5 Mar 2026

26 Feb 26 - Signs Of Spring Part 3 - February Sand Martins

It's been a very wet and sometimes windy start to 2026. So, it is good to see signs that Spring is on its way. In late Feb, I was watching the Frome river valley at Holmebridge hoping that a Goosander or Mandarin Duck would appear for my Isle of Purbeck Year List. I had no joy on the Wildfowl front, but I did find my first two Sand Martins for the year feeding over the Frome, upriver of Holmebridge.
Sand Martin: I didn't have my camera and they were too distant for a worthwhile photo, so here one of my photos from St Aldhelms (26 Aug 22)

3 Mar 2026

24 Feb 26 - Signs Of Spring Part 2 - Brownsea Preparing For The Spring

I popped over to Brownsea in late Feb to do a high tide count for the Dorset Wildlife Trust. The island is closed to the public for the Winter. However, I've been asked if I can do a few high tide counts over the Winter, which allows the DWT wardens to get on with other conservation activities on the reserve. There was a reasonable selection of Waders and Wildfowl species on the lagoon. As the tide was just switching into a neap cycle, the numbers weren't as impressive as they would have been had it been a Spring high tide.
One of the new islands
The highlight of the visit was seeing the new Tern islands that have been created. The DWT wardens, along with DWT volunteers and an external contractor have created four new Tern islands, which are looking really good. The new islands have their top stones on and the plan this season is to leave them unfenced to see how much disturbance they get from the Sika Deer. In previous years, the Sika Deer have tried to get onto the islands to eat the vegetation, which is a risk to the nest Terns and Gulls on the unfenced islands. Hopefully, with the new islands being new and unvegetated, the Sika Deer won't be a problem on the new islands this season. The Black-headed Gulls and Sandwich Terns are comfortable with being fenced in, however, the Common Terns prefer unfenced islands.
The other three new islands: It will be interesting to watch the interest in these new islands over the next few weeks
There are already signs and noises of Spring with quite a few Black-headed Gulls investigating the old islands.
Black-headed Gull: The DWT team have also turned over the stones on the old islands and the Black-headed Gulls are showing a lot of interest in these islands

2 Mar 2026

23 Feb 26 - Signs Of Spring Part 1 - My First Buff-tailed Bumblebee

It's been a very wet and sometimes windy start to 2026. So, it was good to have a dry and sunny day for once. I had a good look around Studland and the highlights were in the dunes at South Haven. Within a minute, I had seen and lost sight of my first Butterfly for the year: a Red Admiral. While I was trying to relocate the Red Admiral, I saw my first Buff-tailed Bumblebee walking around on the path in the dunes. I carefully moved it to the edge of the path, to reduce the risk of somebody following me and treading on this slugging Bumblebee. Spring feels like it is on its way.
Buff-tailed Bumblebee

