Monday, 3 March 2014


Nature Fact

The Black-headed Gull, often seen in flight over the Reserve, often causes confusion due to the variety of changing plumage.  In Summer, the black head is in reality chocolate brown forming a hood stretching down the nape and broken only by a white ring round the eye. The beak, legs and feet are a deep blood-red.  In Winter, the brown hood is lost and replaced by white plumage with a small grey-brown smudge behind the eye, with the beak and legs showing as a muddier red colour.  

Monday, 3 February 2014

Nature Notes January

The weather continued to be wet and windy, with the occasional dry period. Nationally, rainfall was twice the normal January average resulting in extensive waterlogging on the Reserve.

SIGHTINGS 
Birds:   Jackdaws, Jays, Carrion Crows, Magpies, Wood Pigeons, Stock Doves, Black-headed Gulls, Buzzards, Green/Great Spotted Woodpeckers, Siskins, Redwings, Blackbirds, Song Thrushes, Robins, Coal/Blue/Great/Long-tailed Tits, Wrens, Goldcrests, Dunnocks, Nuthatches, Treecreeper, Bullfinches, Chaffinches, Greenfinches, Goldfinches.
Mammals:   Wood Mice, Grey Squirrels, Fox.
Plants in flower:   Gorse.
Insects:   Bees.

A flock of Redwings were seen in the woodland at Kingfisher Creek.


Nature Fact

Deciduous woodlands consist of four main layers of vegetation, each providing living space for different mammal species.  Some, such as Pymy Shrews, spend their entire lives at one level; others, such as Squirrels and Woodmice, move between layers.  Competition for space is not as great as it is in the less complex habitats of fields or moorland and many more species are accommodated into the woodland environment eg Fox, Badger, Wood Mice, Dormouse, Squirrel, Mole, Shrew and Deer.

Wednesday, 1 January 2014

Nature Notes December

The weather during December, although mild, was mostly very wet with gale force winds. This caused waterlogged areas on site.  A very quiet period for monitoring, with not much wild life showing.  

SIGHTINGS
Birds:   Carrion Crows, Jays, Magpies, Wood Pigeons, Stock Doves, Jackdaws, Buzzards, Green/Great Spotted Woodpeckers, Chaffinches, Greenfinches, Goldfinches, Bullfinches, Robins, Wrens, Goldcrest, Blackbirds, Song Thrushes, Dunnocks, Siskins, Nuthatches, Coal/Blue/Great/Long-tailed Tits.
Mammals:   Grey Squirrels, Fox.
Plants in flower:   Gorse.
Butterflies:   Brimstone, Peacock.

Nature Fact

Although you normally see a fox by itself, it lives in a family group.  There is usually a dog fox (male), the vixen (female) and her cubs, or babies.  They live in a den when they are breeding.  This may be in a crack in a rock or under tree roots.  Sometimes the vixen digs her own den, or she may live in old burrow made by another animal.