Thursday, 31 July 2025

Black Stork at Boyton marsh Suffolk

I've been watching news of the Black Stork in Suffolk since it arrived whilst I was at Butlins and the images coming through seemed to show the bird as showing particularly well too. I've had some car trouble since getting home from Butlins and had my car taken away for what looks likely to be a new cam belt so needed to get Suzannes car running again as she hasn't used it this year. It started with a jump pack and after checking oil, water and tyre pressure I gave it a run around locally yesterday. Roll on to this morning and after a night of broken sleep I woke before 3am and decided if the car started I'd run up to Boyton for the Black Stork. Needless to say it started and I arrived at Boyton for 5am to start the walk out along the sea wall. The walk out was about one and half miles. At the car park I had a Little Owl sat on the fence, the pool beyond the farm held a couple of Green Sandpipers with a few Avocet, Lapwing, Curlew, Oystercatcher, Redshank and Black-tailed Godwits. A Bittern flew over and a Tawny Owl called from the woods nearby. Bearded Tits pinged in two small groups in the reeds and three Chinese Water Deer were also seen on the walk out. There was no other birders present as I made it out to the area the Stork had been favouring and I quickly located it in the channel between the sea wall and the farmers fields.

I spent a couple of hours enjoying fabulous views and the bird and in the two hours I saw another four birders come and go. I've seen two Black Storks before in the UK but this youngster was the first to give goo prolonged close views with the other being fly over or distant scope views. The Black Stork is a Suffolk tick which takes my Suffolk list to a modest 281 species and takes the UK year list to 222.









On the way home I stopped at Abberton and enjoyed good views of the juvenile Wood Sandpiper from the causeway and a surprise Weasel that allowed a few images as it ran along the causeway. I walked out to Hide bay to see the Temminck's Stint but the hide was closed for maintenance so I didn't connect with the bird on this occasion.








A decent morning out with some good conversation along the way all helping to take my mind off my worries for a while.

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