Highlights
The lean period, the summer lull or the summer slump – whatever you call the June – July period, birding the months wedged between the Spring and Autumn migration periods is a much quieter and focused affair. It can be a great time to appreciate the comings and goings of our local breeding species that we may often take for granted during the busier months. Lots of us will also use this period to catch up with some of the rarer Orchids, Lepidoptera and Odanata of which Oxon and the surrounding counties host in abundance. For those that do focus on these other taxa, rewards can occasionally come in the form of some of the rarer migrant species with 2024 producing a record breaking number of Lesser Emperor for the county. Others will focus on the fortunes of our rare and scarcer breeding species, particularly Waders which can, to say the least, be a mildly depressing activity – speaking from my own experience of monitoring our local breeding Curlew this year.
Lesser Emperor, courtesy of Steve Burch |
Waders
The standout of the period came with the first returning Wood Sandpiper back Pit 60 on the 27th. Always a popular species when they turn up this one had a string of admirers during its stay until the 29th before it departed overnight.
Pit 60 Wood Sandpiper, courtesy of Ewan Urquhart |
Sanderling were recorded in both of the summer months with a single bird present at Farmoor on the 5th June and apparently still present by the 10th. A late northward bound migrant or a failed breeder returning south, who knows! A bird present also at Farmoor on the 22nd July, seemed much clearer, with possibly the same bird still there on the 28th.
Farmoor Sanderling courtesy of Steve Sansom |
A lone Whimbrel record came from Farmoor on the 5th June and was seemingly on route to the north, although in recent years lone birds have linked up with failed breeding Curlew flocks around the county. Greenshank were also recorded in both months with a bird at Widford on the 14th June whilst a first returnee came on the 4th July at Ardley remained until at least the 11th.
Ardley Greenshank courtesy of Gareth Cashburn |
Black-tailed Godwit were first noted in the county at Peep-o-Day Lane on the 7th July where a flock of 5 took advantage of the now constant presence of shallow water here. The next birds then came through the county at Ardley on the 23rd July with a pair here until at least the 25th. The only Dunlin record came on the 28th July with a single bird joining the Sanderling at Farmoor, whilst Ringed Plover were noted at Port Meadow on the 1st and 3rd June and at Grimsbury on the 28th July, with a pair at both sites.
Ardely ERF Black-tailed Godwits courtesy of John Friendship-Taylor |
The first returning Green Sandpiper came from Bicester Wetlands Reserve came on the 7th June, a very early bird and possibly a failed breeder from the far north where the breeding season can be very short affair. Three birds were here on the 18th whilst July saw a high count of 17 on the 25th, with the site maintaining its status as the premier stop over site for this species during migration. Eight more sites recorded between 1 and 5 birds from the 19th June onwards, although most records came from the middle part of July. Common Sandpiper arrived a little later, although the first record of 14 birds at Farmoor on the 29th was a bit of surprise. With females and failed breeders returning earlier than males and juveniles, it seems this flock was probably combination of the latter. A further 7 sites recorded birds through July with anywhere between 1 and 10 birds at any one site.
An unseasonal Avocet spent a day on Port Meadow on the 12th June
Port Meadow Avocet courtesy of Gnome
Wildfowl & Game etc
The most surprising sighting of the period came from Farmoor on the 23rd when a female Common Scoter dropped in. Presumably a failed breeder from some far flung Scottish Loch the bird remained for the rest of the day before departing overnight. In what has turned out to be not a particularly fruitful year for Quail, and certainly not a ‘Quail Year’, the summer produced only 6 public records. Crog Hill, a classic summer site, had a single record in early June whilst somewhere in West Oxon saw two birds ringed on the 8th June. A bird singing along the Glos/Oxon border was the only bird reported on consecutive days reported between the 18th and 29th June sporadically. Most other records came, typically, from the Oxon Downs with a maximum of 3 birds heard at once at Sparsholt on the 30th June.
