Leith Hill has been rather quiet on my heathland site, with very few Redpolls and Siskins have only just started to return, both of which are by far mainly adult birds. The new woodland site has been very productive although the main numbers are Blue and Great Tit highlights have come in the form of seven Marsh Tit, eight Nuthatch and five Great Spotted Woodpecker. The only major species that seem to be missing from this site is Wren, for which not a single one has been caught or heard which seems weird for a woodland! Today's visit produced the first Sparrowhawk to be ringed at this site, but was suffering with some sort of callouses at the edge of the mouth (see below)
2nd year male Sparrowhawk with callouses in gape |
2nd year male Sparrowhawk with callouses in gape |
A group of up to ten Waxwing that were frequenting two straggly rowan bushes in front of Cranleigh Baptist Church on the village high street. They had been there for a couple of weeks, so took the opportunity to attempt a catch and after a few near misses managed to catch this wonderful first-year female (below). A week later I tried again and also only caught a single bird which amazingly was the same female from the week prior.
1st year female Waxwing |
1st year female Waxwing |
Wattled Plover |
White-faced Whistling Duck |
Senegal Coucal |
Yellow-billed Kite |
1st year African Goshawk |
White-crested Helmet-shrike |
American Golden Plover - 1st to be ringed in Africa |
Cuckoo Finch - one of three caught, representing the 2nd, 3rd and 4th record for The Gambia! |
Hamerkop - one of only about 10 ringed in the world of which this is the third here in two years! |
1st year Black-winged Stilt |