Wednesday, 23 December 2020

Black winged kite


 For some reason the photo of this stunning bird did not upload to the last post. At least 3 individuals were present during the summer

Back at Xmas!

 It’s been a long time since I’ve posted on this blog and my excuses seem to appear familiar........

Very busy;

Salving my conscience by providing bird sightings to Charente Nature which I daresay some followers of this blog are registered with.

The usual frustrations with Google who sometimes refuse to let me into the site.

Anyway, covid restrictions continue but that has not affected the birds (as far as I know) nor has it really hampered my efforts to observe them, although the period when travel from the house was limited to 1kilometre posed a bit of a handicap.

Looking back, the main highlights have been the black winged kites which graced the Tardoire valley for several weeks, an Iberian grey shrike near La Rochette, several woodchat shrikes, autumn flocks of little bustards near Tusson and stone curlews near Saint Angeau, crested tit in the Braconne Forest, black storks in the Tardoire and Charente valleys, booted eagle and an almost certain distant Griffin vulture.

And now some belated photos starting with woodlarks, a species which was delightfully plentiful this year.




A Stone curlew, one of a flock of more than 20

A red kite posing on the plains
              



Little bustards


Iberian grey shrike




Saturday, 2 May 2020

May Day .....and Rain

May Day 2020 may well go down as one of the most miserable that Charente has experienced as along with the lock down and cancellation of all festivities we also had a very cold and wet day.
But that’s the bad news, the good is that the birds don’t seem to be much troubled by such things except perhaps those who are trying to fledge and feed their young.

I came across one such when I risked a brief gap in the showers to visit the nearby plains. It was a skylark which appeared on the track in front of me and proceeded to run ahead with its right wing hanging down. Concerned, I tried to keep up with its pace while thinking I might have to rescue it. It took me a good three minutes and then the bird dying off to realise that it had been feigning the injury to lead me away from its nest.

Before I returned home I once again saw the blue headed wagtails which also seem to be nesting nearby and presumably the same whitethroats, corn buntings and linnets which I saw on the rape crop     a couple of days back. Some of the latter seem to be paired up but there is also a flock of about 45 of them which hang around together. The most unexpected birds of my short trip, though, were a pair of rock sparrows which were feeding on the ground close to eolien number 7.

Other news is that my wait for a hoopoe sighting ended yesterday and I also had the pleasure of watching several swifts screaming through Saint Angeau, while last night I listened to the rather more melodious sound of a nightingale in my garden.

A wagtail on the rape

A grey partridge makes a change from the usual red-legged

Tuesday, 28 April 2020

Wheatears at Last

As I’m sure I’ve said in several previous posts, the arrival of wheatears always confirms (for me at least) that Spring has definitely arrived. This is most likely a hangover from my years on the Isle of Wight when the sight of these elegant birds pertly standing on the short turf of the downs was a much anticipated sight.
They don’t turn up in the same numbers her (and, rather strangely, do so later than 400 miles further north) but I was pleased to see a single male on the nearby plains on Saturday and then another one the following day. Also up there were several blue-headed wagtails, a couple of whinchats, a pair of cisticolas, a grey partridge and a black kite.
Around the garden the song of the golden oriole has now joined that of the cuckoo, the turtle dove and the nightingale....but the resident blackbird’s song is still the most beautiful.

Friday, 24 April 2020

More Migration

Birds are not exactly piling in but I’ve come across several new arrivals in the last couple of days. These include turtle doves which I heard  purring yesterday and today, a golden oriole in my garden, several whitethroat near the wind turbines and a pair of whinchats perched high on the flowering rape in the same area. While I was watching the latter a quail began to call from the wheat behind me.
House martins have probably been around for a while but I didn’t see my first one until this morning when I went to Saint Angeau for bread. They nest at several locations in that village.

Wednesday, 22 April 2020

Nightingales et al

Trying to get an idea of what’s happening in the bird world during the one hour that’s allowed for exercise outside the house is a bit like the ornithological version of speed dating...a quick look at what’s interesting and then move on. (I’ve never done speed dating so I can’t be sure about this).

Anyway, over the last couple of days I’ve ventured out and made some discoveries: I’ve heard several nightingales singing and also the chatter of a melodious warbler. I’m still on the lookout for my first wheatears of 2020 but in a likely habitat today I came across a pair of my first blue headed wagtails of this spring and close by was a squatting stone curlew.

A red kite was circling above the nearby wind turbines as I set out and while watching it I was alerted to the presence of a pair of hen harriers behind me by the surprising loud calls that the male was making as he did a tumbling courtship flight. This species is usually very silent....unlike the two tawny owls which I could hear from my house tonight.

In all, I managed to clock up nearly thirty species today showing that some birding is possible even during lockdown as long as you move fast enough.

