Friday, 6 March 2026

Friday March 6 - Earlswood Lakes

 A grey, cold day was ideal for a visit to Earlswood. This may seem a strange statement, but I think events showed I was correct.

Shortly after arrival, as I concluded an attempt to count the Snipe on one of Engine Pool's rafts (19 for the record), I looked up just in time to see two Shelducks heading over the causeway between Engine and Terry's Pool. This was actually quite a coup for Earlswood where they are barely annual, and I think it was only my second site record. Unfortunately my camera was tucked away in my bag, and I'd have struggled anyway.

I retraced my steps in case they had landed, but as expected, they had not. A single drake Goosander was the only bird remotely Shelduck-like on view. Further signs of early spring came with a singing Chiffchaff (I'd heard another along Springbrook Lane), and many of the Black-headed Gulls being black (well brown) headed.

I made my way towards the causeway between Engine and Windmill Pool. Standing around on the causeway can be surprisingly productive, and after about fifteen minutes I found an early Sand Martin flitting around the centre of Windmill. This was the species I'd been hoping for (it might even be my earliest ever). I typed its details into Whatsapp, but on looking up found that it had disappeared. 

Around the same time a Red Kite flew over, which at last gave me the chance to photograph something. 


I decided to walk back via Engine and Terry's Pools. 

The resident drake Wigeon still think's its a Mallard

Back on the other causeway I heard a singing Blackcap, maybe a summer visitor but more likely a wintering bird which has started singing before trekking back to central Europe. Many of the wintering Redwings are also now singing prior to departure. I wonder whether this is more common nowadays because I don't remember noticing it so often twenty years or so ago.

For the walk around Terry's I was joined by Tony P. When we reached the stump feeder he produced a bag of bird food, and the local Tits surrounded him. He's like a modern day St Francis of Assisi. I left him tending to his flock and headed home.

PS: The Sand Martin was my equal earliest, the other being at Upton Warren in 2002.

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Tuesday March 3 - Spernal STW

 Well you know what they say. It's not what you know, but who you know that matters. I have the good fortune to be friends with Tony and the Redditch Ringing Group, and they had the wherewithal to gain official access to Spernal STW.

So this morning I had the opportunity to spend a pleasant hour or so in their company within the hallowed ground of the sewage treatment works. 


While the ringers got on with what they do best, I spent my time trying to boost my year list. The first of at least two Cetti's Warblers piped up almost immediately. I scanned the small lagoon which is hard to see from outside the fence and counted 15 Teal, a few Mallard, three Moorhens, and eventually one of at least two Water Rails whose squeals had been heard.

A new highlight was two pairs of Mandarins which flew over, unfortunately wrong-footing me camera-wise. Actually I didn't manage decent photos of anything before I had to leave. A single Chiffchaff was singing, and at least three Reed Buntings were no doubt preparing for the breeding season.

Chiffchaff in the early morning light

Reed Bunting

I wish I could have spent longer there, but Cetti's Warbler and Mandarin were added to the year-list so it was mission accomplished.

I've since heard from Tony that they caught 39 birds of 13 species as follows:

Blue Tit 15 (5)
Great Tit 3
Long-tailed Tit (2)
Chiffchaff 1
Goldcrest 2
Wren 1
Treecreeper 1
Robin 2
Dunnock 1
Chaffinch 1
Greenfinch 4
Goldfinch 5
Reed Bunting 1

Although they didn't catch a Cetti's Warbler today, they estimated four were present and they did catch one on their previous visit on February 28.

Cetti's Warbler - per Tony Kelly



Sunday, 1 March 2026

Morton Bagot - Sunday March 1

Another month, the same old story. Dave and I went to Morton Bagot and saw pretty much the same birds as we saw last time. Shelducks, Teal, and Lapwings remain at the flash field. There are still plenty of Fieldfares and Redwings. Not much sign of spring.

Grasping at straws, a party of 16 Herring Gulls and nine Lesser Black-backed Gulls was probably our highlight, although I suppose seeing three different Red Kites and at least seven Buzzards was also better than usual.

