A willow warbler, blackcap and chiffchaff were singing away as we arrived at the RSPB Ham Wall car park at just after 9am starting things off nicely. We headed out to Noahs Hide on Shapwick Heath first and along the way we heard reed warblers and garden warblers singing with a songflighting whitethroat showing well as it snaffled down a huge earthworm.
From the hide we picked out a pair of gadwall, 2 greylag geese, great crested grebes, tufted ducks and a male pochard amongst the coots, mallards and mute swans. More unusual fare were a flyover female marsh harrier, up to 7 hobbies swooping around together high over the trees and the occassional flyover great white egret along with booming bitterns, a feeding great white egret on a pool close to the path and 2 little ringed plovers feeding out on the mud - quite magical.
Great White Egret
Great White Egret
Large Red Damselfly
Blue Sp. Damselfly
Great White Egret
Great White Egret
Great White Egret with Mute Swan
Great White Egret
Great White Egret
Great White Egret
Great White Egret
A pair of marsh harriers danced over the reeds and a pair of bitterns showed well if distantly as they chased each other around before disappearing back into cover. A male garganey was a nice find as it fed out in the open but it soon disappeared back into cover and there were more gadwall, pochard and tufted duck seen plus 2 young great crested with their parents, 1 small one on its parents back and a larger one following its parent across the water while begging for food.
Garganey - record shot
Pochard
Pochard
Pochard
Mute Swan
Garden Warbler
No comments:
Post a Comment