14 Jan 2026

14 Jan 26 - A Perfect Winter's Day On Brownsea

Brownsea Island has been closed for the Winter since the end of the October half-term. This allows the Dorset Wildlife Trust and National Trust to do some of those annual maintenance jobs on the island, without risk to the public. As one of the regular Birders who is also a DWT volunteer on the island, I have been invited to pop over to help out with some high tide lagoon counts while the island was closed.
Looking towards the Brownsea Castle in the early morning sunshine
With the trip to Antarctica, I didn't have the time to get over in the back end of 2025, but I was keen to rectify this in the New Year. The first Wednesday of the year saw an icy lagoon with few Birds on it, but the following week looked good for a visit. It was a day when Poole Harbour would be between two days of solid rain, with crisp, still conditions. I met up with fellow Birding volunteer Phil Bentley for the National Trust staff boat and within ten minutes of departure, we were arriving at the Brownsea Quay. As we got off the boat, there was a shout that 'there was a Seal off the quay'. A quick naked-eye scan revealed a head popping up thirty metres from the quayside. Checking with the bins, it was the closest Grey Seal, I've seen in Purbeck. I mentally kicked myself for not bothering to take the proper camera, especially when it was still on view, when we left it, after ten minutes of watching it. A bonus flyby Kingfisher put in an appearance as it flew past the quay. My first Isle of Purbeck Year Tick for the day. It was time to head onto the check the lagoon.
I really like how this cobweb caught the light
It was a high tide between the neap tides (less than one point seven metres) and the spring tides (around two point three metres) and the high tide wasn't even two metres at the harbour mouth. On these tides, many of the Waders end up roosting close to their feeding areas, rather than being pushed onto the Brownsea lagoon. Still, there was a good selection of Waders on the high tide. A bonus was seeing my first Water Rail along with the expected Bar-tailed Godwits, for the Isle of Purbeck Year List. However, it wasn't the Water Rail or the Waders that were the highlight for the day: it was the lighting on the lagoon. There was a light frost and the sunny conditions were quickly burning off the frost and dampness from the previous day. It was time to grab some nice atmospheric photos of the lagoon.
It clouded over a bit and the lagoon had become more atmospheric, by the time we reached the Tern hide
After we completed the high tide lagoon count, we headed on for a cuppa in the DWT villa. After that the plan was to walk around the island and check from various viewpoints to see if we could relocate a Red-necked Grebe that had been briefly seen by the Birds of Poole Harbour bird boat on Sunday between Jerry's Point on Studland and Brownsea. Various locals including myself, had looked for it that afternoon and on the Monday, without joy. Phil and I were hoping that the still conditions would allow us to refind it. However, before I had finished my cuppa tea, I had a call from Graham Armstrong. He was watching the Red-necked Grebe from the Studland Houseboats. That narrowed down our search area considerably. Our tea mugs were quickly emptied and we headed off to Brownsea's South shore to view the South Deep channel. Phil and I only knew the direction Graham was looking at Studland, but we were looking from a completely different viewpoint, so we were almost starting from scratch. Fortunately, I picked the Red-necked Grebe up after a few minutes of scanning, fairly near to a Great Crested Grebe.
Another view of the Brownsea lagoon from the Tern hide
The Red-necked Grebe was my fourth Purbeck Year Tick for the day to take me to one hundred and sixteen and Green Woodpecker heard for the year. As always this follows the BOU taxonomy, but it excludes any recent reintroductions and Feral Pigeons. It sounds a reasonable total, but I could add another ten species if I spent a day around the Purbeck coastline sites. However, all those species are Birds I will see without any trouble during Spring Birding. This year, I am focusing my efforts towards seeing the tricky species, rather than to get a big total quickly.
Looking back on the Avocet hide: It looks like somebody is vaping in the left hand side of the hide, but it is actually steam disappearing from the sun's rays on the hide
Avocet: An IPhone photo of these two squabbling Avocets next to the Tern hide. There was a large lagoon where they could feed without upsetting each other
We spent a couple of hours looking offshore from various viewpoints around Brownsea, before we headed off to catch the 14:00 boat back to Poole. The other highlights were the two wintering Slavonian Grebes off Redhorn, twelve Black-necked Grebes off Goathorn and four Great Northern Divers. It had been a brilliant visit and hopefully I will be able to support other high tide counts before the island reopens.

