Walthamstow Birding
All the news from Walthamstow Reservoirs and Marshes.
31 December 2011
28 December 2011
If You Have Been....
....Thanks for Reading.
Especial thanks to Mark Pearson who set the blog up and
encouraged us/me to run it. Thanks to the other (somewhat occasional, it must
be said, but nevertheless much appreciated) contributors and photographers, who made this a more
rounded out experience. Thanks to the Followers and those who have posted links
elsewhere and to the celebrity endorsers (thanks for sharing your feelings too)
A special mention too for the hardworking patchers who have
found and shared their Birds. Last, but by no means least, thanks to the
readers, many of whom have offered help and encouragement over the months.
I have no doubt that the blog will one day rise again, I
will do my best to get it adopted by the Country Park people when they move in,
unless of course they have their own, or perhaps a new generation of Birders
will take it on when the place is gentrified.
Finally a message to our sponsors, where were you?
PW
27 December 2011
Listing to One Side
Followers of the blog will have
noticed the cumulative patch year list which previously adorned the Right hand
side of the page; it grew steadily, if erratically through the year. The grand
sum of 90 was reached before the Winter was out and a single Summer migrant was
recorded. We got to 100 before the end of March but, once the passage migrants
were all in it took the last six months of the year to add just 16 species to bring
the total to 148.
Last year with slightly less eyes on
the patch and a good deal less hours spent we reached 149, it was a good year.
So 150 will probably be reached one year but it will be down to someone else to
keep count.
Personally I managed 128, slightly
short of my best effort, 130 in 2010, despite a great deal more effort being
expended. My game plan will be vastly different next year and I expect my
yearlist will be somewhat smaller, hopefully though, if anyone should be kind enough
to let me know about them, I will add a couple more patch ticks. This year
Marsh Harrier and White-fronted Goose were added, Kittiwake or Ring-necked Duck
would be nice for 2012 though in truth I will be pretty happy with whatever
comes my way.
So that is it, time to set the year
list to one side (I’ll stick it at the end of the blog entry for posterity; for
comparison with last year see 31st December 2010 page) if anything
does get added before the weekend I will update but I suspect, like me, most
locals have run out of enthusiasm for this year and might well not visit the
old place before January 1st.
It is funny what’s in a date, today
no one would glance twice at a Cormorant (though I have noticed that many have
been in breeding plumage for a couple of weeks now) but come January 1st
they will be eagerly ticked off. It always used to be House Sparrows that were
used as the exemplar of this phenomenon but of course they are so rare now that
they always get a second look.
A quiet day in for me today, the only
sightings worthy of note was a prolonged Dog-fight between a Crow and a
Sparrowhawk variously taking turns in being the aggressor and defender (still
not a shadow of the scrap I watched yesterday between a Peregrine with prey and
a Rough-legged Buzzard, I suspect the latter had been robbed by the former and
was not in a mood to surrender its lunch without a fight, needless to say this
was not at Walthamstow but only an hours’ drive away and I did see a few Hen
Harriers, a Marsh Harrier, a couple of Common Buzzards and even found a second
Rough-legged Buzzard not to mention all the other stuff....Twitching, you’ve got to love it!) and a Ring-necked Parakeet
perched in a Willow outside my back window; it thereby gets itself off the house
‘flyover’ list and onto the ‘seen on the deck’ list, to think up till a couple
of weeks ago it was merely on the ‘heard only’ list...Listing, you’ve got to
love it!
I also spotted this book at home
today but found it strangely disappointing, if not downright misleading!
