About Me

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Canna, Highland, United Kingdom
This blog has been set up to keep people who are interested in wild bird ringing informed about my ringing activities both locally and further afield.

Saturday, 26 November 2011

Another NUTHA

Early start on the Farmland Foraging Bird Project in Suffolk this morning. Another disappointing ringing session at Dairy Farm. A breeze blew through the game cover strip all morning, and a sparrowhawk enjoyed chasing all the passerines back and forth, resulting in just two, yes two, birds caught:

CHAFF 3F
LINNE 4F

Both new birds.

Back at home I opened the net for half an hour, and within seconds a Nuthatch found it.


This is the 3rd for the garden since July, so very pleased with that! My wife took the pic.

The totals were:

BLABI 1(1)
GOLDC 1
COATI 1
BLUTI (2)
GRETI 9 (2)
NUTHA 1

Not bad for half an hour's effort.


Saturday, 19 November 2011

And a few Bunts out of the Reeds!

Managed to get a net up late this afternoon to try to catch some of the Reed Buntings coming into the phragmites around the lake fringe at Little Bofus.

Nowhere near as many birds there as there were the other day (probably about 50 REEBU in the flock), but had a small catch:

ROBIN 1
LOTTI 1
BLUTI 1
REEBU 5

A couple of Pied Wagtails spent an hour flying around, over, and even trying to walk under the net, but neither of them actually found a pocket. Shame, that would have been nice.


Thursday, 17 November 2011

Bunts in the Reeds

Back to work yesterday, which has put paid to my mid-week ringing sessions. However, I wandered up to Rushgreen Meadow this afternoon to feed the sheep, and came back alongside Baby Bofus Lake at dusk. Good to see about 200 Reed Buntings dropping into the reeds to roost. Might have to pop back with a net at the weekend!

Lots of Fieldfare around too, but not too many Redwings.

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Roe Deer! Oh Dear!

Went out to do the next session for the Foraging Farmland Bird Project this morning. Very disappointing. A 6am start, and by 10am I'd caught 4 birds:

Wren (1)
Dunnock 1
Robin (2)

Not a great success. So, I packed up and headed over to Rushgreen Grove, a small wood at the back of the estate here at Wyken where I monitored a few nests back in the summer.

Wren 1
Robin 2
Goldcrest 1
Long-tailed Tit 14
Blue Tit 11
Treecreeper 3

All new birds. The session was spoilt slightly when a roe deer buck walked through the net, completely destroying the bottom shelf - and this a brand new North Ron net! I was livid!

Went off home to bag a few birds there before dusk:

Robin (1)
Marsh Tit 1 (4)
Coal Tit 2 (2)
Blue Tit 1
Great Tit 1 (1)

Totals for the day:

Wren 1 (1)
Dunnock 1
Robin 2 (3)
Goldcrest 1
Long-tailed Tit 14
Marsh Tit 1 (4)
Coal Tit 2 (2)
Blue Tit 12
Great Tit 1 (1)
Treecreeper 3

38 New Birds, 11 Retraps, 49 in total + 1 Roe Deer!

Friday, 11 November 2011

MARTI update

A bit of garden ringing today - first in my own garden at Wyken, then in my brother-in-laws at Mildenhall.

In my own, managed to trap a MARTI that has so far evaded the nets. This one, a 4F, nipped into a drop trap just minutes after I'd set it, and she became LBR,M;RBY,R with BTO ring Y452210.



Also in the garden, though sighted only, were two of the other colour-ringed MARTIs from my RAS project, LBR,M;RBRB & LBR,M;RBR,W - both made frequent visits to the feeders throughout the morning.

Totals for the day:

New (retrap)

Wyken

MARTI 1 (2 - sighted only)
BLUTI 2 (2)
GRETI 1

Mildenhall

ROBIN 1
GOLDC 1
MARTI 2
GRETI 1
BLUTI 12


Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Foreign Control Robin from Holland

Started the first official session of the Suffolk Foraging Farmland Bird Project today (the project runs from 1st November to 31st March).

A fairly quiet morning, with just 18 birds caught:

BLABI 1
ROBIN (1)
DUNNO 3
WREN 1
BLUTI 1
CHAFF (1)
GREFI 2
YELHA 7
REEBU 1

The best of this bunch were the Robin and the Chaffinch.

The Chaffinch was first ringed by me on 22.9.11, in my own garden. This means it's now joined up with the foraging flocks and has travelled to the southern limits of the farm - only 1.72km as the Fringilla flaps, but still nice to know it's going strong.

The Robin was quite a lot more exciting. I actually caught this bird on 28th October, got it's ring number (BA65008), but forgot to check to see if it was a BTO ring! Doh! It wasn't until afterwards that I realised it was probably a foreign bird. Fortunately, it came out of the net again this morning, so I could check the country of origin. It is part of the Arnhem scheme in Holland! A good record for me here, and a lesson learned as well!

Weather permitting I'm going to try the game cover strips along the Ixworth Plains part of the farm tomorrow morning. I'll then have to switch to a different part of the farm until later in the year as the shooting season is about to start here.