December 2021, Winter 2021/2022

Thursday 30th December 2021

I met up with Dimitri at 8am, we started with some sea watching from Mary Monts. Two Ravens cronked overhead as we set up and there were four or more Great Crested Grebes strung out along Warren Shore. A Razorbill was close in, now a regular sight this winter.

The highlight was four dapper Slavonian Grebes in a very compact group, it was brilliant to see four birds so close together.

Slavonian Grebes

A male Red-breasted Merganser flew west and then two females lingered for most of the day out from Mary Monts. Also heading west were several Eider.

male Eider photo by Ian Williamson

After a lull in sea activity we headed over to the hides and as we emerged from the Main Hedge there were three White-tailed Eagles on the ground in the flooded fields. Despite their captive origins they don’t seem accustomed to humans and they had flown before we had even got to the Viewing Gate.

White-tailed Eagles photo by Brian Fairbrother

On De L’Orne Scrape there were 51 Black-tailed Godwit. This is very similar to my previous highest winter count which was 52 on 17th December 2020 (Exbury Fields). This suggests that a population of around 50 birds winter here.

Black-tailed Godwit

Three Greenshank were active and regularly flying around the scrape, this is the first time I’ve seen more than two during any winter count (December and January). The Spoonbill group which has settled at a consistent fourteen were again on show here, all of them asleep.

Spoonbill

On the walk back along the hedge I always scan the fields carefully, particularly to the west, for a possible Water Pipit but again no luck. In fact pipits of any species are very difficult to pick out in the long grass. There were 19 Pied Wagtails on the damp parts of Wedge Field.  My high counts of this species this year (19, 20 and 25) have all been in these three adjacent fields – Wedge Field, Middle Field and Droveway East.

Pied Wagtail photo by David Cuddon

At the Sailing Club a vocal Rock Pipit was calling from the roof of the Warden’s Hut and in the distance a Pale-bellied Brent Goose was roosting on Inchmery Saltmarsh. Even at this distance, perhaps a kilometer, the angle allows you to see the pale central underbelly which makes the black breast stand out.

Pale-bellied Brent Goose

What I believe is the same individual was then picked up by Dimitri as we sea watched for a second time from Mary Monts. Really nice to get some flight photos, you can really see the strong contrast between chest and belly and the much paler area around and behind where the legs would be. These areas can be difficult to see well when the geese are grazing.

Pale-bellied Brent Goose
December 2021, Winter 2021/2022

Sunday 26th December 2021

A small number of Brent Geese were fairly close in shore on a flat calm sea out from Mary Monts. With swimming Brents it’s harder to be certain but I think this is a well-marked Dark-bellied Brent Goose as opposed to a Pale-bellied Brent.

Dark-bellied Brent Goose

A large group of 40 Cormorants flew over Mary Monts Pools as I started sea watching, this is my biggest count on the reserve, they had probably roosted around Venner. I spent 30 minutes sea watching, it was flat calm but visibility was poor with sea mist and my scope eyepiece was constantly steaming up. I watched 10 Eider appear from the Lepe direction although they landed before they were close.

Although Needs Ore and Hampshire aren’t great for large gulls I regularly keep an eye out for Yellow-legged Gulls and so I often photograph flying Herring Gulls. On this wing tip photo you can see the long grey tongue on the eighth primary (P8) and the tiny black mark on P5, these are typical Herring Gull features. Yellow-legged Gull shows a more extensive black triangular wing tip with a very short grey tongue on P8 and a much more extensive black bar on P5.

Herring Gull

Looking over my shoulder to check whether there was any activity behind me a silent Dartford Warbler flew around the back of the sea watching bush. I managed a photo. The spiky tail feathers, worn primaries, dull brownish iris and dull brown orbital ring all make me think this is a 1st year bird. Another two Dartford Warblers soon joined it.

1st winter Dartford Warbler

With little happening on the sea I headed to the hides. As I arrived at the Viewing Gate a flock of waders appeared out of the mist from the Black Water direction. They were Golden Plover and one or two of them called but only briefly as they went overhead. They tacked back around to Black Water and appeared to land on the Gins.

Golden Plover calling overhead

I later saw them on De L’Orne Scrape and I was better able to count them, there were 71 which is my highest count at Needs Ore. There were also 404 Lapwing on the scrape and a single Spoonbill. Lapwing numbers are certainly lower than recent years.

Golden Plover

Also at De L’Orne a Water Rail squealed from the left hand side of the hide and then appeared briefly at the water’s edge.

