Sunday, 18 January 2026

Local Birding

I headed out on Monday 12th January to The Plym for a look about, catching the bus to Laira Bridge and walking up to the sewage farm near Marsh Mills before returning back to the Bridge. It was an overcast and mild morning with mizzle at times and there were relatively few people around after all the Christmas crowds.

It was coming up to high tide as I started my walk and I was pleased to find the very smart looking drake Goldeneye still present on the river off the Rowing Club. A pair of Red-breasted Mergansers nearby were looking equally as smart but a Great Northern Diver was very mobile and elusive and only gave brief and distant views between dives.

Blaxton Meadow actually had a bit more water on it than of late, I had assumed that the sluice gates were blocked again but the National Trust has plans to revert the Meadow back to saltmarsh and has closed the sluice gates to prevent water flooding in. The vegetation along the retaining wall has been removed too, the wall is in a bad state of repair and the vegetation has been cleared for surveying work to be undertaken. Whatever the plans are for the Meadow it is having a detrimental effect on the birdlife currently using it which is a massive shame and a little bit irresponsible on the part of the National Trust.

Anyway, at least today with the slightly higher water levels on the Meadow there were good numbers of Dunlin and Redshank roosting on the high tide along with Curlew and Oystercatcher and a good sized flock of Gulls which included quite a few Common Gulls, mostly adults, and an adult Lesser Black-backed Gull.

Dunlin and Redshank, Blaxton Meadow

At the Wet Wood a Treecreeper was a good sighting although I quickly lost track of it spiralling up the trees while another good sighting was of a Mistle Thrush which noisely flew into a treetop. Redwings were vocal but skulky here too and I had a brief view of a Grey Wagtail before it flew off.

We had a walk around Plymouth Hoe on Tuesday 13th January and again it was quieter now that the Christmas crowds have dissipated. A single Purple Sandpiper was playing hide-and-seek on the rocks at Rusty Anchor where 2 Dunlin were much more obliging although the Black Redstart nearby was a no show for me.

Purple Sandpiper

Dunlin

We had our post-Christmas walk around Burrator Reservoir on Wednesday 14th January, a little bit late but better late than never, and we very luckily completed our circuit before yet more mizzle arrived. It wasn't too busy with people and cars but there wasn't much in the way of birds either as seems to be the norm in the winter for here these days. The highlights were 2 Raven soaring high overhead, a hovering female Kestrel, an adult Lesser Black-backed Gull amongst the Herring Gulls roosting on the buoys, a pair of skulky Bullfinch and 4 Mistle Thrush (1 heard, 3 seen). The 2 white farmyard Geese were also still present amongst the Mallards and keeping themselves apart as usual.

Burrator Reservoir Dam

Thursday 15th January was forecasted to be a wet day so plans were made for a quiet day at home, however it wasn't that bad in the morning so we headed out to Wembury for a quick walk. It was a bit mizzley at times and apart from the very muddy path at The Point it was a pleasant walk and mostly dog and people free.

Mizzley Wembury

The highlights were a Grey Plover and a Kingfisher out on the rocks on the incoming tide, both are uncommon visitors to Wembury so I was pleased to find them. Also along the beach were 2 Redshank, around 40 Turnstone, 2 Little Egret, a Curlew, 3 Mallard (2 male), Oystercatchers and a Grey Wagtail along with the usual Pied Wagtails, Rock Pipits and Meadow Pipits.

Grey Plover

I met up with Mavis for a low tide lookabout off Torpoint on Friday 16th January, it was a neap tide so there wasn't much mud on show and the sunshine and keen breeze meant for difficult viewing conditions but we did find 4 distant Black-necked Grebes out on the water. Great Crested Grebes and at least 2 Little Grebes were also present along with the usual estuary birds but it soon started to feel cold and so we called it a day and headed home. 

Monday, 12 January 2026

A Kentish Plover - in Somerset

With Russian White-fronted Geese and Tundra Bean Geese being reported at Slimbridge I started to plan a visit there for Saturday 10th January, however with the arrival of Storm Goretti on Thursday 8th January causing chaos with train services across the country along with the arrival of a nasty COVID-like cold making me feel quite crappy my plans were unfortunately shelved.

