2009 Year List Totals – Added Feb 27th
February 27, 2009
These are the current rankings for the year 2009. Totals reflect only those species that are considered acceptable by the UK400 Club. Updated totals or new submissions can be added online or by post or telephone to Lee Evans on 01494 763010. The New Years Day competition on 1st January 2009 was won by a team from Kent, recording 137 species (Marcus Lawson, et al), A NEW RECORD TOTAL.
Diary Notes Jan 26 – 31 – Added Feb 24th
February 24, 2009
I visited Cambridgeshire today in the vain hope of adding Rough-legged Buzzard and Great White Egret to my
Year List – I was partly successful.
I arrived shortly after midday and spent three hours on site ‘dipping’ – my fourth attempt at this elusive Rough-legged Buzzard – the bird I saw in Hertfordshire in December 2008. Searching from both the ‘Esso tanker’ spot and the layby south of the black barn, as well as from the high points just south of Coveney village drew a complete blank.
Four COMMON BUZZARDS were seen, including the pale morph, as well as 9 Common Kestrels and a flock of 35 Yellowhammers.. There were also over 2,000 Woodpigeons in the area, and over 400 WHOOPER SWANS in fields NE of the village on West Fen. A BARN OWL appeared at 1600 hours at Home Dams Farm, where it was caught up in an argument with a female Common Kestrel.
I also struggled with the wintering GREAT WHITE EGRET today and after a lot of searching eventually pinned it down feeding in deep water in the Main Drain, south of Pymoor Village at TL 505 855. It was there from at least 1510-1530. I did not see it today in the drain east of Dunkirk, although it had visited there earlier.

Great White Egret
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2007 HAMPSHIRE BIRD REPORT
February 17, 2009
The standard of this annual bird report just keeps getting better and better and considering this is one of the first to appear for 2007, its editorial team and production consultants need to be congratulated. The quality of the colour reproduction throughout the report is first-rate and liberal and the cover portraits of Farlington Spotted Crake and Calshot Hoopoe are particularly well chosen and extremely pleasing to the reader.
For me, this is a report with only few faults and a testimony to the very hard work and effort that Alan Cox (editor) and Keith Betton, John Clark, Pauline Cox, Jason Crook, Richard Ford, Paul Norris and Russell Wynn (the Editorial Team) have put into this production. Furthermore, it is lavishly illustrated with some beautiful vignettes, kindly provided by Dan Powell, David Thelwell and Rosemary Watts.
It is a top-notch publication of 238 pages length and records the ornithological results of a team of over 300 contributors (listed on pages 7-10). Alan Cox provides the review summary (pages 11-21) which highlights the fact that 257 BOURC species were recorded in the county during 2007 and that GREATER YELLOWLEGS (the only county addition of the year) represented the 365th species to be recorded.
The Systematic List of species is provided on pages 22-177 and boy is this exhaustive and comprehensive. For each species of wildfowl, we are given an easy-on-the-eye chart highlighting all of the WeBs peak counts at each individual location (complete with totals) and we are treated to a detailed summary of breeding numbers and very useful historical data (particularly in the case of the scarce and declining Bewick’s Swans and Eurasian White-fronted Geese). The sole record of an adult Greenland White-fronted Goose at Farlington Marshes on 6 November was an intriguing occurrence, whilst the regularly returning adult Red-breasted Goose was well documented. I was particularly pleased to see that the national cull of Ruddy Ducks had not had any effect on the Hampshire population of this delightful oxyura and that Goosander had experienced another good breeding season in the New Forest.
Common Quail were scarce in 2007, with just 12 calling males in what is traditionally the species’ ‘best’ county, whilst Hampshire received a vagrant Cattle Egret, a peak roost count of 237 Little Egrets, 4 Great White Egrets, an adult Purple Heron, a Black Stork, a Black Kite, Northern Goshawks consolidated their presence in the New Forest with 12 territories now occupied, a Corncrake, a Kentish Plover, an adult American Golden Plover, a Red-necked Phalarope, the regular Gosport adult Ring-billed Gull, an adult Caspian Gull, 2 White-winged Black Terns, 4 Hoopoes, a European Bee-eater, a Red-rumped Swallow, 3 Richard’s Pipits, a Bluethroat, an Aquatic Warbler, a Marsh Warbler, a Barred Warbler, two Western Subalpine Warblers, 2 Rose-coloured Starlings and a ship-assisted White-throated Sparrow. Its most famous rarity of the year however was the Finnish-ringed juvenile White-tailed Sea Eagle that survived to overwinter in the Shipton Bellinger area which is given adequate treatment (with photographs) on page 64.
Most intriguing was a record of a Red-billed Chough in Cholderton Park on 10 April – the first occurrence in the county since April 1941.
I found the Systematic List an absolute delight to read, highly informative, crammed full of important information and extremely interesting, and particularly useful for studying the trends in more frequent species such as Woodlark, Nightjar, Dartford Warbler, Hobby and Wood Warbler.
Pages 178-180 incorporate that highly important ‘escape section’, whilst pages 187-198 incorporate Duncan Bell’s Ringing Report for 2007. There is an excellent survey summary of breeding Ringed and Little Ringed Plovers whilst Jason Crook has published (pages 203-206) a superb and exhaustive account of the first Greater Yellowlegs for the county. David Thelwell provides an enchanting review of the birds of Timsbury village (1966-2006) and there are further interesting papers on Bar-tailed Godwit migration (pages 215-225) and Southampton Water Turnstones (226-233).
This is a brilliant report in every sense of the word and one that took me over five hours to extract important records for my Master Database. No wonder British Birds has consistently voted this report as one of the best bird reports published in Britain. Pure class.
For further information on how to purchase a copy of this magnificent report, simply email alanfjcox@compuserve.com for details. Like most county bird reports these days, it has a limited production run, concentrating on members of the Hampshire Ornithological Society (http://www.hos.org.uk/)
Diary Notes Jan 12 – 18 – Added Feb 12th
February 12, 2009
Diary notes covering the period January 19th – 25th 2009
BROGBOROUGH TIP (BEDFORDSHIRE)
Twitching the first-ever King Eider for Sussex, I was otherwise engaged when Steve Blain texted me with the incredulous news that he had just located a SNOW BUNTING whilst counting a few Mute Swans and Coots at the few remaining areas of open water at Brogborough Tip Reclamation. So, after hearing of 15 or so Beds birders connecting during the Sunday afternoon, I arranged to meet Francis Buckle and Roy Nye at 0915 at the site. And what a site it was……full of thick, slippery mud!
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English Partridge
Another diary update
February 5, 2009
Covering the period from January 12th to 18th Lee publishes another edtion of his diary notes for members to download.
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HAWFINCH, CHASEWATER FEEDING STATION, STAFFORDSHIRE
JANUARY 15th 2009



