Sunday, 18 January 2026

Saturday/Sunday January 17/18 - Morton Bagot

 It's unusual for me to go birding at Morton Bagot two days running, but the recent switch to milder weather, encouraged me to think that the patch would be more like its old self. And so it was.

Saturday was the brighter day. I discovered John S and Sam McV busily ringing birds, handling a Redwing as I joined them. Winter thrushes have remained a staple this winter and I reckon at least 100 are on site, with Redwings slightly more numerous than Fieldfares.

Fieldfare

My main interest, having decided to take part in Patchwork Challenge again this year, was to boost my lamentable Morton Bagot year list. I'd somehow managed two visits this year without seeing a Dunnock or a House Sparrow. I soon put that right, also adding Moorhen, Pied WagtailTeal, and Little Egret during the course of Saturday morning. Its amazing how bad the patch can be when all the pools are frozen.

Little Egret showing breeding plumage aigrettes

I am also listing within the wider Circle, and managed three new birds. A small party of Linnets, and a fly-over Yellowhammer eluded my camera (the latter was heard only), but one or two Reed Buntings included a co-operative male which I noticed sported a metal ring.


Also present on Saturday was a flock of 81 Lapwings, 29 Black-headed Gulls, and four Stonechats.

This morning Dave joined me, and to begin with we sat despondently under the hatch-back of my car watching the rain pound down. Had we made a mistake coming at all? 

Fortunately, after half an hour the rain eased and then stopped altogether. It remained grey and a bit misty, but perfectly birdable.

Our first good decision was to try walking through the sedge at the old pool field. In no time at all we surpassed my Jack Snipe tally of the week before, flushing six plus seven Common Snipe. In years gone by the Common species would vastly out-number the wintering Jacks, but nowadays the numbers are almost equal. I suspect that this reflects a loss of UK breeding habitat for the mainly British Common Snipe.

Still on the look out for Morton Bagot year-ticks we added Treecreeper, Sparrowhawk, Marsh Tit and Peregrine to the list, but all were brief sightings and evaded my camera.

Mammals rarely feature in this blog, but today they stole the show. Dave spotted first one, then two, and finally three Red Foxes chasing each other around the newly planted area. I couldn't get them all in shot but did manage several of two of them.


I have to confess that I don't know all that much about Fox behaviour, but I do know that winter is the mating season, so I imagine that both sexes were involved. 

Back to birds. From a purely Morton Bagot perspective the best bird was saved to last. As we made our way across the ridge field we started to hear the "thrum thrum thrum" made by the wings of a Mute Swan. Amazingly it was at least 200 metres away when it finally appeared and ultimately flew past us. The sound of those wings carries an awfully long way. This was the first Mute Swan here for almost exactly a year. 


I understand its International Swan weekend, but the BTO qualify that by making it clear they are only interested in Bewick's and Whoopers, so our bird won't count.

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