Showing posts with label Little Egret. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Egret. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

North Norfolk



My previous post contains some of our Broadland photographs. This post has the area around the North Norfolk coast as its focus. It is always a joy and a thrill to see an Avocet, symbol (and success story) of the RSPB. We spent a fair amount of time at the wonderful Norfolk Wildlife Trust centre at Cley. Sadly we missed a book launch by Mark Cocker which had taken place there the day before our arrival. 

We love the reedy area around Arnold's Marsh: we have watched Bearded Tits and Reed Buntings here in the past.


I spent my teenage years in Norfolk, and this photo encapsulates those memories for me - long empty beaches of shingle, full of rugged beauty, perfect for wildlife but rather chilly!


The reedbed area on the landward side is equally compelling.


We paused for a while to watch this rather large Little Egret fishing.


Look at those feet...



There were various ducks on the saltmarsh, including this Shelduck.


The church below is in Brancaster and doubtless some of the masonry has been reworked from Brandodunum, the Saxon Shore fort built by the Romans.


We enjoyed watching the waders at Brancaster Staithe: the North Norfolk coast has so many hidden corners. 


Late afternoon: Brancaster Staithe



The photos below show Blakeney...





The sun came out after a dark cloud: I love the subtle saltmarsh colours. 


Another day began with quick visits to NT Blickling and Febrigg.

Part of the front of Felbrigg Hall


There were some very relaxed chickens in the walled garden at Felbrigg - and I loved their house!


The honey bees were certainly not in relaxed mode!



I love the hives, and what a beautiful flint wall behind. 


With blossom like this, I imagine the quality of the pollen must be superb! 


The photo below gives an impression of the vast beach at Holkham, a beach on the edge of The Wash, with sand, shells in profusion and estuarine mud.










You approach Holkham beach through a path between the pine trees. The hall and parkland estate, home of Thomas Coke of the Agrarian Revolution (as it was called in my school days), is just across the road.

I realise I have posted a rather random selection of photos. My next post will move inland again to the Yare valley (Mark Cocker's Crow Country), where I spent my teenage years - and where we spent a bit of time on this recent break.

Tuesday, 5 April 2016

NWT (Norfolk Wildlife Trust) Cley Marshes

We were up in Norfolk last weekend, and while we were there we visited the Norfolk Wildlife Trust reserve of Cley Marshes. This is a superb site, with stunning views and a mix of saltmarsh, saline lagoon, reed bed, fresh water, shingle beach and sea.


These are some of the birds we saw ...

* Avocet
* Blackbird
* Black-backed Gull
* Black-headed Gull
* Brent Goose
* Carrion Crow
* Chaffinch
* Coot
* Curlew
* Grey Heron
* Greylag goose
* Herring Gull
* Kestrel
* Lapwing
* Little Egret
* Magpie
* Mallard
* Marsh Harrier
* Meadow Pipit
* Moorhen
* Mute Swan
* Oystercatcher
* Pheasant
* Red Kite
* Redshank 
* Robin
* Ruff
* Shelduck
* Skylark
* Teal
* Wheatear
* Wigeon
* Wood Pigeon


Little Egret

The new National Trust hide near Arnold's Marsh

Teal

Lapwing

Monday, 12 January 2015

Our First Barn Owl of 2015


What a windy weekend!

I was given a copy of Claxton: Field Notes from a Small Planet by Mark Cocker for my recent birthday. I grew up only a few miles from the Yare-side village of Claxton, so was particularly keen to read the volume. Mark Cocker writes compellingly about his Norfolk owl encounters in the book, and it was these accounts that made me feel the urge to seek an owl encounter of my own.

We headed for the Suffolk coast, watching for birds of prey on a small road that runs along the River Deben, keeping a weather eye on the state of the wind and high tide.

We pulled in at a favourite lay-by and looked around. Intitially the surrounding area seemed devoid of avian wildlife, but all of a sudden a Kestrel swept into view, hovering near the tree-line on our left. It did not hang about, but David was quick to spot a Little Egret in a dyke on the opposite side of the road.

We had watched Barn Owls, these magnificent giants, from this spot in the past. Astonishingly we did not have to wait long before a graceful, if ghostly, form spread out before us, quartering the fields. It circled round for a short while before taking roost in the dense bare branches of a tree. The photos below were nearly all taken behind the glass of the car windscreen and the conditions for photography were far from good. But the joy was in the seeing and the watching, and the record shots below testify to the excitement of what could otherwise have been a dull January afternoon. 










 We finally reached the waterfront, where we looked out on Felixstowe Ferry and its martello towers ...



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