28 Dec 2025

28 Dec 25 - Turkey Or Goose For Post-Christmas

If we were talking food, it would be neither for me as a life-long vegetarian. However, if they are live, then Goose sounds the better option: especially, if they are part of a national influx of Tundra Bean Geese and White-fronted Geese. The Poole Harbour WeBS team had arranged a WeBS count at ten to get everybody off their sofas after the Christmas break. Soon after I got home from counting my Brands Bay section, my phone pinged to say that a flock of five Tundra Bean Geese had been found, along with a much larger flock of White-fronted Geese. They were feeding in a field on the Ridge to Arne road. I decided to defer lunch and I headed back out. I arrived just after one and the field was typically empty. I say this as I've passed that field many times in the last nearly thirty years of living locally and rarely seen anything in it. There were a few of the local Birders waiting. I parked up and joined them. The Geese had been there, but they were spooked by a plane and had disappearing onto the new pools on Arne Moors. After about five minutes, the first party of White-fronted Geese reappeared.
White-fronted Goose: These are the nominate albifrons subspecies which breed in North Russia, eastward to North East Siberia. They winter in Europe, South Asia, North India, South China & Japan
White-fronted Goose: White-fronted Geese use to regularly winter in Dorset & Hampshire in the 80s and I regularly saw flocks of up to two hundred and fifty in the Hampshire parts of the Avon Valley in the early 80s. Sadly, those numbers are a thing of the past, due to climate change and probably other factors like population numbers. There were still up to twenty-three visiting the Poole Harbour area in some years in the first decade of this century. However, those numbers have dwindled to erratic individuals in a good year, between several years of absence. Therefore, a flock of this size is noteworthy
White-fronted Goose: It was also good to see youngsters in the flock with their more uniform underparts, with the adults having barred bellies and more extensive white at the base of the bill
White-fronted Goose: This flock continued to increase in the first half of Jan when it peaked at forty-four individuals
White-fronted Goose: They are noticeably smaller than this presumed local Greylag Goose
Within a few minutes, the Tundra Bean Geese family dropped in along with the rest of the thirty-eight White-fronted Geese. We were at the start of a cold snap which clearly had been very hard in neighbouring Europe and there was an unprecedented arrival of the two species throughout Southern England.
Tundra Bean Goose
Tundra Bean Goose
Tundra Bean Goose
Barnacle Goose: Soon after this Barnacle Goose flew in to join the White-fronted Geese
Barnacle Goose: It's not unusual to see a flock of Barnacle Geese passing through Poole Harbour towards the Fleet in the last couple of decades. These flocks aren't annual, but they occur often enough these days to not be as noteworthy as the Tundra Bean Geese and White-fronted Geese
Barnacle Goose: This is an immature individual and presumably it arrived with the Tundra Bean Geese and White-fronted Geese. We sometimes have lone individuals appearing in Poole Harbour, however, they are typically adults
The remarkable thing is I've don't remember seeing Geese in this field in the past and after some Greylag Geese and Canada Geese flew in, I was watching five different species of Geese feeding in the field. I added a few Egyptian Geese on the next visit. It is one of two short grassy fields next to the extensive land management work that has been going on for over two years on the adjacent Arne Moors, to create new inter-tidal marshes which will help to alleviate flood risk in the forthcoming decades to Poole and Wareham. Hopefully, this will be the first of many interesting Bird sightings in this area in the next few years.
This unremarkable-looking field might be set to become a lot more interesting now Arne Moors is being improved

25 Dec 2025

25 Dec 25 - Happy Christmas 25

Happy Christmas 25 to all the readers of the Blog
Chinstrap Penguin: Deception Island, South Shetlands, Antarctica

25 Dec 25 - A Nice Christmas Present

During Christmas morning, I looked out of the living room window and saw there was a Sparrowhawk about four metres from the window looking at me. It was sitting on a low Pittosporum bush, which has been popular with the occasional visiting Blackcap feeding on the bush's red berries. Additionally, my local House Sparrows and Dunnocks can often be seen moving within the bush.
Sparrowhawk: I'm quite impressed with this photo considering it was taken through a double-glazed window
The Sparrowhawk spent a few minutes looking around and when it didn't see any targets, it finally flew out down my neighbour's drive.
Sparrowhawk
This Blackcap might have been what the Sparrowhawk was after. One appeared around mid-Dec and I've seen the odd visitor since then. On the day this photo was taken, I had my highest garden total with a male Blackcap and three Browncaps in the Pittosporum.
Blackcap: It's difficult to be sure if this is a female or a first winter male (12 Jan 26)