually, it freed itself and attempted to swallow it whole. But even then, it struggled to swallow due to the eel still putting up a fight and wrapping its tail around the bird's head and bill. It took about 4-5 attempts to finally get the eel down its gullet.

The broad's edges were fringed with sheets of ice where many ducks took shelter when the otter was around.. This included a pair of gadwall, a shoveler, a teal and seven swans. I also saw a great spotted woodpecker on the feeders.

Dec 10th Horsey Gap

This morning, Dad took me out to see the seals at Horsey. The most recent count in pup births here (from Dec 7th) this year so far was 3224 and 3608 adults on the beach. Not as many as there were at Blakeney Point, but at least I'm guaranteed in ticking another spectacle off my list. It is also a lot easier to get to than at Blakeney, so at least I didn't have to walk that far.

Every winter, thousands of grey seals arrive to this beach to give birth and to mate. The beach didn't seem that packed from the viewing area, but all I saw was just one small section. Along the coastline from Horsey to Winterton, these seals were practically everywhere. Amongst them were their pups of various ages (most still in their white coats) guarded by their mothers. 


Big bull seals were also on the beach and I witnessed a few matings, which seemed rather forceful with a lot of biting involved. Up on the dunes, a few females had given birth and raised their pups where the public were, away from the other seals. One mother and pup had forced the path beyond closed off completely, preventing us to go any further. It ended up being a shorter visit, but still a good one all the same.

Dec 11th Strumpshaw Fen

A much nicer day than last Monday, though Tower Hide was closed off due to flooding. So I went to Fen Hide and had an otter swim around in front of it for a short while and saw marsh harriers, a great white egret and heard bearded tits. At Reception Hide, I spotted a water rail, another great white egret, swans, a few mallards and marsh harriers and a great spotted woodpecker on the feeders.

Dec 18th Strumpshaw Fen

A fantastic dawn sky welcomed to Strumpshaw. Walking to the reserve, it was still dark but pink-footed geese and rooks and jackdaws were leaving their roosting sites by their thousands. By the time I got to the Sandy Wall, there was a little bit of a drizzle in the air, but that wasn't enough to dull the bright and colourful sunrise over the meadow trail. Behind me though, on the opposite side of the reserve, an enormous rainbow sitting atop of some glowing clouds stretched across the orange-pink sky. Colours were bleeding into one another. It was like looking into heaven. It was absolutely breathtaking!

Inside Fen Hide, I watched the rainbow fade away. The scene outside was rather empty without it. There was one surprise in the form of a green sandpiper which flew right in front of the hide, calling away with its loud piping voice. This bird should be in Africa by now, but as winter has been on the mild side, which could be why it hasn't really migrated south yet. Also seen today were pink-footed geese, marsh harriers, siskins, possible redpolls, a great white egret (flying briefly), a treecreeper, a great spotted woodpecker on the feeders, greylags, mute swans and heard bearded tits.

Dec 23rd Cley

My last visit to Cley of the year and the last outing before Christmas. It completes a whole year of monthly visits to the reserve. It was a short visit though as I had to get to Carrow Road in the afternoon.

Mum and I made our way to the central hides. We were a bit cautious as an enormous high tide had already made Strumpshaw almost completely underwater the day before and we wondered if the paths at Cley were the same. Thankfully it wasn't. However, though Pat's Pool was full of birds, it wasn't to be that memorable of a morning. A mass of gulls, godwits, lapwings, teal, shovelers, wigeon and a few shelducks, avocets and a turnstone were constantly spooked up into the air by a couple of marsh harriers, erupting like a snow globe. A large flyover of hundreds of pink-footed geese, an arrival of a smaller number of brent geese on the pool and a kingfisher were the other highlights of the morning before heading back to watch Norwich beat Huddersfield 2-0 beneath a bright red-orange sunset.

Dec 30th Welney

After spending Christmas at Hadleigh round my brother's place and seeing red kites fly over my head while escaping the tantrums between my nieces over toys for a few minutes and the remainder of the week going to work, it was time for one last outing for 2023. I met up with former Reception Hide partner, Tricia and we made our way to Welney in the hope of seeing the whooper swan roost, which is my final spectacle to tick off remaining.

Welney Swan Feed, Whooper Swan,
Cattle Egret, Pochard
& Scaup With Tufted Duck (Dec 30th)

We arrived around midday, so plenty of time to kill. Tree sparrows were our first target of the day. I managed to spot one amongst a flock of house sparrow visiting the feeders at the visitor centre, though it took some time later for Tricia to see one herself. In the area behind the feeders, a flooded pool had our first whooper swans of the day. Behind them, fields with sheep and around 12-14 cattle egrets following them.

Crossing the bridge over the road to the main hide, we discovered a talk was going on with a warden out in the water with a wheelbarrow of seed feeding the many pochards, mallards and the odd mute swan. Only a few whoopers though. Amongst the ducks, however, we did manage to spot a male scaup between dives and, away from the feeding frenzy, goldeneyes, wigeon, teal, a pintail, a spit of land full of lapwings, black-tailed godwits, a few dunlin and curlew and a spotted redshank.

We waited after dark for the whoopers to arrive in what I hoped in large numbers. Sadly, it was just a smaller number than expected (about under 100 or so) that came in to roost. Not the mass gathering I was hoping to see. It appears that the water was too deep for them this year, meaning they could not feed . Apparently they've been roosting elsewhere this winter. It left us feeling a little disappointed, but it was a good day nonetheless. Goodbye, 2023.