148.Black-necked Grebe, 147.Brambling,
146.Merlin, 145.Golden Plover, 144.Knot, 143.Little Gull, 142.Snow Bunting, 141.Lapland
Bunting, 140.White-fronted Goose, 139.Water Pipit, 138.Black Redstart, 137.Great
Northern Diver, 136.Crossbill, 135.Sandwich Tern, 134.Spotted Flycatcher, 133.Redstart,
132.Turtle Dove, 131.Red-crested Pochard, 130.Gannet, 129.Cuckoo, 128.Oystercatcher,
127.Ringed Plover, 126.Black Tern, 125.House Martin, 124a.White Wagtail, 124.Whinchat,
123.Turnstone, 122.Arctic Tern, 121.Hobby, 120.Whimbrel, 119.Grasshopper
Warbler, 118.Swift, 117.Garden Warbler, 116.Greenshank, 115.Goshawk, 114.Mandarin
, 113.Red-legged Partridge, 112.Reed Warbler, 111.Yellow Wagtail, 110.Lesser
Whitethroat, 109.Whitethroat, 108.Little Ringed Plover, 107.Common Tern, 106.Marsh
Harrier, 105.Short-eared Owl, 104.Osprey, 103.Sedge Warbler, 102.Willow
Warbler, 101.Swallow, 100.Red Kite, 99.Stonechat, 98.Bar-tailed Godwit, 97.Rock
Pipit (Scandinavian), 96.Buzzard, 95.Common Scoter, 94.Lesser Redpoll, 93.Sand
Martin, 92.Blackcap, 91.Wheatear, 90.Cetti's Warbler, 89.Waxwing, 88.Mediterranean
Gull, 87.Dunlin, 86.Snipe, 85.Little Owl, 84.Woodcock, 83.Eider, 82.Yellow-legged
Gull, 81.Barnacle Goose, 80.Red-breasted Merganser, 79.Scaup, 78.Peregrine, 77.Black-tailed
Godwit, 76.Lapwing, 75.Sparrowhawk, 74.Ring-necked Parakeet, 73.Siskin, 72.Curlew,
71.Redshank, 70.Skylark, 69.Reed Bunting, 68.Bullfinch, 67.Linnet, 66.Goldfinch,
65.Greenfinch, 64.Chaffinch, 63.Meadow Pipit, 62.Pied Wagtail, 61.Grey Wagtail,
60.House Sparrow, 59.Dunnock, 58.Robin, 57.Mistle Thrush, 56.Redwing, 55.Song
Thrush, 54.Fieldfare, 53.Blackbird, 52.Starling, 51.Wren, 50.Chiffchaff, 49.Long-tailed
Tit, 48.Great Tit, 47.Blue Tit, 46.Goldcrest, 45.Carrion Crow, 44.Jackdaw, 43.Jay,
42.Magpie, 41.Great Spotted Woodpecker, 40.Green Woodpecker, 39.Kingfisher, 38.Collared
Dove, 37.Woodpigeon, 36.Stock Dove, 35.Rock Dove, 34.Herring Gull, 33.Lesser
Black-backed Gull, 32.Common Gull, 31.Black-headed Gull, 30.Green Sandpiper, 29.Common
Sandpiper, 28.Coot, 27.Moorhen, 26.Water Rail, 25.Kestrel, 24.Great Crested
Grebe, 23.Little Grebe, 22.Grey Heron, 21.Little Egret, 20.Cormorant, 19.Pheasant,
18.Ruddy Duck, 17.Goosander, 16.Smew, 15.Goldeneye, 14.Tufted Duck, 13.Pochard,
12.Shoveler, 11.Pintail, 10.Mallard, 9.Teal, 8.Gadwall, 7.Wigeon, 6.Shelduck, 5.Egyptian
Goose, 4.Canada Goose, 3.Greylag Goose, 2.Great Black-backed Gull, 1.Mute Swan.
21 December 2011
Sanity Clause
I have just finished reading this month’s Birdwatch magazine,
soon to fall victim to budget cuts I fear, mine that is not theirs; which had
an interesting, and balanced, article by Andy Stoddart, extolling the virtue of
doing a local patch. He mentions that there are many ways to enjoy Birding,
something the mono-focussed twitcher bashing brigade on Bird Forum would do
well to recognize. I really don’t understand why they feel the need to post on
the Rare Bird thread; do they join Philately Forums and run down Stamp
Collectors?
Any hoo, I appreciated only too well what Andy said about
most patches producing little in the way of glamorous rarities and how this can
be remedied with a quick fix of twitching. After this year’s abysmal personal year
list, (only one year in the last 30 was lower) I will definitely be indulging
in some therapeutic twitching in 2012 Birds notwithstanding. The perfect balance of
character building, grounded patch work combined with the occasional twitch
should keep (make?) me sane.
