Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Welcome to BirdForum, the internet's largest birding community with thousands of members from all over the world. The forums are dedicated to wild birds, birding, binoculars and equipment and all that goes with it.
Please register for an account to take part in the discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
Not sure. She went New Year’s Day but she’s been quite cold water averse so far. There’s really not been that many sunny days until the last few weeks. Probably still single figures for the year I’d guess. 😀
Enjoyable sunny family walk along the Ely river brought my first Large Whites and Orange Tips and my first UK Small Whites, lots of brimstones too and one Holly Blue, finally felt properly springlike after some false starts. Only got photos of a female orange tip.
Quick after work visit to the blorenge in the black mountains. Was nice to just get outdoors after a days work and there was a nice variety of birds even if they didn't ever get particularly close. Some mid range Whinchat including two males squabbling over a perch and my patience in waiting and waiting for them to get closer didn't pay off as far as the whinchat went but did mean I got to see a cracking male redstart. Also that little too distant for a decent photo but a really striking bird.
A quick visit to the bay to scope a pair of Common Scoter, a patch and uk year tick but not eligible for this blog. They were sat sedately on the water just in front of the Welsh Parliament.
Up to Wenallt woods where someone had had a wood warbler a few days ago, its a lovely wood where I saw my only Red Flanked Bluetail a few years ago. Nice range of woodland birds but no wood warbler.
A couple of miles further on to Rudry Common, again a really nice range of birds, nice to see Redpoll which I dont see near me very often and one song-flighting Tree Pipit. The only photo was of it's back and quite distant so I'll spare you guys that. Depending on the weather I should get to go a bit further tomorrow
Ham Wall in Somerset for a morning today. Got there about 8.30 and as always loved every minute. So many close birds, every tree seemed to have blackcaps and every reed bed Cettis and Reed Warblers. Quickly saw a trio of Glossy Ibis and a nice spotted redshank as well as getting close up views of a Great Egret with green breeding plumage lores, not really taken that in before.
Took about 3 hours before I saw a bittern despite constant booming. One was flushed from maybe 10m away by a great egret and watched it in flight over the reeds. A second gave a flyby about 3 feet above the water for the whole length of the clearing in front of the avalon hide. I stuck to bins for that one and it was probably my best ever flight views. Tons of Marsh Harriers and a few sightings of a crane that apparently was the first breeder for the site this year, always good to watch them whatever the ins and outs of reintroductions.
Heard a load of Garden Warblers and one Sedge but weirdly no whitethroats. Eventually managed awful photos of garden warbler in the canopy as well as my first swifts of the year. As I was driving out of the reserve in the early afternoon I had a hobby flying over the car as it crossed from shapwick heath to Ham Wall itself.
Luckily for the Hobby dragon and damselflies were in good supply, my first ones of the year but the damsels in particular were quite numerous. Also plenty of orange tip and peacock and a few speckled woods and green veined whites. The reedbed loop also provided a tiny grass snake.
Always one of my favourite places in the world and another great visit.
First reported regularly 2 years ago at one site. Now I think 3 potential breeding sites in Cardiff this year. Still very low numbers but yeah spreading
Big fall of warblers (and greenland wheatear) in Cardiff bay this morning, only a couple of days after everyone was bemoaning the lack of migrants. Today we had ever more excited whats apps through the first few hours of the morning
Car was in the garage so I missed the early showy Grasshopper Warbler but by the time I got there it was still absolutely packed out with common warblers, often clearly multiples in small patches of reeds or hedge and the noise was amazing. As the fog and drizzle set in it was largely just standing in amazement at the sheer volume of sedge warbler calls. Spotted Flycatcher and Garden warbler were, like the grasshopper warbler, clearly on their way through. I saw both but the next birder to arrive saw neither and I had a fly over Yellow Wagtail as well which like Garden Warbler is not an easy Cardiff bird. The sedge warblers were the stars though, largely hidden but so so noisy.
My first ever visit to RSPB Gwenffrwd-Dinas in mid wales today with ex-Birdforumer Rich/Clarkgriswold. I've always been a bit put off by the travel times and the fact I work on the edge of the Forest of Dean means I usually see it's specialities there but I was blown away by the reserve and the sheer number of birds. Countless Pied Flycatchers, probably 7 or 8 wood warblers including one singing just in front of us. Marsh Tit, singing Common Sandpipers, lots of redstarts and a heard only cuckoo.
The wood warbler was definitely the highlight, like a lot of people I find it hard to see most years and often settle for very quick views of a warbler near a tree with the right song but it was great getting tuned into call and song and repeatedly finding them nearby.
Stopped and scanned on a few mountain roads so Rich could year tick Whinchat which also brought quite a few yellowhammer, not an easy bird in wales and an UK year tick for me.