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Thursday, 14 March 2013

Spain: Flamingos and friends

Any visiting bird watcher to the Alicante region can visit some fantastic Salt pans and Wetland reserves that in some way make-up for the relentless urbanisations that stretch from Alicante to Murcia on the coastal strip. At the salt pans, the birds seem much more approachable than in the UK - making for fantastic opportunities for photography, you just need time which sadly I didn't have enough of. Heres a few of the commoner stuff I snapped. The Costa Blanca bird club web site has all you need to know for visitor information and latest sightings.

 http://www.costablancabirdclub.com/latestsightings.htm

Greater Flamingo
Slender Bill Gull
Audiouns Gull
Black tailed Godwit
Avocet

Spoonbill, Great White and Little Egret

Cattle Egret

Lesser Spotted woodpecker - Shadoxhurst

A lunch time walk along Blind Grooms lane the byway from Hornash Lane, was rewarded with a splendid Lesser Spotted Woodpecker seen and heard, just my second bird this year. Also still 3 Little Egrets sun-bathing together in the adjacent fields.  A very loud bird scarer seemed to be keeping everything else away.

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

The speck that is Comet Panstarrs

There's something quite satisfying about seeing a new Comet and tonight seeing Comet Panstarrs for the first time was no exception. Just about visible with the naked eye, and through binoculars and film the unmistakable glow from the tail, Comet Panstarrs could have been better, but perhaps that might happen in the nights to come. 

Our view tonight was all about being there at the right time, as bands of cloud passed across the sunset obscuring the view for much of tonight's twilight. Under the earthshine of the waxing moon, I stood quietly at the back of garden looking for the comet, and was briefly joined by a beautiful fox who checked out our old shed for mice that banquet the night away on  discarded bird seed.
Can you see it? Comet Panstarrs is visible low in the western sky (bottom right).
The waxing moon
Earthshine, reflecting back to Earth, the comet hidden by the cloud below.

Monday, 11 March 2013

The accidental Spanish wildlife reserve


Looking back through the Vistabella Golf course urbanisation, this was once Orange groves and countryside
Cold, clean air, brilliant sunshine and bird song everywhere. Welcome to a February morning on an abandonend building site on the Costa Blanca.

Serin, Sardinian Warbler, Hoopoe, Crested Lark, Goldfinch, Corn Bunting, and migrant Chiffchaff and Black Redstart at every turn - could there be anywhere on over-developed coastal Spain that would have this number and variety of birds?  Based on places we were later to visit during our week in Spain, apparently not.

Late February seems a strange time to be visiting Spain, but thanks to an eccentric school half-term timetable and our good friend Hazel's holiday home, we found ourselves on a week's break 45 minutes from Alicante. We stayed on a new 'urbanisation' complete with it's own golf course (if you should want it). Our base was one of many hap-hazardly built retirement estates that seemed plonked into a pressure landscape of low rise development, golf courses and Orange groves. We were told that the urbanisation (just 10 years old), was once a landscape of orange groves and artichoke fields and is now a partly-built housing estate with acres of uncompleted, scrubby building plots.

In the early morning, Artichoke pickers intensively work their prestine fields - I'd recommend washing your hearts before cooking..


For mile after mile out of Alicante, Orange and Lemon trees were laden with fruit waiting to be picked.
On the face of it, not a home for wildlife, but like so many other 'urbanisations' in Spain the property bubble has burst, and unfinished building plots have, in some way, become a temporary respite for wildlife displaced from lost habitat the length of Costa Blanca.

Before construction stopped, the Spanish builders left in place a pristine network of pavements, street lights and tarmacked roads dividing building plots, and these were to be my footpaths to an over-looked Spanish wildlife.

Venturing out through our estate at dawn, with artichoke farmers and orange pickers already collecting their fruits in the surrounding fields, retired British pensioners walked their dogs as only the English do.

Walking a 2 hour grid through the over-grown building plots, my first walk was in beautiful weather and little wind. The air was alive with the sound of bird song that, despite the desolate scene of abandoned plots, couldn't help but bring a smile to your face.

As I left our apartment, Black Redstarts flirted from every house top in the company of House Martins already at their nest sites, and fed in the company of Crag Martins, not yet ready to return to their mountain breeding sites. Occasionally we saw Swallows heading North (high in the sierras too). Back down at ground level it seemed that every bush and fence top had a migrant Chiffchaff singing away - accompanied in the scrub by Black Redstarts and resident Sardinian Warblers.

Migrant Chiffchaffs were abundant and sang the mornings away between feeds, ready for their next trip to the UK

Black Redstarts common everywhere - if only they'd come to Kent ( and take advantage of low exchange rate!)
Serin - so common everywhere
Also, flirting amongst the undergrowth, Sardinian warblers would occasionally pose in the sun before disappearing off again. In the spoil mounds Serin, Crested Lark, Stonechats, Corn Bunting, Gold-, Green- and Chaffinches all fed in good numbers in beds of opportunistic weeds. And then to my surprise it seemed every abandoned plot had a little flock Stone Curlew roosting the day away. Never have I seen so many Stone Curlew, occasionally flocks of 50 birds would fly over head.