Calling Quail (at 17 seconds) courtesy of Steve Akers
With no confirmed breeding this year, records of Garganey came
from four sites. Otmoor, the site of breeding in previous years, had a
single male on the 3rd June. Whilst additional single female
records came from Appleford and Peep-o-Day Lane on the 10th
June and 15th July respectively. Whilst Pit 60 had a pair
present in the latter part of June, with only the female then present
through much of July. Another rare breeding species that was confirmed breeding
though, came in the form of a female Goosander with 5 chicks at Waterstock
on the 16th – the 3rd year such breeding has occurred.
Ruddy Shelduck made their annual jaunt into the county, post summer moult,
with records at Farmoor and Peep-o-Day Lane. A flock of four was
at the former on the 21st July whilst a single bird was on the
latter on the 31st, the 2nd year in which a bird has
arrived on site post-moult. Our own native Shelduck were recorded only
from 3 sites during the summer months, with no further confirmation of breeding
forthcoming from any of these sites. Port Meadow hosted the most birds
with 5 here on the 15th June. Further records came from Bicester
Wetland Reserve and Peep-o-Day Lane.
Herons, egrets etc
A report of Purple Heron from Otmoor on the 19th June got the collective heart of the county going for a brief period over the summer. Unfortunately, the record was never confirmed and some people’s wait for an accessible Purple Heron in the county will have to stretch a little further! The major highlight then, came in the form of the 2nd Spoonbill of the year with one over Otmoor on the 18th June, with the bird seen sporadically between then and the 22nd June. Things then got a little crazy with 5 probable’s over Thame on the 29th July, although these we not seen anywhere in the county and will unfortunately remain a mystery.
Otmoor Spoonbil courtesy of Paul Torevell. |
The Glossy Ibis that turned up in the county at the end of May took a great liking to Otmoor and remained there the entire summer, with most reports of it coming into roost during the evening vigils. A lone White Stork, a now frequent visitor to the county courtesy of the White Stork Project, was seen throughout the county during the early part of the month. Confirmed from SatTracking to be a bird from the project (ring number GBA9) that was born in 2023 and didn’t migrate in its first year. The bird was seen at four sites including Otmoor and Appleford between the 6th and 8th June and was apparently still present on the 16th. An unconfirmed record of 6+ over the m40 on the 11th was an interesting mystery record.
Courtesy of Malcom Bowey |
Pit 60 Great White Egret courtesy of Ewan Urquhart |
Cattle Egret mostly kept their western distribution in the county, with the
exception of Otmoor, with at least 7 sites recording birds. Up to 3
occupied nests were observed at Blenheim, although as in previous years
more were suspected. Successful breeding was confirmed for another year with at
least a couple juveniles clocked at various sites and a post breeding flock of
19 were recorded at Otmoor on the 29th July.
Woodstock Cattle Egret courtesy of Gareth Cashburn |
Crane appear to have had an unsuccessful year at Otmoor, with no
confirmation of any successful breeding attempts over the summer. This was backed
up by extralimital records of Crane coming from two sites over the
summer, with 2 over Farmoor on the 29th June and four
over Woodstock on the 16th July – presumably all four
birds from Otmoor. Little Egret don’t often get a mention in these monthly
reports, unlike their rarer cousins, but a cracking count of 40+ birds at Otmoor
felt noteworthy enough to mention and a sign of some good breeding elsewhere
in the county?!
Gulls and Terns
The typically quiet months kept up
their reputation with very few noteworthy records of notable species over the
summer period. Despite this, some of the finer eyed amongst us still managed to
pull out the odd rarity. Port Meadow produced a probable Baltic Gull on
the 3rd June, the first since the 2021 summer period when one
birder made it their mission to find the county’s first confirmed Baltic Gull
and ended up finding four – see (https://tmbirding.blogspot.com/2021/08/the-baltic-gulls-at-appleford.html).
Caspian Gull continued their run in the county, to what one can now
assume will be an almost year round presence in Oxfordshire. A lone bird
was on Port Meadow on the 4th June and again on the 25th
June, whilst just up the road at a relatively newer site in Stanton
St John were present on the 10th June.
