A Coal Tit in the garden this morning and a Blackcap in full song along Low Road. Sean
Also this morning one each of Swallow and Sand Martin heading south along with approximately 200 Linnets, a Rock Pipit, three Sandwich Terns and a Common Tern. Also a flurry of Chiffchaffs down the Valley with up to six present and a Siskin in the garden. Of most interest though was a southerly movement of 15 Black-headed Gulls, no doubt heading back to their continental breeding grounds. Peter
Welcome
You have found us. We are a secret group of crack birders who have turned our backs on the machismo, corruption, and backstabbing greed that constitute today's birding scene, and have united together to follow the True Path of non-competitive, collaborative and generally lovely birding-as-meditation-and-spiritual-growth. Consequently, we never see anything. Birds that land right in front of our noses, and which we can identify with our observer book, are written about here. Oh, and they have to be seen in - or from - the parish of Winterton-on-Sea, Norfolk, or on the walk round past East Somerton Church ruins and up the concrete track to Winterton Holmes (because it's a nice walk which we all do).
Saturday, 2 April 2011
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