Water Rail photo by Brian Fairbrother

On Black Water there had been an arrival of Tufted Duck with seven males and five females. Also a single female Pochard and the resident female Scaup completed the diving duck group. Otherwise it was good numbers of Teal, Shoveler, Mallard and Gadwall.

Tufted Duck males

A male Great Spotted Woodpecker was working its way along the oaks opposite the Shore Hide car park.  

male Great Spotted Woodpecker

After a brief stop at a very misty Sailing Club I walked the old spit to the cottages, around Thrift Corner and then back to the Sailing Club. I then decided to head back to Mary Mont’s just as the sun finally broke through and suddenly all the morning mist started to evaporate. I decided to walk the spit. 

Out to sea I picked up two distant grebes and in the bright sun their cheeks gleamed white. This was my first double count of Slavonian Grebe this winter. They gradually swam closer and although the light was harsh it was nice to get some closer photos. They stayed very close together throughout. 

Slavonian Grebes

As I was watching the Slavonian Grebes drifting towards me I noticed a silhouetted sawbill and assumed it was a Red-breasted Merganser. A few seconds later I took another look and this time thought the chunky profile looked more like Goosander. As at moved out of the line of the sun I could see more detail and it was indeed a female Goosander, maybe even the bird had I seen with Ian at Park Shore on the 28th November.

female Goosander

Three Red-necked Grebes had been reported together on Thursday at close range inside the river from the Sailing Club. There was no sign today although the mist had closed in and from the Sailing Club I couldn’t see the other side of the river! Out on the sea I did see a couple of scruffy and dusky looking very distant Great Crested Grebes which were worth a closer luck. Even at this long range, however, a Red-necked Grebe would show a dusky grey neck front framed by white cheeks and chest. Also a much shorter neck and less of a horned appearance.

The wintering Purple Sandpiper was still showing very nicely on the muddy fringe directly out from the cottages.

1st winter Purple Sandpiper photo by Brian Fairbrother

While walking back along the spit a male Marsh Harrier headed over the saltmarsh drifting further inland. It was clearly a male although not a full adult given the browner underwings.

sub-adult male Marsh Harrier

The Teal and Wigeon lifted up from the bay just east of Teal Point. A few seconds later I picked up the immature female Peregrine powering along the beach. You can see the pale edgings to the brown upperparts and although not visible in this photo it showed pale nape patches and streaking (as opposed to barring) on the underparts. In the last few weeks the only Peregrine I’ve seen at Needs Ore has been this young bird. 

immature female Peregrine

An unexpected Peacock showed briefly in sunny conditions on Wheatear Corner and a Siskin called overhead as I stopped at the Reedy Ditch.

Peacock
December 2021, Winter 2021/2022

Wednesday 22nd December 2021

Amazing to see a White-tailed Eagle in the tree next to the Crop Strip field as I drove along Warren Lane, definitely the closest I’ve been. It flew away almost as I was underneath mobbed by several Jackdaws. I later saw three White-tailed Eagles roosting in the trees at the back of Long Pits.

Lots of Redwing again today, a very tricky bird to photograph as they always seem so keen to keep moving. No Fieldfare again today.

Redwing

As I headed over towards Mary Monts six Barnacle Geese flew over Pullen and on towards Black Water.

I met up with Ian at just after 8am to do some sea watching. Highlights were four Guillemot including a group of three together on the sea, 2 Common Scoter heading east, a single Red-throated Diver and a Razorbill. Last winter I didn’t see any Razorbills at all but this winter so far I’ve recorded 28 bird days!   

We headed to the hides and chased 10 Bullfinch along the main hedge, this is the best location on the reserve for this species and it is my highest count at Needs Ore.

Kestrel photo by Brian Fairbrother

From Venner hide there were 60 Curlew and three Black-tailed Godwit feeding on Wigeon Fields. The Scaup was still on Black Water and a skittish Grey Heron lifted up from one of the new islands out from the NFOC hide.

Grey Heron

On De L’Orne Scrape there were now 13 Avocet. This is a typical count and location for Avocet, there were 14 here in December last year. Numbers grew to 21 by early March, also feeding along the edge of the river. A further increase in numbers came in April with 37 on Great Marsh.   

In the distance over Inchmery Saltmarsh a group of around 100 Lapwing headed our way, a smaller wader was on the right flank, a Golden Plover, it peeled away and dropped down on to the saltmarsh. At high tide at least one Bar-tailed Godwit was amongst the Grey Plover and Dunlin. The juvenile female Peregrine was again on show, this time on the Inchmery side of the river in a dead tree.

