Monday, 16 March 2026
Little Ring
Saturday, 14 March 2026
Welcome break
Despite a cold start and a northwest breeze today's weather was clear and the temperature picked up by the afternoon. Looks like the more windy and wet conditions return tomorrow so it was a nice break today. I popped out before the usual Saturday family proceedings started and checked out Ferry and the harbour from the end of the Long Pool HERE. The Ferry field was lively with a Ruff, Green Sandpiper, over 50 Black-tailed Godwits, 2 Curlew, 4 Redshank, 3 Lapwing, 1 Snipe, 2 Avocet and 2 Oystercatcher and there was a Greenshank and a Spotted Redshank in the Ferry Channel. A Weasel was running along the Long Pool footpath which was nice to see.
In the afternoon I popped out again and went to Church Norton to twitch the female Wheatear that the Vicar had found this morning. Ebird list HERE. Luckily the Wheatear was still there and also four Slavonian Grebes were off shore (presumably the same birds from last week that Ian saw earlier in the day too). Now on 136 for the local year list. It was quite a gap since my last 'summer migrant' with Sand Martin on 28th Feb, Swallow on 2nd March and now Wheatear on 14th so nearly a two week gap between new summer migrants after an early start.
Friday, 13 March 2026
Winter bites back
The temperature is set to get to around 4 C tonight and the wind is a cool westerly with a bit of north in it. Yesterday was really windy and felt cold. I didn't bother putting the moth trap out in such cold night temperatures and bird migration has slowed right down on the Peninsula.
Wednesday night was the last relatively mild evening with about 20 individual moths with the first Red Chestnut of the year. Stuck on 23 species of moth in the garden for the year.
A noc-mig session on 10th March was pretty lean with highlights including Oystercatcher, Teal, Coot and Redwings HERE.
With demoralising field conditions I've got on with work, bits in the garden, updating some databases, getting the latest Dutch Birding paper to advance draft stage, reading and doing a bit of music.
Very slow going and looking forward to the next wave of migration- Tuesday looks promising- just as I have to head back up to London.
Thursday, 12 March 2026
Battening Down
Tuesday, 10 March 2026
Whooper Swan Twitch
Monday, 9 March 2026
White Out
Sunday, 8 March 2026
Arundel WWT
A family day today so we went to Arundel WWT and then afterwards had a walk round Swanbourne Lake. Despite the distractions of having to stop Isaac jumping into the lakes and biting the heads of the geese, somehow I managed to see two new year ticks HERE. Highlights included Goosander, Mandarin, Peregrine, Marsh Harrier, Marsh Tit and Firecrest.
The moth trap was quite lively last night with 57 individuals. The only NFY was Narrow-winged Grey, Eudonia angustea.
