Today saw the return of Morton Bagot to the friendly competition known as the West Midlands Alldayer. We last took part in 2023, and as a result of our below par performance that day I rather lost the enthusiasm to do it again. We had managed only 61 species, and I saw it as part of a general decline from the zenith of 2015 (72 species).
But I missed it; the getting up stupidly early, the staggering around in late afternoon trying to add one more species. So this morning the same team reassembled: Myself, a team of ringers headed by Tony and Leigh Kelly, Martin Wheeler, Gary Jilks, and finally Sam MacVie who was combining an afternoon shift with counting butterflies.
When I said stupidly early I wasn't kidding. I was birding by 03:45 and Tony wasn't far behind me. The first bird of the day was Pheasant, while the second was a Cuckoo. That was the first since my fluke early bird on April 9. The reason I'd arrived so early was that I was hoping for a Barn Owl, but the first and only owl of the day was a Tawny Owl which was actually the thirteenth bird on the list. Several locals confirmed that a Barn Owl had been around, but unfortunately it eluded the team today.
The first three hours was spent prioritising the "better" birds ticked off over the last few days. Lesser Whitethroat was fifth on the list, it's rattling call heard well before dawn. It was light enough to see birds by 05:15, and Willow Warbler, Garden Warbler (which was later ringed), and the singing Water Rail all got added. Down at the flash field the news was mixed. Cetti's Warbler and Sedge Warbler were still singing, but there was little else bar Lapwings, Greylag and Canada Geese, and Mallard.
On Thursday a dress rehearsal had picked up Little Ringed Plover, Herring Gull and Grey Heron, but today the latter two failed to show up at all.
By the time I had to take time out to help Lyn (07:30 to 08:30) the full compliment of the morning team were on site. By lunchtime everyone had contributed species to the cause. Particularly useful additions of tricky to find species included Nuthatch, Treecreeper and Mistle Thrush courtesy of Gary, Jay and Sparrowhawk (Tony), Coal Tit (Leigh), and Bullfinch, Little Egret, and Red Kite.
Completely absent was any sense of birds passing through. It looked like it would just be a case of trying to see all the local breeders.
The afternoon can sometimes be rather dispiriting, but mine got off to an absolute flier when I picked up three Mute Swans heading south. I later learnt that Gary saw them heading back north.
I was on a mission to check out the rarely visited fields at the south end of the patch, hoping that the Barn Owl might be occupying one of the owl boxes in the old Curlew Field. I didn't find any, but my time wasn't wasted as I heard a Yellow Wagtail call three times on the opposite side of a high hedge. By the time I reached a gate it had evidently moved on. It was still my first this year.
By now it was quite warm and I was being distracted by several butterflies which were new for the year. These were the no longer common Small Tortoiseshell, at least three Small Coppers, Small Heath, and arguably best of all two migrant Painted Ladies.
On previous occasions when I've seen lots in May, they've gone on to have an excellent immigration so I'm hoping these are the forerunners of a great season.
Anyway, back to birds. I headed the length of the patch to get back to the flash field. Surely the emerging mud would host a wader. Well it did. The Little Ringed Plover was now visible and became the 64th bird for the day. (I should admit there was a bit of a recording cock-up involving me missing Carrion Crow off the list, so the LRP was ticked as bird 63.)
Gary Jilks reappeared, while Sam headed to Bannams Wood. I had to go home, but the day was not over. Sam found a Marsh Tit in the wood, while Gary located a pair of Mandarin on the Kingfisher Pool bringing the final total to a very respectable 66 species.
In terms of the other teams competing, our total will not challenge the big beasts. Reservoirs and nature reserves in Staffordshire and North Warwickshire will have recorded well over ninety, maybe even a hundred species. Our near neighbours Earlswood ended up on 73 species, close to their best performance.
The important thing is that everyone enjoyed the day, and maybe we'll be back next year to try again.