I'm not sure what my cold was all about, I had one at Twixtmas although it never really got going and quickly fizzled out but this one was a different beast. It started at 5am on the Thursday morning with constant sneezing which felt like hay-fever or some other kind of allergic reaction and just like my first experience with COVID back in 2022. As the day wore on it got worse and I felt achey and shivery, I did a COVID test using the last one from my NHS working days and it was negative although the test was 2 years out of date and probably not sensitive to current COVID strains in what is now a very mutated virus. I still felt crap the next day (Friday 9th) yet by the evening I felt OK, just tired and foggy headed, and the snotty nose and sneezing had stopped. By the Saturday I felt fine and the trains post Storm Goretti were also running pretty much to schedule too so a trip to Slimbridge would have been do-able but never mind.

I still had a hankering for a further-afield birding day out though and with a Kentish Plover overwintering again at Burnham-on-sea in Somerset for its 7th winter I decided to finally go and have a look for it although it can be a very tricky bird to catch up with. Being a Saturday I could use my Railcard at any time and so I paid just £29.75 for a return ticket using the Split Ticketing website instead of paying the full £49.30 ticket price while catching exactly the same trains - ridiculous!

I have visited Burnham-on-sea just once before way back in December 2020 to see, of all things, a Russian White-fronted Goose and a Tundra Bean Goose which were associating with a flock of Greylag Geese at Apex Park, both juvenile birds of unknown provenance and ridiculously tame. The Kentish Plover had also been present on the nearby beach that day too but instead of going to look for it I decided to head back to Exeter to try and see a Dusky Warbler there and which I failed miserably to do.

Tundra Bean Goose and Russian White-fronted Goose, December 2020

Tundra Bean Goose and Russian White-fronted Goose at Apex Park, Burnham-on-sea, December 2020

Anyway, back to January 2026 and it was a cold and icy morning as I caught the 6:27am train from Plymouth but as the sun rose it became a beautiful and sunny, wintery day. The trains all ran smoothly and I arrived at Highbridge & Burnham train station at around 8:15am to start my walk along the River Brue towards the sea wall at Burnham-on-sea where the Kentish Plover is frequently seen along the beach.

The River Brue heading towards the beach at Burnham-on-sea - mobile phone shot

The Beach at Burnham-on-sea

On arriving at the seafront a report came through on Birdguides that the Kentish Plover was present and after a good lookabout I eventually found it roosting along the shoreline with Ringed Plovers where it gave some wonderful views (and what Doughnut had forgotten his camera today?!). It's a female bird sporting assorted leg bling after being ringed in Germany in 2021 and only my second ever sighting of one in the UK after a distant, heat-hazy view of a male at Minsmere in May 1981!

Kentish Plover with Ringed Plovers, 10/1/26 - photo courtesy of @paganbirder on Bluesky

Kentish Plover, 10/1/26 - photo courtesy of @paganbirder on Bluesky

As the tide headed in the Plovers moved closer up the beach towards the sea wall and the Kentish Plover showed beautifully, it was a nervous looking, crouchy bird but it did stay on the beach when most of the Ringed Plovers had flown off until it eventually left too.

Other sightings of note on my visit were 2 Sanderling, Lapwing, Golden Plover, 6 Avocet, Wigeon, Teal, Dunlin, Redshank, Curlew, Oystercatcher, a female Reed Bunting, Linnet and Collared Dove and with the Kentish Plover in the bag and it being such a glorious and calm day I decided to head home and stop off along the way at Dawlish Warren for a walkabout and a look for Divers offshore.

On arriving at Dawlish Warren the sea looked flat calm but there was a little swell which was especially noticeable further out as birds on the sea bobbed up and down and disappeared and then reappeared. I scanned about from the Lifeguard Hut and there were good numbers of Great Crested Grebe scattered across the Bay, most were further out with just a few closer in. Eventually I found some Divers with at least 2 Great Northern Divers and 3 Red-throated Divers seen but they were very mobile and spent little time at the surface. A Guillemot and 3 Common Scoter were also picked up along with a Grey Seal moving west close inshore and at least 2 Common Dolphin moving east distantly offshore.

The View from the Lifeguard Hut towards Exmouth


Dawlish Warren Pronenade towards Exmouth

The water levels were high at the Main Pond but there was a Snipe feeding on the mud amongst the reeds and a female and 2 male Shovelers feeding out on the water. A look at the Estuary from the Dune Ridge revealed the usual birds with a single Grey Plover out on the mudflats bringing my tally of Plover species for the day up to 5. The best though was a Slavonian Grebe in the main river channel, busily diving away and moving upstream, distant but very distinctive in the strong sunshine.

The Main Pond, Dawlish Warren

It was soon time to head back to Plymouth but it had been a very good birding day out and I was very lucky to have seen the Kentish Plover so well and on my first visit too, many birders have had to visit multiple times to eventually catch an often distant sight of it - the Birding Gods certainly smiled on me today.