Monday 21 March 2016

Ruby, ruby!


Back in mid-January, I mentioned the Siberian Rubythroat which had just been found in a Dutch garden, atttracting hundreds of admirers on its first day alone, all of whom had to file through the garden owner's living room to see the bird!  Amazingly, but no doubt thanks to its daily helping of mealworms offered by the locals, the bird is still there.  After two months of deliberation, therefore, and failing to convince myself that I could afford or even wanted to to make such a long trip for just one lifer, I finally had a weekend planned in Amsterdam and got to do my own pilgrimage to Hoogwoud, North-Holland.  As you can see, I did get to see this northern jewel of a bird but it was by no means easy.  After about 45 minutes of waiting, I detached myself from the small group of people, including some who had driven all the way from Hamburg and England, at one of its favourite patches of bushes to check out the second patch just around the corner and there it was, sitting up and scolding at an intruding cat.  I had time to fire off just three pictures, before it dropped down into the bushes and out of sight.  I quickly summoned the others and most people got very brief views of it skulking around in the undergrowth but it never showed like this again the whole time I was there.  I would have liked to have been able to admire it a little longer but I was very pleased with the above photo, the red berries almost mirroring the colour of the ruby's throat.

Friday 11 March 2016

Less(er) is more

Wednesday was a big day for crane migration so I had planned to go to the Ardennes yesterday to try and see some.  The SNCB's inability to run trains on time put paid to that idea, however, so I ended up 'just' doing another tour of my Brussels patch instead.  It started out very well, though, with a male Lesser Spotted Woodpecker drumming and calling.  I've been going to this site about once a month on average for the past 15 years and this is the first time I've seen one there, although I did think I heard one calling about a year ago.  Great Spotted were also very active and I completed the spotted trio (a very rare occurrence!) with a Middle Spotted calling constantly.  I relocated the Bittern, watched a Firecrest singing, and ended up with a total of 50 species without a single spring migrant, not even a Chiffchaff, the first of which should be here by now.

Monday 7 March 2016

March on fire

This month has started very much in the same vein as February, with plenty of grey and wet days, especially whenever I'm not working!  As a result, I've not been out birding but I did have a nice surprise this morning when I looked out my window to see a male Firecrest foraging in the tree opposite.  A new bird for my flat/balcony list closely followed by another one, a singing Dunnock, taking the total to 42 species in the six months I've been here.  I have, however, committed myself to surveying a 50-hectare section of the Sonian Forest as part of an effort to map all the breeding woodpeckers in the Brussels region, so that will keep me busy as soon as the weather allows me to go out and look for them.