Herring Gulls with Lapwings in the background

My garden has produced heightened levels of interest this week with a Wren building a cock's nest in a bird box on the side of our house, and both Robin and Blackbird being seen carrying nesting material.

March is always a waiting game and its a pretty safe bet that things will improve.

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Thursday February 26 - Austy Wood and Morton Bagot

 I woke before dawn, and decided a pre-breakfast birdwatch would be in order. This is getting to be a habit. My destination was Austy Wood on the south-eastern edge of the Circle. 

As dawn approached, it became apparent that it would be a cloudy and breezy morning. Not ideal. I walked along a very muddy footpath from opposite Wootton Pool, up a steady slope until I reached the eastern edge of the wood. 

Most of the wood is private, and managed for shooting. The only part in my Circle which is available is a tiny section visible from the footpath.

So a lot of effort, but there was a small reward. A weedy field just before I got to the woodland was alive with 150+ Chaffinches, plus two Bramblings and 20 Goldfinches. It's really satisfying to find a good finch flock. The wood itself was busy with birds but I saw nothing scarcer than a Marsh Tit.

Scroll forward to the post-breakfast element. I slogged around Morton Bagot, failing once again to locate a single Coal Tit (needed for my PWC2026 3k list). Eventually I reached the flash field with its obligatory Teal, Lapwings, Shelducks, and Mallard. A single Snipe looked like it would be the only added variety.

However, persistence paid off as a wader appeared from behind the sedge which largely obscures any shoreline on the nearest flash.


I've never been so pleased to see a Green Sandpiper, the first of the year.

Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Tuesday February 24 - Morton Bagot and Spernal STW

It just so happened that I awoke at 05:00 and remembered I had bought a thermal imager. Time to creep out of the house and try the patch for owls. 

Without the imager I was blind, but with it I could immediately see Rabbits, Hares and an Owl. It was sitting on a post, but beyond that I couldn't be certain of the species. Then it took off and flew away. My strong hunch that it was a Barn Owl was confirmed when it gave the classic rasping call.

I could also hear Tawny Owls in the woods some way off, but identifying the white blobs in the fields was rather tricky. Fortunately most of them were calling and were Red-legged Partridges, the smaller dots eventually revealing themselves as Skylarks.

Once it got light, I dashed home for breakfast.

Part two of the morning involved a trip to the sewage works at Spernal. Neither of my two main targets, Mandarin and Cetti's Warbler, was present (or in the latter case maybe just not singing), but there was some compensation. A Goosander flew north, and after hearing at least one Chiffchaff singing from within the compound of the works, I located two more along the footpath on the way back.


Sadly, but unsurprisingly, no wing-bars were seen apart from on the several Goldcrests which were also feasting on the numerous gnats. One day maybe.


Sunday, 22 February 2026

Morton Bagot - Sunday February 22

 A pleasantly mild, and mostly sunny morning. Lots of birds singing and even a few insects on the wing.

Wintering birds included at least 80 Redwings, 42 Lapwings, and a couple of Stonechats. There were plenty of photo opportunities.




I'm in a much better mood today.

Earlier this week I twitched a Brambling in my sister's garden at Tidbury Green, and saw a Goosander from our kitchen window as it flew over the garden. 

I've also seen one of these this week:-


Boom!

Thursday, 19 February 2026

2025 Garden Moth review

 A few weeks ago the Warks micro moth recorder dropped by to collect my 2025 specimens. Unlike when you identify birds, a few moths cannot be identified while they are alive. The results are now in, and my 11 specimens turned out to be 10 moths and a "hairy fly". All of these creatures are tiny, and disappointingly only two turned out to be new for my garden. One of these, Epinotia abbreviana, turned out to have been a common moth (but still the first I had ever seen), and I should probably have been able to work it out myself.

Brown Elm Tortrix Epinotia abbreviana

The other "new" one was White-speckled Fungus Moth Nemapogon koenigi was only the sixth for Warwickshire and could not have been confirmed without dissection.