This afternoon I had to have a camera shoved up my nose (don’t bother
googling You Tube it’s not on there) which meant I had a bit of time to do the
Southern end of the patch. The footpath to nowhere is taking shape in the
South-east corner of Marsh Lane fields, there were quite a lot of Birds along
the previously hard to access Dagenham Brook but I suspect they will be soon driven
away if the footpath gets much traffic.
I was concentrating on the scrubby edges of the patch today
with Bullfinch and Redpolls in mind; naturally that’s where they stayed, in
mind. As I approached the top field I heard the yapping of a yappy Dog, it and its
owner and child had walked along the whole length of scrubby bushes, I didn’t
bother! I headed round the field and decided to look at the roosting Gulls on
the Football pitches, the Dog family changed course and headed for me, I
doubled back and outflanked them at which point they outsmarted me and headed
straight for the Gulls....D’oh. I thought I could beat them to it but they cleverly
sent the Dog on ahead and he flushed the lot, just to make sure they stayed
away they all walked over to where they had settled....
Time to give up and check the Lea by the Golf Course. There
were quite a few Duck loafing including 20+ Teal and a few Gadwall. One of the
Teal had neither a vertical nor horizontal White flank bar; I was just thinking
what it should be called....No-winged Teal? When it flew off...perhaps just Winged
Teal. I don’t know what made me check the Owl Tree, habit? You’ll never guess
what I saw...told you you’d never guess, the Little Owl was in there, well a
bit of its wing was. Given how it filled the hole the other day and how much
room there clearly is in there, such that it can get really tucked away, I’m
thinking there must have been two of them in there before. Still pretty hard to
see though. Follow directions as before but see photo for actual hole.
A Kingfisher called from the Lea but must have flown in the
opposite direction. Near to the Red Bridge 2-3 Goldcrests were loosely associating
with some Long-tailed Tits but unusually no Chiffchaffs in what is normally a
good spot for them.
On the Waterworks a showy Water Rail in bed 17 toyed with me,
giving me enough time to get glasses, bins and cameraphone lined up before disappearing
and then doing the same all over again a couple of minutes later.
A few months ago I promised a picture of the finished
sculpture in the Olympic Park which is prominently visible from much of the patch,
conveniently they seem to have finished it just before the blogs demise, I say ‘seem’
as it’s hard to tell really, at least we won’t have to put up with it for too
long, it must be a honeypot for metal thieves. Not the best photo but I could have given you nostrils.
Nothing much else in the Waterworks, no Snipe or Green
Sandpipers though both have been seen recently and no Bullfinches or Redpolls,
again both have been seen nearby in the last couple of weeks. Winter officially
starts tomorrow but somehow I don’t think we are going to notice, we have
virtually no Winter specialities around. Looks like the blog is not the only
thing going out with a fizzle.
On this date: 21
12 1989 At Walthamstow the
Red-necked Grebe was on No.4 reservoir and a Common Sandpiper was on the
Lockwood. On the Marsh a Long-tailed Tit and a Stonechat, possibly a Chiffchaff
heard in the distance.
17 December 2011
BLOGOFF (nearly)
An (the) adult Mediterranean Gull
was seen again this morning flying South-east over my house, which means it has
been seen more often here than anywhere else on the patch, unless of course we
have more than one Bird locally. I still think it is probably the Wanstead Bird
but what do I know.
The nights are drawing in; thank
goodness it’s only 4 days till the shortest day. But that also means it’s only
14 days till the end of the blog, (unless someone else wants to carry it on?
And if they do I would like to know where they were for the last two years?) or
at least my blogging. It is nearly three years since Mark Pearson set the thing
up, though it never got used until March 2010. It has been an interesting
experiment in compiling it and I hope it proves to be useful to new local
Birders. The site guide is complete from top to bottom, well actually from
bottom to top, and should give first time visitors an idea of what to expect
and what the layout of the site looks like.
The weekly (or often more
frequent) journal entries should give an idea of the ebb and flow of Birds on
the patch, at least for the last 22 months. The highs and, mostly, lows of
patch work are recorded for posterity. The year lists are remarkably similar
for the last two years, I guess it’s not too surprising how predictable most of
the species are, though it also gives one a rough idea of some of the more
exciting visitors to occur and, of course, just how rare rarities are.
