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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).

Monday 21 November 2022

Finding a Blue Rock Thrush at Winterton on October 20th 2022

The local birders in Winterton (at least those of us who didn't have to go to work) were pretty excited about going birding on the morning of Thursday 20th October as, for the first time that month, the wind had been easterly for the previous 24 hours and the day was leaden with cloud and intermittent rainfall.
I, too, was hopeful for some good birds, despite the fact that I’d been out on the patch for a solid 10 hours the day before, and while other birders from around the county seemed to have been caught in an endless shower of Pallas’s Warblers, my best bird had been a Lesser Redpoll.
But patch-birding Winterton is pretty often like that and you just have to keep the faith - even if that faith sometimes seems to border on religious self-flagellation. I’ve lived here for 19 years. I’m not massively keen on crowds, and twitching doesn’t do it for me, so pretty much all my birding is done from my door in the hope and expectation that occasionally - very occasionally in my case - it pays off, and the countless hours of birdless trudging about will be all forgotten in a moment. (The last time it paid off really ‘big time’ for me was 14 years ago, on 20th April 2008, when I found Norfolk’s first, and to date only Black Lark, in the North Dunes).
Since I retired a couple of years ago, I have been able to conduct my self-flagellatory patch walks on pretty much a daily basis and so was out again at 7.30am on the Thursday morning to undertake my customary autumn morning route through the ‘valley’ as local birders call the Winterton South Dunes SSSI. As I reached the dunes at the end of my road I could see Barry, another of the village birders, heading off with his scope towards the fishing huts for a sea-watch, and momentarily I was torn about whether I should be doing the same thing. But I decided to stick to my plan and look for a Pallas’s Warbler - surely there must be one here somewhere!
The valley was full of thrushes - mainly Redwings, Blackbirds and Song Thrushes, and there were many more Goldcrests than the day before too, so it felt pretty ‘rare’. But despite looking everywhere, I could find little else and around 9am I headed up towards the Hermanus, the holiday accommodation complex of distinctive thatched roundhouses which sit above the dunes just south of the village. This area is pretty much out of bounds to birders but the owners kindly allow a few locals to scan the complex from the top of the slope leading up to it from the South Dunes. The rooftops are a favoured haunt of Black Redstarts. The area also contains a few more sheltered spots which I figured might hold birds avoiding the still fairly strong wind.
At about 9.15, I got to the top of the slope and scanned around. Immediately I saw a Grey Wagtail fly in and land on one of the thatched rooftops. Grey Wagtail is a slightly tricky year tick here these days and I knew that Barry would be interested so I rang him, but as is almost always the case with his ancient, steam-driven mobile phone, I couldn’t get through. I tried again and was waiting for the phone to connect and keeping an eye on the Wagtail when I noticed another bird come out from around the far side of the thatch lower down and shimmy up onto the TV aerial. It was about Blackbird size, but the effortless, agile way it had bounced up the slope of the roof was very different from a Blackbird and actually reminded me more of a huge Black Redstart!
I know I’m not a great birder by any means. Often I’m not even a particularly competent one! After 50 years of birding I still can’t really get to grips with large first year gulls, or with Phyllosc and Acro wing formulae, and confining my birding to one frequently pretty birdless patch doesn’t exactly provide me with the opportunity to hone my field ID skills on a wide range of species. But somehow I think I knew what the bird I was looking at was going to be even before I raised my binoculars to get my first proper look at it, and when I did (through Swarovski EL 8x32s if you’re interested) the shock of confirmation was overwhelming but almost expected.
Sitting on the TV aerial, looking around with a lovely large eye and alert expression, sporting crazy humbuggy zig-zaggy underparts all the way to the undertail, and casually holding a grub in its outlandishly long bill, was an immature Blue Rock Thrush!!
My first view of a Norfolk first
I’m not really sure how I knew what species it would be, but I had seen them abroad, and had read the finder’s account of this spring’s Essex bird in Birdwatch magazine only recently, looking longingly at photos of that bird and of the species in general, imagining finding one here. And here I was, looking at one!!
I had my camera on me (OM1, 300mm and 1.4 converter if you’re interested!) and was shaking when I raised it, but I fired off about 20 shots. Then the bird flew down and away on the other side of the roof and I was thrown into a dilemma about what to do - get permission to go into the complex and try to relocate the bird, double check the ID on my photos or try to get a message to the other locals I knew to be out birding that morning. I decided on the latter and hastily got my phone out. In the drizzle I texted “think ive got a blue rock thrush in the Hermanus” and sent it to our village birders WhatsApp group and a couple of other people, then copied the message and texted it to Barry (whose phone is so ancient it can’t use WhatsApp). I scanned around but still couldn’t see the bird any more, so I called Barry again and miraculously got through to him - “Oh! I’d better get back there then!” was his response and he was on his way immediately. I needed someone else there urgently to verify that I wasn’t just making it all up in my head!
Then I started off into the Hermanus grounds and double checked with one of the workers that it would be OK to take a quick look for the rare bird I had just seen. I went round the drive and couldn’t see it. I searched for the next ten minutes but nothing. So I crouched down and reviewed my photos. Thank the Lord about half were in focus. I sent one out on WhatsApp, which caused my phone to ring pretty much immediately as several other village birders realised I wasn't going bonkers and scrambled for further details.
The WhatsApp messages 😂
By about 9.50 several locals had arrived, and we had all started searching but couldn’t relocated it. By now it was drizzling steadily. Barry went to look on the rooftops along the road to the south of the complex while I and the others waited on the edge of the Hermanus, hoping it was sheltering from the rain and might reappear. I was elated but also sad for the others as it seemed increasingly likely that the bird had moved on and I was destined to be the only observer. But just after 10am, as we were discussing this likely outcome, one of us suddenly said “Hang on, what’s that sheltering under the roof of that playground house?” We looked over and in the murk there it was! I fired off another shot on my camera before it dropped out of sight. Amazingly it was still here!
The second sighting - phew!
Barry returned and a few other local birders began to arrive. I wasn’t sure of the status of Blue Rock Thrush in Norfolk and asked if there had been any previous records. Apparently not! The bird was by now showing very occasionally, popping up on a different rooftop each time, and disappearing for long periods, but it gradually dawned on us that despite the access problems, if it remained we needed to try to release the news. Indeed it appeared that somehow it was already out, as rumours were flying around on the Norfolk Bird News WhatsApp group, which led to it appearing on Birdguides and other information services, then disappearing, then reappearing!
We spoke to the Hermanus manager and negotiated access for a car-parking fee, and at 10.50am I was able to release the news. The first birders managed to get here within the hour and most who arrived through the morning were lucky enough to connect, but by early afternoon it had seemingly disappeared. Amazingly though it was relocated later in the afternoon on the other side of the village where it was seen by a lucky few as it continued to play rooftop hide and seek.
Sadly it was not seen the following day.
So 14 years after my somewhat obsessive patch dedication had paid off with a first for Norfolk, I had found another one! One Black, one Blue; I’m going for Brown Flycatcher next, but on my current form it will probably be in 2036...

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nice one Sean!

Anonymous said...

Wonderful read..