After lunch we headed over to Park Shore. From the viewpoint at the top of Park Lane there were 800 Brent Geese and amongst them was the Pale-bellied Brent Goose again. Probably not as well marked as the two birds that wintered here last year.

Pale-bellied Brent Goose (middle bird)

The two Cattle Egrets were still around Park Farm.

Cattle Egrets

From Park Shore there was little on the sea other than a 1st winter Red-throated Diver heading east and a male Eider heading west. There are good numbers of Red-throated Diver in this part of the Solent this winter but I’m still to see a Great Northern Diver, I’d recorded four by this time last year.

No sign of the Russian White-fronted Geese today and no-one reported them yesterday either, perhaps they were just moving through.

December 2021, Winter 2021/2022

Monday 20th December 2021

I stopped at the Reedy Ditch layby hoping that I might bump into a Hawfinch again but no luck. It was cold and wintery and the trees were full of Redwing ‘bok’ calls and the more familiar high pitched plaintiff ‘tzeee’, there were at least 40 moving through.

Next stop was the Sailing Club where a pair of Red-breasted Mergansers were loitering in the river mouth and the juvenile female Peregrine was sat on a post on Gull Island again. Looking towards the Yacht Club 12 Avocet were feeding along the river edge, I later saw the same group feeding just over the sea wall on De L’Orne Scrape.

Looking offshore 5 Red-throated Divers included birds on the sea and also in flight. A Razorbill also headed west and there were another nine Red-breasted Mergansers heading east.

It was great to see a Shag on the sea. Compared to the much commoner Cormorants it was significantly blacker, with a shorter body above the water, a flash of yellow around the gape and a white chin. Nice to see it dive with an amazingly athletic leap before entering the water almost vertically.

On the saltmarsh 31 Cormorants, many with wings outspread, was my highest count at Needs Ore. They were strung out in a long line and then peeled away in small groups as the water levels rose.

40 Canada Geese were resting in the Middle Field and I quickly realised that there were six Russian White-fronted Geese with them! There were four adults and two 1st winters. It’s nice to think that maybe two of these adults are returning birds from last year. The four birds that over-wintered last year tended to associate with the Greylags. I first saw them on the 19th December 2020, a very similar arrival date.

Russian White-fronted Geese, four adults and two 1st winters (one partly hidden)
Russian White-fronted Geese, four adults
Russian White-fronted Geese, three adults
Russian White-fronted Geese, four adults and two 1st winters (one partly hidden)
Russian White-fronted Geese, three adults and a 1st winter

On De L’Orne Scrape a Kingfisher flitted between fence posts and 30 Shelduck was a good count. A Great Black-backed Gull rested with the Shelduck and the wintering Greenshank fed with a handful of Redshank.

male Kingfisher photo by David Cuddon

A Little Egret walked along in front of the hide, an area that Adam has cleared and cut short to attract grazing dabbling ducks. I’m hoping it might also attract a Water Pipit.

Little Egret
Pheasant

Around Black Water a pair of Magpies was slightly unusual, the female Scaup was still around. The bleating of the Teal, the constant ‘crecking’ of Gadwall and the occasional Wigeon whistle provides the sound track here.

Magpie

Around Venner Island there were a handful of Pintail, three Pochard, a Tufted Duck and at least 6 Black-tailed Godwit feeding with the Curlew on Wigeon Fields.

Pintail

In the hide Adam and I watched an amazing interaction between a female Marsh Harrier and a Brown Hare. The two were within 2 feet of each, staring. The Brown Hare barely moved the whole time while the Marsh Harrier rotated its head inquisitively leaning back and forward trying to work out what was going on. Eventually the Marsh Harrier jumped into the air leap-frogging the Brown Hare, the Brown Hare dashed away soon afterwards and the Marsh Harrier followed half-heartedly finally realizing it was too large a prey item.

Marsh Harrier and Brown Hare

A sea watch from Mary Monts produced a Guillemot and a Razorbill, four more Red-breasted Mergansers and an obliging Turnstone which I think is an adult as there is no moult contrast in the coverts which all look like adult type feathers lacking the neat buff fringe of retained juvenile feathers. Having said that the coverts all look worn which you wouldn’t expect if they were newly moulted adult feathers, lots to learn.

Turnstone

There has been a Red-necked Grebe at Pennington and one or two Long-tailed Ducks near Hill Head, I’ll cross my fingers and keep watching the sea!