Yesterday I spent the day ringing in a very muddy wood on the Kelmarsh Estate called Sunderland Wood. This wood has had a lot of clearing done inside the wood and is now pretty much a natural mature Ash woodland. This seems to have helped the birds inside the wood and we noted many common woodland birds including quite a few Marsh Tits and a minimum of three Woodcock, one I watched fly in off a nearby field and come into roost in the half light. There was quite a sizeable flock of thrushes on some nearby fields, mainly consisting of Redwings which came into the wood at the end of the ringing session.
We ended up catching 69 birds consisting of two Nuthatch, seventeen Great Tit, four Robin, two Coal Tit, two Chaffinch, five Marsh Tits, twenty five Blue Tits, two Goldcrest, two Wren, two Treecreeper, three Long Tailed Tit and a Blackbird. Two of these birds were interesting, firstly, one of the Blue Tits was incredibly old for this species, ringed there on the 27th November 2010 already as a adult making this bird at least eight years old if it survives till this may. This backs up my, and a lot of others theory that once these small birds survive their first winter, they can last for a considerably longer even though the life expectancy of a tit is shorter than year, especially in a considerable harsh winter which we haven't had over the last few years, probably the reason for a few older birds still kicking around. The other was a Blackbird which had clearly had a run in with something else as it had lost all of its tail and its secondaries, tertails and 10th primary on its right wing. Please see the below image:
Today was spent birding the whole of Pitsford Reservoir for the monthly WeBs Count and the highlight has to be a Jack Snipe which was intact a county tick for me and a healthy two points for Patchwork Challenge 2017, another new bird for PWC was a day calling Tawny Owl, which only hooted once but thats all it needs! Now third in my midlands mini league but who knows what other people will get during the time I am at school over the coming week. Today leaves me at 93 species and 108 points. Other birds noted were the Red Necked Grebe north of the causeway in the 'middle section' of all the bays, the Slavonian Grebe in Yacht Bay but had been seen in Pintail Bay earlier in the day, two Great White Egrets north of the causeway, a drake Pintail, two Redshank, two Green Sandpiper, a Woodcock, ninety Snipe, two Willow Tits, two Marsh Tits, two Kingfishers, four Grey Wagtails, two Stonechat (one by Holly Tree and one south of Dam along fence line), two Ravens carrying food in Scaldwell Bay, a 1w Yellow Legged Gull was flying around south of the causeway during the day but wasn't visible in the roost and a 1w Mediterranean Gull in the roost. All in all, I think this is the most species I have recorded in a day on-site with a total of 82 recorded!
I also had a male Brambling in my garden first thing this morning...
Regards,
Jacob

























