I walked out to the Joist Fen Viewpoint where common cranes are often seen but I was out of luck today but I did see a pair of tufted duck, 2 pairs of marsh harriers, 2 oystercatchers, chuntering reed warblers, swifts, swallows, house martins and 6 distant common terns. At least 5 hobbies were dashing around the reed beds catching insects despite the chilly breeze with 1 bird perching up in a tree right by the footpath and making sorties right over my head - I thought it may have been curious about me but more likely it was catching insects I was disturbing from the footpath as I was walking along but I had some amazing views of it.
Hobby, Lakenheath Fen
Hobby
Hobby
Hobby
Hobby
Back at the visitors centre I had a closer view of a common tern flying over a lake and a flyby cuckoo along with a kingfisher and a stoat, both of which Mum and David had been watching while drinking hot chocolates.
Kingfisher
Warblers were seen and heard - willow, Cettis, reed and sedge warblers and whitethroat, chiffchaff and blackcap - with greylag goose, a spotted flycatcher, a little grebe with a chick, 2 hobbies dashing around over the reeds, a male marsh harrier quartering over the reed bed ( a pair are nesting here this year) and a red kite flying over being mobbed by a carrion crow also being seen. There was no sight or sound of any turtle doves despite 2 pairs breeding here this year but I did flush a red legged partridge from the surrounding fields as well as startling a muntjac deer and a small herd of fallow deer. A burnet companion was a surprise find and holly blue, orange tip, brimstone, peacock, speckled wood and green veined white were also noted along with a male broad bodied chased, hairy dragonfly, large red damselfly and blue damselfly species.
Muntjac Deer, Fowlmere
Burnet Companion
Large Red Damselfly
Blue Damselfly
Hairy Dragonfly
Corn Bunting
David duly arrived and had found an angleshades in the back of the car which I photographed before releasing into the hedgerow and we drove on to Aylesbury, seeing red kites soaring over the town buildings as we arrived at our hotel.
Angleshades
We stayed at The Bell, a Wetherspoons hotel which was actually very nice but it was a little strange eating breakfast by the bar while various assorted gentleman knocked back pints at 9 o'clock in the morning. After breakfast we drove to Waddeson Manor, a National Trust house and estate once owned by the Rothschilds that David wanted to visit. The grounds and gardens and house looked stunning in the beautiful sunshine but the house interior, while interesting, was for me a little soulless and staged.
Waddeson Manor
Red kites were regularly seen soaring overhead as we wandered around the garden and I also saw holly blues, mistle thrushes and a "singing" spotted flycatcher high in a copper beech tree.
Red Kite
Red Kite
Red Kite
The drive back to Devon was ok with a traffic snarl around Oxford made more bearable by watching red kites flying over and 2 hares in a field and we eventually arrived back in Plymouth having had a great time away.
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