Norfolk 19/02/2012

February 20, 2012 in Holiday and Trip Reports by Jim Steele

Every so often you just get a right good birdy day out!

I met up with my Brother for a Winter day out in North Norfolk – never been at this time of year and we’d been planning it for a while.

Called in at Wolferton near Sandringham for Golden Pheasant for the Nth time but no joy. Walk out on Dersingham Bog – superb habitat but very cold and nothing to report except 3 Buzzards.

On to Thornham and a wintering Greenshank was a pleasant surprise. Fantastic close views of Grey Plover and my first singing Skylark of the year.

At Wells drove out toward the Beach when several dozen Brent Geese flew across and landed in the fields next to us and a scan over the grazing marshes revealed 4 Marsh Harriers. Stopped off for chips in the town and lunch was accompanied by several Dabchick in the quayside channel and a Ringed Plover and Turnstone on the mud. Several hundred more Brent Geese on the salt marsh.

Parked at Holkham NNR on Lady Ann’s Drive and walked out to Holkham Gap. Hundreds of Pink-footed Geese on the marsh, and very close views in bright sunlight of a pale Barn Owl, 4 Muntjac Deer and another 3 Marsh Harrier. Several dozen Lapwing and Golden Plover were strewn out in the fields, then suddenly air-borne when a lone Sparrowhawk sailed across. Out on the saltings no joy with Snow Buntings but some really rufous-coloured Skylarks, a bunch of Rock Pipits and several Golden Plover. Back to the car and I was getting disappointed not to have connected with Rough-legged Buzzard that was my ‘target species’ for the day, having been seen here regularly for some weeks. I finally tracked the big bird down, parked up in a distant Willow Tree giving superb front views and then it took to the air and was joined by not one but two more Rough-legs, one of which was very pale and looked for all the world like a giant, dirty-white Hen Harrier! Watched them soaring and hovering like miniature Eagles. Amazing to think that these three birds represented about half of all the birds seen in the country that day!

Along the coast back towards Burnham and stopped alongside some guys with very large camera lenses. No fewer than 5 Barn Owls were hunting between two fields, 3 more Marsh Harrier and 9 Brown Hares were boxing in a single field.

Daylight fading, dropped into Wolferton for yet another go for Golden Pheasant and bingo! Two males strutting their stuff on the roadside. Finally!

A fine day out. You folk with the cameras would have loved it!

Jim