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Showing posts from May 24, 2015

Saturday 30th May 2015

We have been house hunting today in Wales, with little success, as for the next few days I am away on an European Protected Species (EPS) surveying course in Exeter so no blog until Wednesday I guess.

Thursday 28th May 2015

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This morning was looking like a good time to do a spot of birding, ok I go birding every week!!! I went down to Slimbridge WWT, and was in the hides by 08:10hrs, when I went to the Robbie Garnett hide there was nothing to note within seconds a chap in the hide asked "is that a phalarope", a quick scan saw the unmistakable spinning action of a small bird on the water, a female Red Necked Phalarope, I managed a few seconds of video and a dodgy photo before the bird was chased off, now how do I upload the video onto my blog? Mmmm no idea so instead here's a dodgy photo, you can view the video on my Facebook page. Later in the morning I joined one of the twice daily Landrover safaris to parts of Slimbridge that usually only the staff visit, we had great views of Hobbies and  breeding Redshank, plus a female Common Blue butterfly but very few dragonflies as it was cool and windy.

Wednesday 27th May 20156

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Today I went out to Lackham College near Chippenham to help one of the North Wiltshire Ringing Group team to ring seven Nuthatch nestlings, it was great to see these birds using a nest box within 30ft of the kitchen window, sorry no photo? I forgot to take one. I did a spot of "weeding" this afternoon in the gravel court yard area of the garden and I pulled out this.. . nature is amazing, a Hazel seedling still with the seed nut attached.

Sunday 24th May 2015

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CES 3 Today saw the team at the Swindon Lagoons nature reserve for the third of this years Constant Effort Site ringing session. We arrived on site for 04:30hrs, having set and secured most of the nets on Saturday evening, with clear skies it was already light and the birds were getting into the dawn chorus. As at the same session last year it was fairly quiet, with 41  new birds ringed another 33 or so "retraps", including a Sedge Warbler which had been ringed by a ringer outside our group. There were two juvenile Robins ringed they really are stunning birds, the adults we are all familiar with  their red breasts but these youngsters are special   It wasn't all birds as we had two moth traps set, quite a collection of commoner species but three Poplar Hawk moths stole the show The site is pretty good for damselflies and dragonflies, this normally evasive Azure Blue gave itself up easily today, the distinguishing feature of this speci