I will leave all the blog entries
and year lists intact for future generations of Walthamstow Birders, you never
know, once the place is turned into a Country Park, the habitat is vastly improved;
it starts to attract scores of regular Birders, loads of rarities start getting
found and Petrol hits £2/litre someone may want to resurrect the thing.
Meanwhile, in case you get withdrawal
symptoms; a handy cut out and keep guide to blogging Walthamstow Birding style:
1) A
play on words with the title never goes amiss.
2) A
bit of dithering as to whether to bother visiting the patch.
3) A
bit more dithering as to which bit of the patch to check, the North reservoirs,
South reservoirs or marsh.
4) A
moan about picking the wrong one in retrospect.
5) Some
speculation/wishful thinking as to what might be found (this can be made to
look more scientific by checking other local sites and websites for current occurrences
on the migration front.)
6) At
this point inject a bit of nostalgia of how it used to be in the good old days.
7) Probably
best to insert some blurry photo about now to break up the dry text.
8) Probably
best to insert an apology about now for the blurry photo.
9) Now
a description of the visit itself, this can be long and rambling or more
concise according to taste, yours of course, not the poor readers.
10)
Some sort of conclusion, possibly tying all the
disparate elements of the blog entry
together, is usually best left to the end.
11) Another dose of nostalgia, if available,
preferably gripping readers off with
something really good that was seen aeons ago.
And there you
have it. Simples.
Maybe a couple of blog entries left till the end of the
year, I might even follow the template.
On this date: 17
12 1996 The Dartford Warbler
soon seen on Walthamstow Marsh in loose association with 3 Stonechats, also 2
Chiffchaffs nearby.
PW
16 December 2011
Something is rotten in the state of Denmark
And we are still suffering the fallout....
Apparently in 894, a force of Danes sailed up the River Lea to Hertford, and the following year they built a fortified camp in the higher reaches of the Lea, about 32 km north of London.
(Dirty) Old Man River
For the second time this week the patch makes BBC local news, though not sure either story puts us in a good light. Looking on the bright side, maybe the pollution will kill off the Shark/Crocodile/Alien Creature that lies below.
PW
Apparently in 894, a force of Danes sailed up the River Lea to Hertford, and the following year they built a fortified camp in the higher reaches of the Lea, about 32 km north of London.
(Dirty) Old Man River
For the second time this week the patch makes BBC local news, though not sure either story puts us in a good light. Looking on the bright side, maybe the pollution will kill off the Shark/Crocodile/Alien Creature that lies below.
PW
15 December 2011
Site #9 Banbury reservoir & the Wild Marsh
We have reached the top of the patch, North of the Lockwood
reservoir is the Wild Marsh East, sometimes viewed as part of Tottenham marshes
it is actually firmly in Essex and therefore part of the Walthamstow patch.
Formerly a grazing field it has hosted such delights as Yellowhammer and Great
Grey Shrike and when waterlogged Redshank, now it is a bit more manicured and
has much more extensively wooded edges. It still has its specialities though
and is the best area on patch for Garden Warbler, Bullfinch and Firecrest, the
last two still quite rare. This year it held a summering Grasshopper Warbler
and Pheasants are frequently heard, and occasionally seen on here. Access is
from Sinnott Rd and Sandpiper Close E17 or from Tottenham marshes via a
footbridge over the Lea.
To the East are some allotments and a new housing estate,
previously the site of breeding Grey Partridges, sadly now very unlikely to
reoccur on patch. Pheasants are often seen here and it was also the site of the
Dusky Warbler of 2010 which also got alongside the overflow channel which runs North.
The channel is a reliable site for Green Sandpipers and occasionally other
Waders. Further North the channel becomes deeper and sometimes holds Goosander
in Winter, though these tend to be mobile getting anywhere between the Southern
reservoirs and right up to Chingford.
The Banbury is the Northernmost of the Walthamstow complex,
the William Girling and King George V being North of the North Circular and
therefore in Chingford. Access is nowadays restricted to keyholding WEBS
counters but much of the reservoir can be seen from Banbury Rd. Anything large
should be seen with patience. Previous scarcities include Common Scoter,
Sabine’s Gull, Brent Goose, Little Tern etc. in fact this is the most favoured
reservoir of the group for Sea Duck and other Sea Birds.
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