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Saturday, 6 May 2023

A slow start to the year

2023 promised a similar outlook of keeping it largely local, within 12 miles of home - it can be hard work but I enjoy it and it fits around family life!

It was a relatively slow start to the year, leading up towards spring. 

The best birding to be had was up in the flooded mid-Cherwell Valley near to Aynho. The highlight was finding my first Pink-Footed Goose for the area, with numbers of Greylags and Canadas - incidentally found while looking for the Brent Goose I'd seen before the new year! 



The mid-Cherwell was alive with over 2,000 Lapwings, a few Golden Plover and plenty of Wigeon, Gadwall, Teal & Pintail gracing the floods. Lapwings generally were in excellent numbers locally in general, close to Brackley and the Upper Cherwell too. Seemingly a big push in from the continent during recent cold snaps.



Elsewhere it was Geese that dominated the script too, as I managed to catch-up with the long-staying 1st-winter Brent Goose at Foxcote Reservoir, plus a relatively brief Egyptian Goose in the Upper Cherwell Valley.

A family trip to Stowe Gardens is always enjoyable, with relatively close quarter views of a range of wildfowl. A visit on 12/02 was no exception, including a pair of Goosander and the first signs of spring with plenty of Snowdrops out.






A few other pics from Jan-March:

Shelduck & Corvid roost at Bicester Wetland; 



A hungry Mistle Thrush & Little Egret from Brackley.



A wintery scene at Hinton Airfield  a handsome Carrion Crow from Grimsbury Res


Last of the summer migrants

As we moved through September and into October, summer visitors slowly thinned out and autumn began to take grip. The sound of Redwings seep...