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Your top 3 "bogey" birds?
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<blockquote data-quote="Andy Adcock" data-source="post: 3470882" data-attributes="member: 31710"><p>It took me about a dozen attempts to get Broad-billed Sandpiper in the UK although I've seen hundreds abroad. In 1995 it was eventually my 400th UK species.</p><p></p><p>The key to getting the migrant breeders is to get them as soon as they arrive, much more visible then. On my patch in Russia, I have Thrush Nightingale all over the place and easy to see but once they pair up they're almost impossible to see, same with Bluthroat and Marsh Warbler.</p><p></p><p>A</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andy Adcock, post: 3470882, member: 31710"] It took me about a dozen attempts to get Broad-billed Sandpiper in the UK although I've seen hundreds abroad. In 1995 it was eventually my 400th UK species. The key to getting the migrant breeders is to get them as soon as they arrive, much more visible then. On my patch in Russia, I have Thrush Nightingale all over the place and easy to see but once they pair up they're almost impossible to see, same with Bluthroat and Marsh Warbler. A [/QUOTE]
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Your top 3 "bogey" birds?
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