Thursday, 16 April 2020

Tree Pipits and Corn Bunting

With the lockdown restricting our scope for travelling around looking for birds, we have to rely more on birds coming to us. Yesterday, three tree pipits obligingly turned up in a tree outside my bedroom window, one of them seemed to be the child of the others as he kept opening his bill to be fed. This species is a summer migrant and this family obviously arrived early and have already had their first
brood.
The corn bunting is a common enough species on farmland throughout the summer but today is the first time I can recall having one singing in the garden..... perhaps he’d become tired of no one listening to his efforts elsewhere.

I cut my lawn today but despite its new fresh look, no hoopoe has yet come to grace it this spring.

I’ve been curious about the occupant of a nest which sits in one of the many recesses in the outbuilding’s sone wall. I have seen no bird approach it during the last week or so so I decided to investigate. As soon as I touched it, a loud buzzing and vibrating started up so I quickly withdrew especially when the appearance of several small bumble bees indicated that they had taken up residence. I’ll leave them to get on with their pollinating.

Some Charente folk are obviously finding ways to get further about than me as there are reports this week of ring ouzel, grasshopper warbler, spotted crake and pied flycatchers in the department. I’ll keep an eye out in my garden for the last of these, I’ve not much chance of the first three.

Wednesday, 15 April 2020

Mid April in the Garden

The lockdown goes on and is scheduled to continue for a long time. One consequence of this is that everything is generally quieter as there is less traffic and no planes in the sky....or con trails. Everything seems stiller so that we can hear the birds more, the loudest of which at least in my garden, are the squabbling house sparrows and the frequent song of a male chaffinch which ends with his cry of ‘pleased to see ya!’.
Each day I hear the beautiful song of the blackbird mainly during the dawn chorus and in the late afternoon but he delivers a few phrases at other intervals to defend his territory against nearby rivals. A pair of robins have already brought up a brood in the potting shed and the male’s delicate song and warning tics are to be heard throughout the day. Sadly, he lost his partner a few days back and had to work very hard to feed the nestlings on his own.
A serin and a firecrest are both singing from the garden’s trees and the crackling song of the black redstart is always in the background. One pair of these birds has been trying to build a nest on top of the apex beam inside the covered terrace but almost all of the material which they take up there falls down within a few minutes as the beam is too narrow. They seem not to realise this fact and have persisted with their enterprise for at least two weeks ...and continue to make a mess.
I hear a cuckoo, green woodpecker  and a buzzard calling most days but the blue and great tits along with the goldfinch and greenfinch which flit through the garden remain generally quiet.
I am still awaiting the first hoopoe and nightingale but swallows are becoming more commonplace and some are now feed around the village rather than flying through.

Monday, 6 April 2020

Lockdown Birding Day 2....and Rock Sparrows

It’s not day two of the lockdown of course as that began some weeks back but this has been my second day of restricted birding since I managed to get back into France.

It’s been much cooler than yesterday with some welcome rain during the morning but the garden birds were much the same as yesterday with the addition of a firecrest and two goldfinches. The field opposite my house is planted with peas this year and a flock of around a hundred meadow pipits occasionally arose from the crop and then settled again.

Today I had to venture out in the car for some groceries and that took me further afield than my permitted one hour daily walk. In the course of the journey I came across a delightful group of ten rock sparrows feeding in a ploughed field, followed by two pairs of stone curlews a little further on. I was also able to add hen harrier and corn bunting to the lockdown count.

Sunday, 5 April 2020

Back to the Blog

It’s with some guilt that I realise that I haven’t posted since last autumn but Covid 19 has made me realise the value of very local birding as I, along with everyone else in Charente, am now essentially restricted to observing birds within 1 km of my house.
So, partly because I have more time on my hands (despite all the garden and diy jobs that have suddenly turned up) and partly to provide some info for anyone who still reads this blog, I will try my hand at Birding Charente During Lockdown.
The garden’s a good place to start and I’ve spent some time walking around it since I hurriedly scrambled back from a trip to Texas just a few days back. The weather’s been warm and sunny and there are plenty of signs of bird activity including some migration and this resulted in a tally of 26 species in or from the garden this weekend.
I saw and heard my first cuckoo of the year on Saturday and three swallows flew northward over my head this afternoon. Blackcaps are singing and probably nesting in the garden while blackbirds, and black redstarts definitely are. A pair of the former sadly deserted a nest leaving four eggs behind but I think they have already relocated close by. A chaffinch has been singing very noisily all week and he and his partner are always busy on the lawn as is a robin. A serin, a cirl bunting and a mistle thrush joined the choir today and I’ve heard the sounds of green and great spotted woodpecker close by.
Other species that have put in appearances include dunnock, house sparrow, starling, blue and great tit, greenfinch, chiffchaff,  woodpigeon (but strangely no collared dove) crow, jay, magpie and of course moorhen on the adjacent pond. Overhead, along with the swallows, have been buzzards but no other raptors as yet.
I’ve  done a couple of the limited walks that are allowed from the house but they added only a few birds to the garden list viz. linnet, skylark, meadow pipit, long tailed tit and nuthatch.
Let’s see what the next few days bring.