tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16314333.post3107493057015082451..comments2024-03-10T14:33:50.262+00:00Comments on Regent's Park Birds: 30th Aprilregents park birds.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05857667944318385224noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16314333.post-90410775532710157872012-05-01T15:57:44.657+00:002012-05-01T15:57:44.657+00:00Sorry, Tony - I now recall someone saying a Reed W...Sorry, Tony - I now recall someone saying a Reed Warbler was seen earlier this month in area 20 or 21; still, today's bird is the first Reed Warbler of the year conceivably on territory in the Park.birdman_eustonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09232990514600770658noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16314333.post-66736095020220091142012-05-01T15:37:46.621+00:002012-05-01T15:37:46.621+00:001 May: Warm night (12C) with ENE breeze but I tho...1 May: Warm night (12C) with ENE breeze but I thought better of arriving at dawn as it was throwing it down then! The overnight deluge, probably the most in a 12-hour period this year, eased at 07.00 and ended by 08.30. The rest of the day was warm, humid and calm, with a low cloud base below 150m/500ft till 11.30, then mainly cloudy thereafter. Boating Lake now overflowing; surface water collecting in hollows, e.g. 'Primrose Pond' (complete with opportunistic Mallard Duck) has formed overnight in SE corner of Primrose Hill, area 51, submerging the pathway there.<br /><br />Lesser Whitethroat 1: (Cricket Pen, area 31, at 08.40; seen again at 14.15).<br />A lifer, first spotted shortly after the rain ended, feeding frantically in the elm thicket at the W end of the Cricket Pen. At first I could only see it from behind and its sandy-brown back with what looked like cream edgings to the greater coverts, producing faint single wingbars, gave it the jizz of an oversized goldcrest. However, when it finally turned around, I saw the grey cap, with a barely darker mask, and white throat. (Of the Old World warbler species I've seen so far - not many! - this one most reminds me of New World warblers, with their non-stop feeding behaviour like Old World warblers on amphetamines!) I saw it again at 14.15 when it conveniently popped up from the large, central bramble bush at the opposite (E) end of the Cricket Pen, into a silver birch. In the fifteen minutes I watched, it spent half its time acting according to type, skulking in a bramble bush, but the other half was spent in the open, gleaning leaf insects high in the silver birches like a Willow Warbler. On second viewing in brighter, afternoon conditions, its back looked a darker brown and without wingbars, so what I saw this morning could have been a trick of the light. At no time did I notice the white outer tail feathers, but then I didn't have my bird guide with me due to the rain so I didn't look for them.<br /><br />'Greenland' Wheatear 2f: Cricket Squares, area 37 at 08.55 - I'm from Canada and it blows my mind that conceivably they could be laying eggs on Ellesmere Island not far from the North Pole soon!<br /><br />Willow Warbler 6: two each in areas 2, 18 and 19.<br /><br />NB: Dave had the first Reed Warbler of the year, singing from reed bed in Wetland Pen / area 32 in the early morning rain.<br /><br />All in all, a classic day for migrant-watching (with earlier, favourable migration conditions brought to a screeching halt by heavy overnight rain) but it could have been even better had the rain stopped by dawn, three hours earlier - I can't help thinking I left a few 'goodies' out there today.birdman_eustonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09232990514600770658noreply@blogger.com