Blog Header Text

For questions you can contact Adam at: adamchartley "at" gmail "dot" com or Jason at: jasoncppk "at" yahoo "dot" co "dot" uk

Wednesday, 5 February 2025

January Review

Highlights

After 2024 somewhat underperformed, 2025 got off to a flyer, bringing some hope that this year might do a little better on the county list and rarity front. Three species not recorded in 2024 came in the first couple weeks of the year and provided a welcome lift to any lingering January blues! The first of these and arguably the highlight of the month came from Balscote Quarry on the 2nd January when a Bewick’s Swan was found resting on the small lake there. A rare bird pretty much anywhere that isn’t a WWT site these days and getting less abundant at these sites due birds stopping on the continent as climate change makes sites more and more attractive. With the most recent record coming not that long ago in 2023, when a pair stopped off at Otmoor before heading over to Slimbridge, this was still a very welcome way to ring in the New Year for county birders. As with the previous records the chances were that this bird was almost certainly enroute to Severn Estuary and so time was bound to be limited to enjoy this beautiful arctic visitor. 

The Bewick's Swan courtesy of Badger

Having spent the afternoon and early evening basking in the winter sun and providing the lucky few with some fantastic viewing opportunities, as expected the bird departed that even and arriving at Slimbridge overnight. As with a lot of the Bewick’s that arrive at Slimbridge this bird underwent the usual scrutiny of its unique bill pattern to figure out whether it has been recorded before and what it’s history is if so. This individual, likely a male, arrived as a yearling in 2023 with its parents ‘Orkney Reid’ and ‘Doodled’ who has been coming to Slimbridge for 6 years now, and when it arrived in 2023 it was, as all newcomers are, named – ‘Cardington’. But after some liaising between one of our own and Slimbridge folk the bird was renamed ‘Balscote’ in honour of its little excursion into the county. Hopefully in years to come we can track the movements of this young bird over the coming year and whether it continues to return like its mother for many years to come. More information can be found here on the WWT blog - https://www.wwt.org.uk/wetland-centres/slimbridge/news/bewicks-blog-winter-20242025

Balscote & chums Slimbridge WWT

Waders

Although occasionally the county can have a busy and interesting winter when it comes to waders – see Cote in 2023 when it seemingly became twinned with Thames Estuary, normal service has been resumed this winter with little birds of note. Dunlin were the only uncommon species to be recorded this month with three records from two sites. Pit 60 had two on the 4th, whilst Port Meadow, attractive as it always is, had five on 9th rising to 12 on the 10th. The wintering Common Sandpiper continued its stay at the big concrete bowl of Farmoor with sporadic records in January. It was briefly joined by a 2nd bird on the 13th, at least showing the site is attractive to more than one bird in the winter. As I may have mentioned before, if anyone has any literature on wintering fidelity of Common Sandpiper I’d be very interested! 

Farmoor Common Sandpiper courtesy of Ewan Urquart

Elsewhere, wintering Green Sandpiper continued to be somewhat thin on the ground with only three sites reporting birds in January. Chipping Norton continued to hold up to two birds with a one regular bird reported during the month. Peep-o-Day Lane then also hosted a single bird between the 18th and 27th of the month, whilst Ardley ERF in the far north of the county had one lone bird on the 25th. Records of Jack Snipe were fairly widespread and sporadic in their reporting, as is to be expected from this elusive species. Records came from at least four sites in January, with Waterstock hosting the most birds with three here on the 12th. With other sites hosting more typical numbers with singles, which included Days Lock and New Marston Meadows in the latter part of the month. Woodcock, however, were much more numerous in abundance and sites which recorded them. At least six sites recorded birds this month, often several together. The largest count came from Chipping Norton where at least ten birds were reported across the estate land there. A somewhat surprising count of five came from Peep-o-Day Lane with birds seen flying from roost into the old landfill site for a night of probing for earthworms. Other sites recorded single birds and included Piddington, a site that usually has double figure counts, Abingdon and lower Heyford.

The first Oystercatcher of the spring (?!) arrived over East Challow on the 14th although been a nocmigged record it was potentially just transiting the county to elsewhere. Either way this bird is the 2nd earliest arrival since the turn of the century (12th January 2021) and beating the median arrival date of the last decade by more than 3 weeks! This was followed by birds at Rushy Common on the 22nd and Lower Windrush Valley on the 26th with a pair at the latter site. All arriving earlier than in previous years. As is often said about such events ‘changing baselines before our very eyes’. The only other bird of the note for the month came in the form of a pair of Curlew back at Otmoor and although not the first birds to have returned this winter, the haunting call of a Curlew back across the county’s premier birding site is something worth celebrating!

