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.

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