Summer Birding 2024. You could argue that summer and early autumn birding morphs into one. Taking the astronomical definition of the period 21 June 2024 to 23 September 2024, but surely autumn birding starts on 01 July a marker in the calendar any year for the first returning waders.
This period both starts and ends with honourable mentions for Great White Egret. On the last Saturday of June two of these majestic Herons graced Rainham Marshes RSPB, London where there was a start of autumn birding feel with returning singles of Black-tailed Godwit and Curlew feeding on the low tide in Aveley Bay. As with last summer Red Kite discovered the landfill site, but this unlike last year this turned out to be a fleeting visit.
As we moved into July and a chance to twitch the Black-winged Pratincole at Finningley, South Yorkshire which was literally by the border with Nottinghamshire, quite a big Yorkshire Tick. For me this now stands at 351 and for Yorkshire Birding Listers League purposes add two more (Fea’s-type Petrel, Flamborough Head Aug 2003 and a couple of Isy/Red-tailed-type Shrikes at Kilnsea Oct 1991 and Bempton Cliffs Summer 2022). Though both will soon drop by two with the lumping of the Redpolls. The Pratincole showed reasonably well allowing for the following record photographs.
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Black-winged Pratincole |
Elsewhere in July newly fledged
Tawny Owls called on most evening walks in south Hertfordshire and similarly when I was back on South Yorkshire’s moorland edge. The latter held churring
Nightjars and patrolling
Woodcock at dusk. But late July signifies the return of Yellow-legged Gulls to the Thames hoping for Caspian Gulls soon after. Over a dozen juv.
Yellow-legged Gulls sighted along the river about the Thamesmead peninsula, and on one visit
Mediterranean Gulls appeared out of nowhere at high tide gatherings of the
Black-headed Gulls. An adult flew down river with the remainder comprising 4 juvs. including the one below.
Whimbrel sounded off in the distance on one visit and
Peregrines started to move around with a pair of juvs. attacked a high-tide roost of
Black-headed Gulls, honing their hunting skills. One sticky July evening produced a suburban
Peregrine that seemed to be floating in a sky that was like plasma.
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Yellow-legged Gull |
Finally into August and on one mid-month visit 2 juv. Caspian Gulls showed on the river at Thamesmead where Yellow-legged Gulls remained on all visits. Early one warm evening a string of silver birds flew low fast along the north side of the Thames at this site, a flock of 50+ ‘Commic’ Terns that included a dozen Black Terns in various degrees of moult. They headed towards the city and must have carried on their journey as they had not returned downriver during the following walk west. ‘Autumn’ Hobby sightings started as early as the 10th July with a juv. chasing anything it could over Rainham Marshes RSPB, London. Were the 4 Ruddy Shelducks that spent some time at Rainham's Aveley Bay wanderers from the Netherlands, potential Category C tick?
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Caspian Gull |
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Ruddy Shelducks
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End of August and a good time to spot
Ospreys moving south for the winter. Passage birds shown below seen at different sites during the period.
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Osprey |
Into September and Spotted Flycatcher noted again, this time at Rainham Marshes RSPB, London where Hobby sightings continued as expected for late summer and Great White Egret continued. Whinchat seen on one visit and Black-tailed Godwit numbers increased and passage Ruff seen. Just before the end of the period and jumping back in South Yorkshire where Hobby sightings continued, we had a more unexpected sight of 6 Great White Egrets flying over a moorland reservoir heading north. A great time when the birding seasons come together with Swallows and House Martins on the move, Spotted Flycatcher still being seen plus my first skein of winter Pink-footed Geese on the same day as the Egrets. Of those Great White Egrets flocks of 6 and 41 moved through Spurn the same day (18th), perhaps suggesting a more widescale movement taking place. Easy to say that the 6 were the same as those that flew over Upper Midhope? At least 2 remained at Rainham Marshes RSPB as the season drew to a close, a site that saw 2 Spoonbills drop out of the sky looking for somewhere to have a snooze.
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Great White Egret |
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Spotted Flycatcher |
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Pink-footed Geese |
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Spoonbills |
More average photos uploaded at 'Latest UK Bird Photos'. Please enjoy.