Category: Fauna


Butterflies

06 Jun 2015
Quite a few butterflies out on the seawalls this afternoon when it warmed up: common blue, small heath, painted lady and red admiral all on the seawall leading to East Lane. And ther were two singing corn buntings near the Martello half-way and, interestingly, a pair of avocets prospecting the pools.
Jeremy

Little Terns

28 May 2015
Two little terns fishing off point and along our shoreline, but no sign of them using the cordoned-off area at this point. I suspect they will be perverse and try outside it again.
Jeremy

Barn owl

27 May 2015
Barn owl hunting in the evening over the fields. A welcome return since they've been less regular in recent months and I gather they have been suffering regionally as a result of a cold spring last year and a downturn in the rodent populations on which they depend. This tends to be a cyclical process so let's hope they will be breeding again here soon.
Jeremy

Corn buntings

26 May 2015
Back in SS now and took a walk to see if the corn buntings were back by the sea-wall walk to East Lane. I was worried about this small, precious colony after the sea walls were stripped of their bushes last year. To my relief I heard one singing, half way along. Will hope to relocate the others in the next week or so. Glad to see that the sheep have been moved back into the usual fields now too – they were trampling some of our best habitat in the area between the dykes. Threats on all sides ...
Jeremy

First swift

06 May 2015
If you look at my article on migrant dates on the website you'll see that I nominate 7 May as the day to look out for the first swift. In fact I saw one on 6 May, beating low over the fields on a most unsummery day of huge SW winds and rain. Clearly eager not to be unpunctual.
Jeremy

Ichneumon

05 May 2015
Susanne Horncastle sent me this picture of a beautiful insect in her kitchen. It's an unusual species, an ichneumon wasp, beautiful to look at though it does have some nasty habits. The ichneumon injects its eggs into a host (usually a caterpillar) and the grubs then develop inside the unfortunate creature and eat it from within. Nature is like that sometimes.
Jeremy

Shingle Street bird song

I’ve been keeping records of which birds are singing in which weeks for the last dozen or so years at Shingle Street and a clear pattern has emerged. I’m attaching a little chart illustrating this, which you could check to see what you should be particularly listening out for at any time of the year. I’ve only included those birds that sing regularly here and their usual song-periods. There are lots of exceptions involving birds just passing through, rare visitors or residents occasionally singing at untypical times. I have notes on all these if anyone is interested, but for the sake of simplicity have not incorporated them into this table.
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Hare

30 April 2015
I saw a hare, less than full size, on the beach infront of Coast House, this am. It was coursing, its nose to the ground. It saw an approaching dog and 'hared' off towards the sea.
Celia

Dates for summer migrants

Every spring and summer migrant birds return to Britain to breed, having made the long and perilous journey from their winter quarters in Africa. These annual movements are part of the deep rhythms of the natural world and from time immemorial they have served humankind as markers of the year’s seasons.
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Cuckoo

24 Apr 2015
At 8pm I heard my first cuckoo calling in the meadows west of Shingle Street. The wind had changed today and it felt much warmer. More swallows. Heard a lesser whitethroat in the gorse bushes
Celia