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Thursday 18 September 2008

My Garden on 18th September 2008

Every year for the past four years, we have been fortunate to have a Grey Wagtail visit our garden, where we have a pond. When this bird arrives, it usually stays for several weeks, visiting several times each day. Today the bird is back for our first sighting this end of the year, making my week for me !! I guess that it is not necessarily the same bird each year - two years ago there was an adult with a youngster.
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Shustoke Reservoir on 12th September 2008

This day I went to Shustoke to see the Grey Phalarope that had been there for several days. It had been there the previous evening, but had gone by early morning when I arrived !!! In spite of the very dull morning and occasional drizzle, I contented myself with photographing the charming juvenile Swallows that were flying around and sitting on the fence by the car park. They do look exceedingly grumpy head-on, don't they !!
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Wednesday 17 September 2008

To Bosnia from 30th August to 7th September

At the end of August I did another of my brief spells of working abroad as a tour guide for a Hungarian company. This entailed taking a group over to Budapest, Hungary, and then taking a special train through Hungary and Croatia to Bosnia where a week was spent looking at railways (mainly industrial) before returning to Budapest via Croatia again. This particular tour left me with very little free time to look for birds and other wildlife, but I found that birds in Bosnia were a little thin on the ground to say the least, leading one other birder on the tour to speculate that maybe the wildlife had all been eaten by desperate people during the war.

One aspect that was rather limiting, as far as birding is concerned, was the warning that one should not stray from roads and made-up paths because of residual land-mines. Our local guide reckoned that there were still in excess of 5 million land-mines in Bosnia.

On arrival in Budapest I had a free afternoon and asked a local colleague if he had any recommendations for a nice countrified place for me to go and find some birds. He told me of a lake at the end of a tram line where he had seen many "big birds". In the event, this turned out to be little more than an elongated duck pond with water that stank, but which was lined with fishermen who seemed to be taking their catches home for tea. Other than some (dubious) Mallards, I saw only Tree Sparrows ! However, the insect life proved to be relatively interesting - a trend that continued throughout the tour. There were, however, a few treats in store birdwise during the tour.

These are the insects from Saturday 30th August:-

Great Banded Grayling

Beetles on wild hop plant

Bee mimicking a Hornet

The following day we took the train through Croatia to Bosnia. En-route we saw a few birds, including two flocks of Great Egrets. Some of my photos (one of which is below) showed two darker birds which I had not spotted when taking the photos. Suggestions from 'Birdguides' have included Glossy Ibis, Black Stork, Purple Heron - and a joker who suggested Black Heron and then Black Egret !!!!
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A visit to the railway of a coal mine (entirely worked by steam engines) at Bukinje, Bosnia, on 1st September resulted in several insects, a lizard, and a Black Redstart (not successfully photographed) being seen.

Unidentified moth at Bukinje

Cricket at Bukinje

Probable Green Lizard (juvenile) at Bukinje

We then moved on to the railway complex at Banovici (again using steam engines).
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Large Skipper at Banovici

Black Redstart at Banovici

The next morning (2nd September), after an early breakfast, I had a stroll round the undeveloped land round our hotel. This was not without some concerns for safety. However, I did see Whinchat and Stonechat (shown below) both of which were wrongly positioned for the sun - but I was not going to leave the path to try and go round them !!!


Whinchat (juvenile)
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Stonechat

Later in the day, I stopped to photograph a Hooded Crow (below) which was on a railway platform (huge numbers of Hooded Crow seen during the trip).

We overnighted in Zenica at a hotel next to the river, owned by the local steelworks. I took an early breakfast so that I could have a walk by the river. The river was full of junk, but a 'local' stopped me to tell me how, now that the river was clean, there were "so much birds". I must say that I was surprised to find several Little Grebe, and even a Kingfisher (as well as numerous Mallards), so I supect that the water was relatively clean.

After breakfast, we went to the Zenica steel works for a visit (they still use steam engines). Here I saw several Whinchats from the bus. As we left the bus, a Kestrel flew off the tall building beside the bus and headed out of sight, but on a decending path. I found this in the top of a low tree and took the safety shots before working my way round the other side of a building to take some closer shots from the other side which were with better light.

Wood White at Zenica Steel Works
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Kestrel at Zenica Steel works
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By now, our local guide had realised my interest in birds, and pointed out this Whinchat to me when we arrived at Kakanj.
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Whinchat at Kakanj

The following day (4th September) I photographed this Common Buzzard in Rajlovac railway goods yard.


Common Buzzard at Rajlovac
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That evening I took a tram out of the centre of Sarajevo and then took a taxi to Vrelo Bosna (the source of the Bosna river). This is a beautiful park, and I discovered where some of the birds in Bosnia had gone to. Here I had my first ever sighting of a Grey-headed Woodpecker - I confess to thinking it was a Green, until I had a closer look at the photos that I had taken in the dark evening shadows.
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Marsh Tit at Vrelo Bosna (near Sarajevo)
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Grey-Headed Woodpecker at Vrelo Bosna

The following day (5th September) we took our train to Ploce in Croatia (on the coast) for a short visit. No interesting birds were seen, but I did photograph a grasshopper and a dragonfly.
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Grasshopper at Ploce (Croatia)
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Dragonfly at Ploce

The return to Bosnia, and then to Zagreb (Croatia), with a run to Budapest from Zagreb on 7th September did not yield anything very exciting. In summary, I do not recommend going to Bosnia for 'independent' birding.

Tuesday 16 September 2008

Alvecote Pools on 29th August 2008

Earlier this year I went out to Alvecote (quite near me) to photograph the Firecrests that were there for a long while. I thought that I would pay it a summer visit this day to see what I could find. As I crossed the road bridge, this Rabbit was below.

A further hour or so revealed nothing of interest near the water, so I decided to have a look down the 'closed' lane which runs off Laundry Lane near the bridge (this is where I found the Firecrests). This Wheatear was there, and very obliging.




My Garden on 29th August 2008

Very occasionally we see dragonflies in our garden (we have a pond). This day, whilst having a late-morning coffee in the conservatory, an Emerald Damselfly landed on the conservatory in front of me. This was the first I had seen in our garden.


A quarter of an hour later, I was out with my camera again as a female Southern Hawker was laying eggs in the moss beside the waterfall.


Sawley Marina on 23rd August 2008

A trip down the River Trent on our boat this day did not reveal too much exciting in the way of birds, but this Grey Heron was on the end of a narrow boat in our marina as we set out. OK, so they're commonplace, but I do like them as photographic subjects (as you will probably detect from this blog!).



River Soar on 20th August 2008

A trip southwards with our boat from the Trent onto the Soar resulted in a Kingfisher being spotted near Kegworth Deep Lock. Our boat was tied up ready to go through the lock at the time, and this gave me a chance to attempt to photograph this bird. Unfortunately my camera started playing up, and I missed the shots when it flew out of the tree on the opposite bank, caught a fish, and then landed on the towpath in front of me with it in its beak. I have now found out what the camera problem is, and can get round the problem most of the time. However, it will be going in for a service once a trip to the USA is over.


On the way back to the Trent, some juvenile swallows were sitting appealingly on top of a moored narrow boat - again my troublesome camera allowed only one in-focus shot to be taken.