Sunday, 5 April 2026

Rainham and KGV

A quick walk round Rainham on Friday gave me my first Common Tern of the year when two birds flew down river early morning as me and Steve B scanned the river waiting for the reserve to open. At the entrance to the reserve I had my first Willow Warbler of the year and on the reserve my first ever booming Bittern for Rainham marshes. This Bittern has now boomed for over a week so is officially considered as on breeding territory. Other birds of note were a couple of Curlew, Raven, Marsh Harriers and seven Fieldfare. Lapwing, Avocet and Redshank are all busy with the breeding season now.

On Saturday I headed along the sea wall and found no fewer than five singing Sedge Warblers for another year tick. Raven, Turnstone, Curlew and Fieldfare again the highlights of this short walk.

Today saw me and Jim hit the KGV at first light after last nights storm Dave. It was cold and we did get wet as the last of the storm moved off but our reward was our first two Common Sandpipers of the year and another male Wheatear which is only our second for KGV this year. Greater Scaup, Smew and the two Slavonian Grebes were all still present and a female Goosander flew down the river. Two Sparrowhawk and a Red Kite were both nice to see but we missed a distant fly over Osprey which Nev and Harry had as I was busy photographing the Wheatear on the opposite bank. A total of 55 Species on this visit.

Year list now 173











Thursday, 2 April 2026

KGV update

With my daughter in law having surgery recently my time has been taken up supporting my son with the kids which of course I love to do, to the point where I've recently sat through Gabby dollhouse at the Apollo in London with Emily and I've watched the new Mario movie with George. I've done two RSPB volunteer farm survey intro's in the last couple of weeks too and look forward to doing the surveys in the coming weeks. At one of these survey sites in Herts I saw a group of Seven Wheatear together which I think were among the first Wheatears in the county this year.

Today I found a couple of hours to myself and after a quick call to Jim we were heading to KGV for a full two hour circuit. It was grey, cold and windy but we headed out along the east bank spotting first the wintering Greater Scaup on south basin before finding the Smew and Slavonian Grebe that's wintered only to be joined by a second bird a few days ago. The birds have almost completed their moult into breeding plumage so could well be heading north in the coming days. Two Raven flew over calling heading into the distance in a south easterly direction. A couple of Red Kites were noted along with the usual suspects. We spotted six Sand Martin and then our first Swallows of the year when two birds flew low over north basin to join the Sand Martins hawking the NE corner. A rough count of around 200 Tufted Ducks remain, 20+ Gadwall, 4 Teal, Mallards and I think only 6 Goldeneye now. Pied and Grey Wagtail were noted along with numerous Wren, Chiffchaff and Cettis warbler all announcing territory as we walked around the track. Raven were on the nest but I can't be sure they were the same two birds that headed off south earlier. A male Black Redstart was the stand out bird of the return along the west bank and we also noted Blackcap, Goldfinch and Greenfinch in the expected areas.

The industrial estate has many Lesser-black backed and Herring Gulls making use of the rooftops.

A decent visit where we saw all the expected birds and the bonus of our first Swallows although it didn't feel much like summer. 

48 species seen today and the year list nudged along to 170







Tuesday, 17 March 2026

first Wheatear of the year

Walking around KGV with Jim this morning we had one eye on finding Common Sandpiper which had been reported yesterday. As we reached the magic corner I found my first Wheatear of 2026 and managed to alert Jim so he could enjoy it too. It posed for the camera but was always a little distant. Whilst watching it I found the drake Smew in the relief channel and a pair of Raven flew over and appear to be nesting again this year. A drake Goosander was the only other bird of note and we failed to find either the Scaup or the Slavonian Grebe on this circuit. I also didn't find the LRP I had yesterday or indeed the Common Sandpipers reported yesterday.


Year list now 169






Sunday, 15 March 2026

Sand Martins at KGV

Another day and another walk around KGV first thing this morning before Mothers Day duties with my mum, my wife and my daughters in law and grandchildren.

