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Little Grebe

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WELCOME BACK WILLOW WARBLER!

Willow Warbler singing at Red Bank, Ribchester on 2 April, back from Africa a couple of days earlier than usual.

THE LOVELY DESCENDING NOTES OF WILLOW WARBLER’S SONG greeted me at Red Bank today as more summer migrants return to the village, despite a drop in temperatures over the last couple of days. Red Bank is a regular site for Willow Warbler, which still breeds in a few spots around Ribchester. Swallows are more in evidence around the village now and there are also plenty of Sand Martins excavating their nesting burrows along the riverbank, albeit not in their traditional spots opposite the vicarage/school. A Blackcap was also singing at Red Bank today and a female was close in attendance.

We are lucky to have 5 or 6 pairs of Barn Owls within 5km of the village and they are very conspicuous hunting until well after dawn at the moment. Maybe they have hungry mouths to feed now? Sunny spring days usually also mean soaring birds of prey. Buzzards, kestrels and sparrowhawks have all been up high in the sky this week, a couple of the buzzards showing unseasonal wing damage, ‘Maltese Moult’ as it is known. I am still waiting for an osprey! March finished on 70 for 2021 and 80 species all time, making it the best month for numbers by far now but it also has the most checklists! The Rib yearlist moved on to 84 today as the commoner summer visitors appeared. April started with a pair of Mediterranean Gulls in breeding plumage that flew east along the river yesterday and a late Little Grebe was still at Red Bank today of note. At higher altitude another 12 Common Crossbills flew over in the early morning cold wind.

Barn Owls continue to delight. Everyone loves owls!

The Dell at Red Bank, Rib birding hotspot!

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DABCHICKS BACK ALONG THE RIVERBANK

A Little Egret flies under the bridge at Little Town. They sometimes fly over it, I wonder how they decide?

‘I USED TO SEE DABCHICK ON THE RIVER BY THE SCHOOL’ said Geoff Rollinson the other day. I hadn’t seen a Dabchick (AKA Little Grebe) there so far in 9 years but amazingly the following day there it was, struggling upstream along the oppoosite bank! Since that sighting things went a bit crazy with 4 Little Grebes at Red Bank on Saturday and 3 from the allotments today. The Little Grebe also marked 100 birds for me in Ribchester this year. Not bad considering I hadn’t even seen 100 species here in total before the first lockdown.

November ticks away and now stands at 60 for the month and 65 all time. There are so many possibilities to add to this figure over the next few weeks. Little Egrets appeared both days this weekend but numbers have definitely dwindled as the autumn has progressed. It is not surprising considering up to 17 are roosting upstream at Sawley at the moment. The BTO BirdTrack walk yesterday managed 51 species. Nothing special, just a good selection of common birds.

A Brambling flew over the allotments this morning and there are still 3 figures of Fieldfares flying south. A small flock of siskins was the first multiple sighting this autumn. Kingfishers are still very noisy and easy to see at the moment, either along the brook near the Stydd or along the river itself, upstream from the road bridge.

Little Grebe at Ribchester (Mike Watson)

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