Monday, 8 December 2025

Caspian Gulls

Cloudy, mild, drizzle, SW 3 - After a weekend taken up with family business it was good to get out and about today with Ted. We started at Lade for the WeBS count where four Goldeneyes were the highlights amongst low numbers of common ducks, grebes and Coots. A brief seawatch from the boats delivered a trickle of passing/feeding Kittiwakes, Gannets and auks but little else. Moving onto the bird reserve where from the water tower I watched a pair of Peregrines stooping in tandem at a Black-headed Gull out over the Desert. The larger bird (presumably a female) seemed to be doing most of the damage as clouds of feathers exploded from the gull; eventually it flopped onto the shingle and became breakfast for the falcons. From Hanson hide the usual wildfowl noted, plus several each of Great White Egret and Marsh Harrier, a perched Kingfisher, calling Water Rail and Cetti`s Warbler and a Goldeneye and Sparrowhawk from Screen hide. Over the road at Dennis`s hide I joined Martin and Richard who were busily counting double figures of Caspian and Yellow-legged Gulls amongst the more numerous Greater and Lesser-black Backed Gulls. We finished up at Littlestone Green for waders on the bay which included several Grey Plovers, Barwits and Redshanks, although still no Ringed Plovers.

                                  Adult Caspian Gull - Burrowes

                                 3rd winter Yellow-legged Gull - Burrowes

                                  Both together

                                  View from Hanson hide




    Kingfisher - ARC (through glass)

Thursday, 4 December 2025

Swans and Geese

Cold, cloudy, wet, SE4 - This past week has been dominated by the weather and trying to avoid the bands of rain and brisk winds sweeping in off the Atlantic. The farmland around New Romney, Lade, Pirate Springs, Littlestone, Scotney and the reserve have all been visited a couple of times each. The highlights have been several each of Bewick`s Swans (five today) and White-fronted Geese on the fields between Lydd and Horsebones Farm and at the back of the old sand pit amongst hundreds of feral Greylags, Canada and Egyptian Geese and Mute Swans, plus two Black-necked Grebes and an immature Scaup on the main Scotney roadside lake. The expected raptors, gulls (inc Yellow-legged and Caspian Gulls) egrets and wildfowl have been noted on the reserve with ARC being the best spot for Great White Egrets and Bittern sightings, plus up to five Goldeneyes on Lade pits. At low tide eight species of waders and a laggard Sandwich Tern were logged from Littlestone Green last weekend. The Boulderwall Fields re-wetting project is coming on apace with the anti-predator fencing now being installed; next spring should not only benefit breeding Lapwings and Redshanks but also, hopefully, lure in a few passage waders...


                                  View over Tanners Pool

                                  View over Cooks Pool

                                  Anti-predator fencing


    Ted - Pirate Springs