Time to add my latest year list: these were birds previously recorded:
Red throated diver, little grebe, great crested grebe, gannet, cormorant, bittern, grey heron, little egret, great egret, mute swan, greylag goose, canada goose, barnacle goose, brent goose, shelduck, mallard, gadwall, pintail, shoveler, wigeon, teal, pochard, tufted duck, long tailed duck, goldeneye, smew, marsh harrier, common buzzard, sparrow hawk, kestrel, merlin, red legged partridge, grey partridge, pheasant, moorhen, coot, oystercatcher, golden plover, lapwing, turnstone, dunlin, redshank, curlew, snipe, black headed gull, herring gull, caspian gull, common gull, lbbg, gbbg, kittiwake, guillemot, razorbill, stock dove, wood pigeon, collared dove, tawny owl, little owl, barn owl, green woodpecker, gsw, skylark, meadow pipit, pied wagtail, grey wagtail, wren, dunnock, robin, stonechat, mistle thrush, redwing, songthrush, fieldfare, blackbird, goldcrest, great tit, blue tit, long tailed tit, bearded reedling, nuthatch, treecreeper, magpie, jay, jackdaw, rook, carrion crow, starling, house sparrow, tree sparrow, chaffinch, linnet, goldfinch, greenfinch, bullfinch, reed bunting, yellowhammer, bewicks swan, whooper swan, red kite, pink footed goose, ringed plover, grey plover, black tailed godwit, bar tailed godwit, snow bunting, cettis warbler, siskin, lesser redpoll, kingfisher, coal tit, water rail, green sandpiper, knot, peregrine, ring necked parakeet, mandarin,red kite, chiffchaff, ruff, sandwich tern, med gull, red breasted merganser, reed warbler, water pipit, white wagtail, sand martin, raven, blackcap, garden warbler
To these 127 species I have added:
goldcrest (Little Hadham) willow warbler (Little Hadham) swallow (Little Hadham) wheatear (Little Hadham) house martin (Little Hadham) whitethroat (Little Hadham) cuckoo (Little Hadham) sedge warbler (Amwell) swift (Amwell) common tern (Rye Meads) lesser whitethroat (Little Hadham) little ringed plover (Amwell) common sandpiper (Minsmere) nightingale (Minsmere) nightjar (Minsmere) hobby (Puckeridge) yellow wagtail (Hadham Hall) stone curlew (Weeting Heath) spotted flycatcher (Hadham Hall)
146 species is pretty poor for July, but with several trips coming up, I hope to bump this up before Autumn visits to Norfolk propel the total towards 200+
Archive photo: February 2008 and 3 days at a science show in Poznan, Polnad. Spent time in Wielopolska National Park, wandering along the frozen river Warta. Saw middle spotted and black woodpecker, short toed tree creeper, great grey shrike, hen harrier, beaver dams, wild boar, row deer, hawfinch, crested larks etc.
A record of the wildlife in and around Hadham Ford as from January 2008. Please feel free to leave any comments or email me with details of interesting bird, mammal, butterfly, moth and dragonfly sightings. @jonoForgham on twitter
Sunday, 8 July 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
This is me
Caley Wood view
A walk along the Warta Valley, Poznan, Poland. Feb 2007
About Me
- Jono Forgham
- A primary school teacher for 30 years, I retired from teaching in July 2009 to set up my own science enhancement and communication company. The Primary Works offers science clubs, workshops and staged science shows nationwide. I have always been interested in bird watching since my early years. Apparently my first tick was after inquiring about a chaffinch and then receiving the Observer book of birds. By the age of 9 I had moved on to Tory Peterson's collins guide and was now involved on YOC birding holidays to Northumbria, Essex coast, Slimbridge and Yorkshire. My twitching rule is that I will willingly travel 1km for each gram the bird weighs. However, I have had many rarities just by being in the right place. I have travelled widely throughout Europe and also visited Australia and Sri Lanka. In 2016 I spent time at Portland Bird Obs and two trips to Aviero, Portugal. 2017 found me back in Sri Lanka in Feb/March, then July and back for New Year's Eve celebrations in December. Also returned to The Camargue in May for a 4 day trip. Few plans for 2018, but nothing yet booked apart from a trip to the IOW.
Grey heron
Southern Hawker
Juvenile green woodpecker (17.08.08)
common blue
Indian balsam (impatiens glandulifera)
azure damselfly
marbled white
ruddy darter
honeysuckle 19.07.08
cinnabar moth caterpillar
Bittersweet
male yellowhammer
common blue butterfly
River Ash
Common poppy (papaver rhoeas)
Caley Wood sunshine
Millenium Wood fox
common comfrey (symphytum officinale)
Garlic Mustard or Jack by the Hedge,(Alliara petiolata)
April showers
Caley Wood bluebells
Yellow Archangel
sunlight 16.04.08
snowy buds
Looking north west
Back Garden
Brick Kiln Hill
No play today
Teasel head
Reflections
Swollen River Ash
Daybreak over the chapel
Wild daffodils (narcissus pseudonarcissus)
January snowdrops
Good Moon
Village Green
Looking south before Hadham Ford
Useful sites
The following are some useful websites that may interest readers of this blog.
Firstly, Bishop's Stortford Natural History Society http://bsnhs.webplus.net/
Firstly, Bishop's Stortford Natural History Society http://bsnhs.webplus.net/
Fellow birder, Gary Whelan's blog. Gives reports from our trips out together plus reports from his trips abroad. http://hairybirders.blogspot.co.uk
http://www.hertsbirdclub.org.uk/ The official herts bird club website. Frequently updated, listing bird sightings around the county. Offers links to many other websites. Both of these sites also offer links to yahoo discussion groups.
http://www.birdforum.net/ An international site. You can enter as a guest but become a member( free) to post comments, bird sightings and just about anything to do with wild birds. Good news updates, classified section for binoculars, cameras etc.
http://www.guidedbirdwatching.com/ A new site set up where you can contact people worldwide who will help you find good birds in their country. UK section being set up presently.
http://www.britainsbirder.co.uk/
Fellow birders blog. Strtford resident, Graeme Smith regulary birds the area south of Stortford as well as around Spellbrook and the River Stort from Spellbrook to Twyford Locks. Some superb bird photography: Graeme uses a digital camera attached to his powerful telescope to get detailled images of the birds he sees. Well worth a browse.
Two local sites that may be of interest can be found at
http://www.thehadhams.com/ www.thepelhams.net/content/section/12/139/
http://www.hertsbirdclub.org.uk/ The official herts bird club website. Frequently updated, listing bird sightings around the county. Offers links to many other websites. Both of these sites also offer links to yahoo discussion groups.
http://www.birdforum.net/ An international site. You can enter as a guest but become a member( free) to post comments, bird sightings and just about anything to do with wild birds. Good news updates, classified section for binoculars, cameras etc.
http://www.guidedbirdwatching.com/ A new site set up where you can contact people worldwide who will help you find good birds in their country. UK section being set up presently.
http://www.britainsbirder.co.uk/
Fellow birders blog. Strtford resident, Graeme Smith regulary birds the area south of Stortford as well as around Spellbrook and the River Stort from Spellbrook to Twyford Locks. Some superb bird photography: Graeme uses a digital camera attached to his powerful telescope to get detailled images of the birds he sees. Well worth a browse.
Two local sites that may be of interest can be found at
http://www.thehadhams.com/ www.thepelhams.net/content/section/12/139/
No comments:
Post a Comment