The walk was quiet but I did see the drake Smew on south basin and the equally long staying Slavonain Grebe on north basin. A Raven and a Sparrowhawk were seen and after a tip to check the William Girling for Sand Martins I managed to see three from KGV to add another year tick bringing the total so far to 168. I also year ticked both Stuart and Harry.

The view of London from KGV across the Girling

Drake Smew


Slavonian Grebe

Slavonian Grebe


Friday, 13 March 2026

KGV

 My birding has mostly been a quick look at the local reservoir I like to call a patch although it only really gets my best attention for spring passage and a few winter visits to check for rarer wintering birds.

This winter has been a bit slow and spring seems to be taking forever to get going. We had a juvenile Great Northern Diver winter until 19th January and some Scoter have dropped in on a couple of occasions. A single Slavonian Grebe, drake Scaup and drake Smew remain on site having been seen on almost all my visits including this morning. We've had at least three Goosander of late but I didn't see any this morning. Red Kites are daily encounters now and this morning I noted Sparrowhawk and Kestrel with a Buzzard this week too. At dawn Parakeets fly from roost across the reservoir in ever increasing numbers. On the 8th March Jimmy found our first spring arrival with a single Little ringed Plover on the causeway. 

Our first Wheatear of the year was seen on 3rd March but didn't linger for me to connect with it and I'm told somebody has seen Sand Martin passing through but again none have lingered yet.

For now the visits are a little disappointing but I guess Spring passage will start proper any day now to keep the interest going for a month or so.

I also took the Jims up to Abberton again on 9th March where we found the Canvasback from Billets Farm in the mist but couldn't locate a reported Ring-necked Duck despite a good search at Billets, Wigborough, Abberton church and both causeways. Spoonbill were nesting, we picked out a Redhead Smew and then 32 Russian White-fronted Geese dropped in west of Layer Breton causeway. Three Great White Egrets were noted.

year list now 167 with the LRP and Canvasback.

drake Smew on site since 11th December

Smew

Slavonian Grebe on site since 24th February

Black Redstart

Goldeneye

Shelduck

View down the reservoir towards the city of London

Slavonian Grebe

Smew

Smew

Smew

Scaup

Wednesday, 4 March 2026

KGV

A walk along the east bank at KGV today gave me a site tick when I found a single Golden Plover on the causeway. It was distant and in thick fog so I didn't manage a photograph but I'm happy to add it to my KGV list which now stands at 133 as I also added Redshank having seen one today too and on checking realised I didn't have that on my site list either.

Also seen on this visit were a Slavonian Grebe, Greater Scaup, Drake Smew and a female Goosander. There were still at least twenty Goldeneye on site and a single Wigeon.  

I had a quick walk around Connaught waters on the way home hoping to bump into the Falcated duck that keeps getting reported there but I keep missing it and today was no different. I know it's an escapee but I've never seen one so I'd like to catch up with it if I can. I found ten Mandarin and Five of the Ringed Teal which gave me a chance to get the camera out. The Ringed Teal are of course escaped/released birds but they are pretty cool still and will probably try to breed again this year as there's at least the one female on site.

Ringed Teal

Ringed Teal

Female Ringed Teal

Ringed Teal

Mallard

Mandarin

Female Mandarin

Mandarin

Mandarin

Mandarin pair

Smew

Slavonian Grebe in the mist


We visited Sandon/Wallington in Herts on 28th February and managed to see a couple of Short eared Owls that have wintered there although it was almost dark when they eventually came out to hunt and we added Grey Partridge on the drive to Sandon too.

I also took Dad to Abberton on Monday (missed the Sea Eagle by a day). We found a redhead Smew three Tundra Bean Geese, 3 Spoonbill, 2 Great White Egrets but little else of note for our effort.

Year list still 165

Thursday, 19 February 2026

RINGING DATA

Whilst scanning all the geese at Fishers Green last week I noticed two birds had leg rings that were readable with the scope so duly noted the numbers and sent them off to the relevant recorder.

Yesterday the data came back to say both birds were ringed in St.James park London. One in 2023 and the other in 2024, neither bird has been reported away from that site until my report from this month.