Common Sandpiper courtesy of John Workman

Wildfowl etc

Wildfowl season really got underway this month with several county rarities recorded and enjoyed for long periods of time, a nice change for those of us not always able to react to news straightaway! Arguably the rarity of the month came in the form of a drake Green-winged Teal at Otmoor on the 24th. Just pipped to the top highlight spot by Bewick’s Swan, mostly due to a personal love of that species having spent the early part of my career volunteering in the research department at Slimbridge, Green-winged Teal is very much a top level county rarity. Although the last record came in early 2024 at Day Lock, this belies the true status of this species at a county level. Since 2000 there have been four records previous to this one, with the last two all but untwitchable. A drake showing at close range from the 1st screen then, was very likely to be a popular bird. Thankfully the bird did the right thing and remained present until the next day and in fact through the remainder of the month into February. It took some sifting through the hordes of ‘standard’ Teal,  especially with the constant threat of hunting Marsh Harrier causing absolute chaos and creating an avian version of musical chairs - just as you were fairly confident you had sorted through one half of the birds. A bit of patience though was well rewarded with some great views of a great bird. 

The Green-winged Teal, above courtesy of Conor MacKenzie


Green-winged Teal courtesy of Gareth Casburn

Somewhat overshadowed in rarity value but certainly not in aesthetics, a pair of Smew from far south of the county got most of the county birders moving to a part of the county that doesn’t always get that much attention. A redhead and a drake, easily the prettiest duck pairing, were present at Henley Road GP’s from the 12th until at least the 29th with a constant stream of admirers making the worthwhile pilgrimage to the border with Berkshire. This was the first record of the species since a somewhat epic record from Port Meadow in 2023, where a redhead briefly made an appearance on the vast flood that forms on the site every winter. 

The drake Smew, above courtesy of Ben Sheldon and below Johnathan Mercer

 
Also making the site worthy of a visit was the wintering Great Northern Diver which was present at the end of 2024. Although the Diver seemingly preferred the larger sailing lake on the other side of the causeway to the Smew pair. Having already spent quite a bit of the winter at the site, it was somewhat unsurprising that it continued until the end of the month and into February. 

Courtesy of Marek Walford


The female Ring-necked Duck which put in a brief appearance at the end of 2024 made a reappearance at Dix Pit on the 12th before bunking again. It did finally pop up again 3 days later but this time at West Oxon Sailing Club Pits and from there became much more reliable, been recorded all the way through to the 31st except for a brief return to Dix Pit on the 19th.  Also a Dix Pit on the 19th was another good county bird with a Brent Goose present in the afternoon roost. It seemingly changed its mind in the last few hours of daylight and departed the site to pastures new. One bird that caused some discussion in the early part of the month was a possible Ferruginous Duck present on Dix Pit on the NYD, a mighty find for the local patch birder there. Unfortunately it departed and that seemed to be it until it reappeared, just as the Ring-necked Duck did, at West Oxon Sailing Club later in the month where it was much easier to scrutinise. With some good photos, it was possible to see that this bird unfortunately had some Pochard in its lineage and was a hybrid of some kind. The bird continued to be reported from the gravel pits sporadically until at least the 26th

Courtesy of Nick Truby


It doesn’t quite feel like the winter birding season until we get a wintering Scaup at Farmoor, such is the regularity and reliability of the species at this site. It had been getting a bit late in the day for one to make an appearance, so it was a relief when one finally was found at Farmoor on the 12th. The lone drake continued at the site only until the 15th, a surprisingly short stay for a species which often can be present from November until March. Astonishingly the drake then turned up a Hinksey Lake the following day – a fantastic find for the local birder who patches here and for such an urban patch, in what presumably is a first record for the City of Oxford?! With its new found home so small and accessible it continued to show extremely well during its short stay until at least the morning of the 18th , when it departed not to be found elsewhere in the county as of writing. 

The Scaup at Hinskey courtesy of Gareth Cashburn

Scaup at Farmoor courtesy of Debbie Cummins


A trio of White-fronted Goose at Standlake also have plenty of admirers this month, with the group being present from the 1st until at least the 26th. Three were also at Otmoor on the 17th and were presumably the same trio on a small jaunt after being pulled there by the masses of Greylag and Canada Goose. Also at Otmoor this month was a Garganey, found within the masses of Eurasian Teal from the 1st screen on the same day as Green-winged Teal. 

