Went out for a walk along the river yesterday evening but didn't go that far as the mosquitoes were out in force (they really give me the creeps - have done ever since I went for a walk very early one day and found
loads of the huge ones all feeding on me!). I accidentally flushed a Snipe as I walked beside the little stream at the south of the meadow, I haven't seen one here for quite a while so that was really cool, although I felt bad that I disturbed it!
Lots of Cuckooflowers blooming in the boggy patches of the meadow, two quite large separate groups of them at each end of the meadow despite the spraying that's been going on there. I spotted a pair of Bullfinches near the horse paddocks, the male sitting on top of a mass of brambles and the female hunkered down nearby. Lots of Linnets flying about the same area, a few Skylarks making late songflights in the evening light and Lapwings flapping low over the fields where Jackdaws, Carrion Crows, Pheasants, Woodpigeons and a few Stock Doves were feeding. I heard a snatch of Blackcap song near the mill and Green Woodpeckers laughing from the trees while a Song Thrush sang nearby, a Blackbird joining the chorus.
There were Collared Doves along the meadow edge, Long-tailed Tits in the willows on the riverbank, the odd Moorhen here and there, Magpies flying south overhead while Mallards flew in noisily to land on the millpool. The air was full of the song of Greenfinches, Chaffinches, Robins, Blackbirds, Wrens and Blue Tits. A very nice evening... apart from the mozzies!
Pics:
1. one of the patches of Cuckooflowers, to the east end of the meadow
2. Stock Doves feeding on the neighbouring field (difficult to get close to!)
3. offshoot of the stream at the meadow, the path splashes through it but you can divert a few metres to the north where it's dry. This is a channel to help drain the watermeadow after flooding
4. male Bullfinch on the brambles
5. the river at sunset