Saturday 1 July 2023

No 15 What a confrontation.... A Great White Egret v Mr Fox

 

For a 3 hour walk at Attenborough gravel pits, the participants in the Library bird club walk on the 30th June, were well rewarded!!

For a start, walking up the ramp to the visitor centre, it was like Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds” being continuously buzzed by a huge number of hyper-active Swifts – sometimes passing no more than 3 feet away – phew!  Surprisingly, they were confined to the car park area, and not seen further afield.

They were noisy but not screaming.   I can get that around the city walls of Alcudia in Majorca.  In 4 weeks, they will be going back to Africa.    Oh, I do love that bird, it is well in my top 10.

The next good sighting, and I do mean sighting, was a Cuckoo. At the end of the Strand near the cricket club, we had to turn back due to a closed bridge, apparently due to being unsafe. Then we picked up the call of the cuckoo, repeated several times and becoming louder, so it was calling as it flew, until it landed in a nearby tree. Only a very short stop and it was on its way.  I’ve heard the memorable call several times this year, but to actually see the bird was brilliant. (Another one in my top 10!!)

Being continuously serenaded by Cetti warblers we next visited the empty bird watching tower hide. A large white head with an enormous orange beak, sticking out above the reeds was obviously a Great White Egret.  It was on the edge of a small stony island on which we then watched a handsome looking fox, with an edible kill of some sort.

As we watched, there was some sort of confrontation between the fox and the Egret, with a lot of  eyeballing going on, but when the Egret faced the fox and strongly flapped it’s wings, that was enough to end any dispute!

A nice dry morning walk, only 25 species, and the Cuckoo was undoubtedly BOD.  A pity that only two people enjoyed these memorable moments.

August walk?   To be decided but Willington Gravel Pits appearsto be a possibility, a venue that does have a good variety of birds and  is well watched, plus the possibility of Beavers!

Happy Birding

 

David