Nemapogon koenigi

The arrival of these results concluded what turned out to be my best year of moth-trapping since I began in 2018, and prompted me to review my garden moth list and discover I had overlooked about eleven species (and also counted one twice).

So here are some stats. My total garden list from 2018 to 2026 now stands at 472 species. In 2025 I trapped on 37 days and caught 2508 moths of 278 species. My previous best year was 2020 when I caught 2031 moths of 253 species (but trapped on 61 days). I'd like to think my good results in 2025 are down to the careful nurturing of our untidy garden, but its probably more because it was a very warm dry summer.

These are the 36 new moths for the garden in 2025 and their status in the West Midlands/Warwickshire:

Micros 

Rusty-dot Pearl Udea ferrugalis - A common migrant to the region
Cherry-bark Tortrix Enarmonia formosana - Locally common
Triple-spotted Nest Moth Tinea trinotella - Fairly common resident
Brindled Tortrix Gypsonoma minutana - Nationally Scarce B, and very scarce in Midlands

Gypsonoma minutana

Buff Mompha Mompha epiliobella - Very common locally.
White-speckled Fungus Moth Nemapogon koenigi - Sixth record for Warwickshire.
Dark Blackthorn-tip Moth Argyresthia albistriana - Common locally
Brassy Y Argyresthia goedartella - Very common locally
Southern Apple Moth Recurvaria nanella - Uncommon locally

Southern Apple Moth (aka Brindled Shoot) Recurvaria nanella

Italian Bark Moth Metalampra italica - A naturalised species, still rare but increasing.
Lettuce Bell Eucosma conterminana - Local and scarce.
Brown Elm Tortrix Epinotia abbreviana - Fairly common locally
Regal Piercer Pammene regiana - Fairly common.
Common Spruce Tortrix Epinotia tedella - Local.
European Corn-borer Ostrinia nubilalis - A rare migrant.

European Corn-borer Ostrinia nubilalis

Brindled Apple-tip Moth Argyresthia curvella - Fairly common.
Marsh Lance Bactra fufurana - Uncommon locally.
Large Tabby Aglossa pinguinalis - Local and declining.
Dark-barred Tortrix Syndemis musculana - Common.

Macros 

Figure of Eight Diloba caeruleocephala - Uncommon and declining
Cypress Carpet Thera cupressata - Uncommon but spreading.

Cypress Carpet

Frosted Orange Gortyna flavago - Fairly common
Red Underwing Catocala nupta - Fairly common
Small Rufous Coenobia rufa - Uncommon locally (a marshland species)
Plain Pug Eupithecia simpliciata - Uncommon locally

Plain Pug

Gypsy Moth Lymantria dispar - Probably naturalised and very rare.

Gypsy Moth

Garden Dart Euxoa nigricans - Uncommon and declining.
Lunar Hornet Moth Sesia bembeciformis - Common (but hard to find)
Red-belted Clearwing Synanthedon myopaeformis - Fairly common (very hard to find)
Yellow-legged Clearwing Synanthedon vespiformis - Local
Pinion-streaked Snout Schankia costaestrigalis - Common
Four-spotted Footman Lithosia quadra - Rare migrant, but increasing.

Four-spotted Footman

Brown Scallop Philereme vetulata - Uncommon locally
Broken-barred Carpet Electrophaes corylata - Common
Grey Birch Aethalura punctulata - Fairly common
Shoulder Stripe Eorophila badiata - Common.

Just four of the "new" moths were not caught by light trapping. The exceptions were the three species of Clearwing Moth/Hornet Moth which were caught in daylight using a borrowed pheromone lure trap, and the Argyresthia curvella, which was discovered while gardening.

I will resume trapping on the first Friday in March 2026, but already the first moth of the year has been attracted to the kitchen window. A micro called Agonopteryx heracliana/ciliella, another one I should have taken as a specimen. However, I did that once and it was heracliana, so I have left it as unidentified to species level.