Resident Stone Curlews stayed hidden away in the undergrowth during the day, but I often saw flocks of 30 - 50 birds, perhaps dispersing North for spring.

So despite a landscape that seemed to have no space for birds, we found ourselves immersed in migrant birds and Spanish residents benefitting from this accidental environment. My walks were to get more enjoyable still, in the more remote areas of the complex a pair of Great Grey Shrikes perched in the higher scrub looking for prey.
Great Grey Shrikes seemed to be common everywhere on the Costa Blanca, even on our urbanisation wasteground

Never seen so many Hoopoes on any Mediterranean trip. In February they're very vocal and easy to spot as they chase each across their territories
Even better, Hoopoes posed and called the day away. Never, in many visits to the Mediterranean, have I seen so many Hoopoes. Back in the scrub a brief view of a Ladder snake (eats rodents) and a resident pair of Kestrels added more interest, and at night they'd be joined by Little Owls and Nightjars. Another bird easy to make you jump was the Iberian Green woodpecker a seeming cleaner more brilliant coloured version of our own.

We returned back to the UK at the beginning of March and before Spain's own Summer migrants had arrived back. No doubt that Bee-eaters, Scops Owls and Nightjars will soon be arriving back in Spain for the summer. I hope they can find a true Spanish countryside to live on, and not just the short-lived building site environment we'd witnessed.



Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Little Egrets getting nearer behind the garden

The deeply rutted, over-grazed, partly-flooded and manure-loaded horse field behind the garden continues to attract Little Egrets, with a village record of five birds there this morning.

That's it for a week, Alicante beckons and (hush don't tell my kids - they think its a beech holiday) a little Spanish winter bird-watching!


Sunday, 17 February 2013

In the garden.. ..out in the woods

A garden female Yellowhammer.

 For the last two weeks, from dawn to dusk, two Little Egrets have been feeding on flies and earth worms in fields behind the garden and on Saturday, they were joined by two additional birds. So the grand total of four birds together, is something of a Shadoxhurst record.

In the pasture behind the garden, our adaptable Little Egrets sift invertebrates amongst the Horse Dung.

Two large scoops of seed is feeding 6 Pheasants, 1 Red legged Partridge, and a mixed flock of 60 plus Finches, Buntings and Sparrows in the garden. Our Yellowhammer flock is averaging at about 8 birds, and I'd expect numbers to pick up before spring arrives in earnest. A single Reed bunting has tagged along with them too. Two Fieldfares are still arguing over split Apples on the lawn, whilst dozens of Redwings run between horses hoof's and Egret feet in the pastures behind the garden.

Accompanying a drumming GS Woodpecker, a Song Thrush is singing away at 6.15 most mornings. Sitting high in our front garden Larch, and not that far from our bedroom window, it might be time for him to move along and try another garden soon?

OUT IN ORLESTONE FOREST

Common Buzzard
 An hours walk through the back of Faggs Wood and then to the near-by Coniferous plantation on Capel road, revealed few birds of note,  but Buzzards were displaying in pairs over both woods. The odd pair of Siskins whizzed over, and a great many Redwings were feeding on the woodland edges. The garden was the easy winner today!

Thursday, 14 February 2013

Was this the Russian meteor or a Satellite over Kent?

This afternoon, the sun finally came out. I stood on the garden deck and had a stretch and a break from sitting in front of my computer. I looked around the sky in the hope of seeing our local Buzzards enjoying the warmth. Looking to the east, at an angle of 45 degrees, I could see a white light source, stationary in the sky. It looked similar to and as bright as Venus or Jupiter would look against a dark sky, except this was about 2.30 in the afternoon! It looked motionless compared with airliners that were criss-crossing the sky, reinforcing the feeling that whatever I was watching, was static.

I walked back to the house and grabbed my camera and 500mm lens. I took one burst of pics before the phone started to ring inside the house - my wife! I explained I didn't want to talk because I was taking pics of a UFO!

I took the phone out to the garden and told Sian that I could still see the light, and that I needed to take more pics, but then, a cloud obscured the view - and that was that.

Look at the photos below. What looked like a bright white light to my eye, takes on a shape through the lens. I decided it might be the ISS, which I've seen and photographed many times before. I also thought that it wasn't moving - which was odd as the ISS moves quickly across the sky. But my check of the ISS timetable showed no passes over the UK at that time. I've also checked NASA's site for satellite passes and, as yet, can't find anything at that time.




About five minutes later, I took a picture of the same area of sky with a standard lens so I had some reference of the sky scape at the time. See pic below.


I then took a pic of an Easyjet plane crossing the sky east to west in the same direction as our UFO. When I looked carefully at the pics on the computer I can see a small white and out-of-focus fuzz in the image. This again reminds of a poor record shot that you might take of Jupiter or Venus, except this was before 3pm in the afternoon. Have a look at the pic (below) and at the small out of focus white dot, bottom left of the picture. The same dot is in all the pics I took of the plane - is this perhaps the same object - perhaps a balloon? Or perhaps, it's an unknown satellite. But I don't understand why I thought it was static? Any thoughts anyone?