The other highlight came in the form of several records of Sandwich Tern, a highly unusual summer sighting and a presumably a sign of things going wrong for these birds on the breeding front. A trio were present at Dix Pit on the 9th June before been observed just down the road at Rushy Common on the same day, albeit minus one bird. Interestingly 3 were also observed at Rushy Common on the 22nd June and one has to assume the same birds, although where they were in the interim remains a mystery! Another unusual summer record came from Freeland with pair of adult Little Gull seen in flight heading towards the more usual site of Farmoor or at least in that direction on the 30th July, but unfortunately birders there were not able to connect with these early passage birds. The only other real noteworthy species this month was a small number of Mediterranean Gull records, two from Farmoor on the 9th and 30th July and another from Pit 60 on the 27th.
Yellow-legged Gull, a staple at Farmoor at this time of year, courtesy of Steve Liptrot |
Passerines
Migration of passerines through the county began at the very end of June with 3 Redstart at Pit 60 on the 30th. Most birds though started moving through the county in early-mid July. A further 6 sites saw Redstart records with most of the sites recording multiple birds through the middle part of the month. Whinchat arrived a little later with the first at Woodstock and Otmoor both on the 14th July and both still present by the 21st.
Juvenile Redstart and Juvenile Goldfinch, Letcombe Regis, courtesy of Geoff Dymott |
Other interesting records came from Blenheim with
breeding confirmed for Stonechat, a species with a limited breeding distribution
in the county mostly confined to the Oxon Downs. Breeding Cuckoo was
confirmed across multiple sites with sights of the first fledged juveniles, including
a nice video of one been fed by a presumably knackered Reed Warbler. A
Hepatic female was again at Otmoor during the summer, this been 4th
or 5th year this same individual has returned to the site.
A lone Crossbill record came from close to the downs at Lockinge, with a male here on the 16th July. Whilst it appears the Ring-necked Parakeet have had another decent breeding year in 2024 with approximately 85 at Florence Park on the 19th July, the impact of this is yet to be known but presumably the local birds are unlikely to be pleased at the prospect.
County Spotted Flycatcher courtesy of Nick Truby |
Raptors
The major excitement for this group during the summer season has been the joy of watching the juvenile Marsh Harrier over Otmoor after another successful breeding season. The interest has been even higher this year due to two of the 3-4 young been in a very unusual and striking plumage. Despite the birds looking like they are leucistic, the cause of the patches of striking white plumage apparently have a much more sinister explanation. When young birds are developing their fledging plumage from the soft fuzz of downy chicks a bad diet or poor weather can cause a shock to the system wherein the body stops producing the melanin needed to develop normal feathers. This lack of melanin then causes the huge patches of white plumage that can be seen through the birds wings and body. Unfortunately these feathers as a result are also brittle and survival of the birds can be a tough ask, especially going into the winter months. A nice explanation can be found here - https://x.com/Au_Erithacus/status/1817867089790578792. Let’s hope they manage to make it, they shouldn’t be too hard to keep a track of!
Above & below courtesy of Richard Tyler. |
Cassington Marsh Harrier courtesy of Terry Godfrey
Patchwork challenge
Patch |
Birder |
Points
|
Species |
Highlight |
Aston eyot |
Ben Sheldon |
|
|
|
Ardley ERF |
Gareth Casburn |
|
|
|
Dix pit |
Simon Bradfield |
|
|
|
Grimsbury reservoir |
Gareth Blockley |
|
|
|
Lye valley |
Tom Bedford |
|
|
|
River Thames |
Geoff Wyatt |
|
|
|
Sutton Courtenay |
Conor MacKenzie |
|
|
|
Radley GP’s |
Ian Elkins |
|
|
|
Freeland |
Glen Pascoe |
|
|
|
South Hinksey |
Alex Figueiredo |
|
|
|
Cholsey |
Alan Dawson |
|
|
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