Tuesday 20 October 2020

A week in Norfolk - 9th to 16th October 2020

10th October

Was rather rainy so we decided to drive to Cambridgeshire and try for the Lammergeier. When we arrived it had just flown off having given good views as it fed on a hare in a field adjacent to the road. We set off in the direction that it had flown and after some searching it was seen in flight overhead. We were fortunate enough to spend some time watching it as it drifted above the ploughed field, often harassed by Red Kites and Buzzards.



 We spent the afternoon at Titchwell.

A flock of Ruff

Redshank

Wheatear on the beach

Little Egret

Black-tailed Godwit

Bearded Tit


11th October.

We headed to Burnham Overy dunes in a strong and chilly wind. We made for the pine trees and having first found a Lesser Whitethroat, connected with the Barred Warbler. The very dark eye showed this to be a first year bird. We didn't see the Short-eared Owl that's been seen in the dunes.

Lesser Whitethroat

Barred Warbler


View across the dunes

The afternoon was spent at Holme NOA where the pines sheltered the observatory area from the prevailing wind and  dragonflies and insects flew around the buddleias and pond.

Migrant Hawker

Wall Brown

White tailed Bumblebee

12th October

Dawned and it looked like rain was likely although this was not due according to the forecast.
We spent the morning at Sculthorpe where some trails were underwater and closed off.


Brambling


Coal Tit

Treecreeper

Nuthatch

13th October

Was also a rainy start, but we were out before 8am and went to Holkham Meals. There were many thrushes arriving and the pathways that had been cut through the bracken to the left of the track allowed so good views.

Song Thrush

We were struggling to hear bird calls over the persistent rumble of plant working in the pines, doing forestry work. We heard Yellow-browed Warbler and had at least 4 along the track, possibly more!

Two of the four birds seen.


Additional walkways make viewing easier

Fungi in the dunes


Grey Partridges by the car park

Pleased with having found our own YBWs, we tried North Point hoping for Ring Ouzel. There were plenty of thrushes dropping in for a brief stop off.

Redwings, Fieldfare, Blackbird are attracted by the berries

Hawthorn berries signal thrushes of a good place to stop!

Ring Ouzel record shot

Hare

14th October.

Wednesday was a little windier than the previous day. We started off at Holme NOA. There were plenty of Redwings, Fieldfare and Blackbirds about, also finches including many Brambling and Goldcrests. A reccie along the dunes on to the NWT reserve turned up a Pallas's Warbler in the calm,  sunny leeward side of a clump of mixed vegetation.

Pallas's Warbler

A Ring Ouzel was feeding in the dunes.


There was a second Pallas's in the NWT car park in the usual Sycamore trees. Closer inspection showed that it was the bird ringed earlier at the NOA observatory.

Hummingbird Hawkmoth at NOA

15th October

Thursday had a showery start. We walked Holkham, finding some Yellow-browed Warblers again. When the news of a Red-flanked Bluetail came through we were only 5 minutes walk away.

Record shot RFBT

We carried on further along the path and tied down another Yellow-browed Warbler. On the way back a Reed Warbler was seen, but turned out not to be a Blyth's as originally reported.

Reed Warbler

Buzzard

A pm visit to Stiffkey to check out the campsite woodland was made only to get there and find out there was a report of two Pallas Warblers in the area, but no birders as yet, give a chance to have a quite check around the area, though most of the tres on the coastal side had already lost their leaves. At the south side of the eastern end, there was not one, but two Pallas', and what was the second one from the report was still present by the boat, making three present in total. But, if a better check had been made around the car park, what else might have already been there?

16th October

We decided to start off at Holme, working the paddocks on the way to the already located Red-flanked Bluetail. However we'd seen a RFBT on the way, in the paddocks so was it the same bird?

RFBT at the end of the golf course

Cetti's Warbler in full view

We do our best to avoid twitches, 
especially when social distancing is not in evidence

The second RFBT that we found in the paddocks.

There was a third RFBT at the NOA (no photos of that one) and lots of Goldcrests in the pines.



We drove home, having found a lot of our own birds through the week, but we could have done with another day - then we would have been there for the Rufous-tailed Bushchat. Who knows, Chris might even have found it (or not) had we been there.