After giving in to the painful Saturday morning phone alarm, I made it to Grimley in time to greet the first two Wheatears of the season as they dropped onto the Pits. Unfortunately, they come a day after Steve Gale ended his renowned 'Who can post the most gratuitous photos of posing Wheatears on their blog before they get bored?' competition, which is a bit of a pain, but I'm not deterred...
Wheatear perched on a fence post. I know, I'm original. |
Grimley veteran Mike Bourne turned up, and we went looking for the pair of Garganey found yesterday on a small reservoir nearby. After a bit of searching, both birds (including a drake) showed distantly as they slept on the distant bank- Grimley seems to be the prime location for this species in Worcestershire, so with any luck there will be a few more chances for better views before the end of spring.
Back at the Camp Lane Pits, a rather stunning male White Wagtail- the first of the season- was feeding with its commoner British relatives on the north-east scrape, providing a nice opportunity to compare plumage features between the two subspecies.
White Wagtail (ssp. alba) on the Pits this morning. |
It was a productive morning, migrants or no migrants, with 6 species of wader noted. Bar the usual Gadwall, a few Teal and a solitary Shoveler, duck numbers have taken the expected plunge though.
I hadn't come across Hare in Grimley until this morning- several were chasing each other about in a field opposite Camp Lane. |
4 comments:
Excellent images to show how to tell pied and white wagtails apart, a really useful ID feature.
There's always next year Bill for 'Wheatear' glory. Cracking little patch you've got there!
I've just had a wagtail that looked very like your pied wagtail. Your id tips were very useful for eliminating white wagtail.
Glad I could help :)
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