Garganey courtesy of Badger

Not an unusual occurrence these days, with almost annual wintering records in the county. But if you thought the Green-winged Teal was difficult to pick out of the hundreds of wildfowl present from the 1st screen constantly changing places, you can see why no reports followed this initial sighting. 

The White-fronted Geese courtesy of Steve Burch

Shelduck were only reported from four sites this month, with Peep-o-Day Lane providing the most records this month. A single bird was present for a few days in the latter part of the month with the bird at Appleford GPs on the 27th presumably the same bird. Port Meadow had two birds on the 17th and Chimney Meadows hosted a single on the 22nd. Goldeneye were surprisingly more spread than usual this month. Two were present at Henley Road GP’s on the 11th, whilst Farmoor hosted up to five birds between the 13th and 16th. Radley GP also hosted a single bird on the 19th until at least the 15th, whilst Dix Pit, the county’s premier site, hosted a maximum of 15 throughout January. Goosander were present at a minimum of 7 sites this month, typically in pairs or small groups. The max count came from Dix Pit where at least four were present on the 20th. At least two sites hosted Mandarin this month. A drake continued briefly at the Ducklington which continued to be probably the most discussed Mandarin in the county’s history. Whilst Blenheim had two females on the 3rd

Goldeneye courtesy of Debbie Cummins

 Herons, egrets etc

Cattle Egret were a little more numerous and widespread in January with the usual large feeding flock present in the Wytham area for much of the month, with a maximum of 25 here on the 6th. Additional records came from a minimum of five sites with small feeding parties of between 3-5 at most sites with the exception of a single bird at Peep-o-Day Lane for much of the early part of the month. Great White Egret however were again at a whopping number of sites with a minimum of 17 sites hosting between 1 – 3 birds in January. Otmoor and Blenheim both hosted three birds at some point this month, on the 25th and 22nd respectively. At least two sites hosted two birds, namely Peep-o-Day Lane and Henley Road GPs on the 7th and 10th respectively. Who knows how many birds are actually present in the county at any one time, but with a maximum of 13 present at one sight last year you have to wonder if 2025 might finally be the year we get our first breeding record of the species?!

Bittern & Marsh Harrier Otmoor rspb courtesy of Malcolm Bowey

In a somewhat groundhog day round up of this group the Great Bustard continued in its favoured field at Childrey in the New Year, often in the company of Roe Deer but not exclusively so. Possibly some disturbance to the field meant the giant bird was only present until at least the 13th, although she did finally return early the next month. The Great Bustard Group kindly provided some interesting information on this bird after a bit of digging around. Apparently, she spends most of her time up on the Oxon Downs since being rescued as an egg from Spain and released on Salisbury Plain in 2019. She did however return to the plain last spring to breed but seemingly couldn’t stay away from Oxon Downs too long and returned for the winter. Apparently she is one of the only birds who doesn’t stick with the main droves of Great Bustard during the winter, maybe one day some others will follow her! 

"Our" Great Bustard, courtesy of Geoff Dymott

 Gulls and Terns

A very quiet month this month, with most of the action coming from Port Meadow in January. A range of ages of Caspian Gull were present in the sites evening roost – 1st winter, 2nd winter and the odd adult too. Farmoor also had at least one bird this month, a 2nd CY on the 13th, whilst Cassington and Ardley ERF hosted a single and two birds respectively in the 2nd half of the month. Mediterranean Gull were present at two sites this month, including the usual lone bird on Port Meadow – an adult in the roost on the 18th and 21st. Sonning Eye GPs also hosted a single bird on the 12th

Adult Caspian Gull on Port Meadow courtesy of Thomas Miller

Passerines

After given many folk the runaround last month the Bearded Tit at Radley GPs became somewhat more reliable although still not at all easy to pin down. It took several people, myself included, multiple visits and hours to get decent views of this local mega. Records came fairly frequently during the early part of January and then tailed off in the latter part with less people on site, although the last record came on the 29th. Hawfinch records subsided substantially into the New Year, with only four sites recording birds this month. A far cry from the spread of records the previous two months, only one site was a new one - an unconfirmed report from Otmoor on the 17th . East Lockinge continued to host at least a couple birds from New Years Day until at least the 4th. Great Tew was the most reliable site this month with between one and three birds present from the 16th until at least the 20th. Woodstock had a flock five over the aptly named secret garden on  the 21st, with plenty of habitat for birds to disappear into. 

Bearded Tit courtesy of Thomas Miller

The Black Redstart in Oxford and Chinnor continued their winter residency throughout the whole of January. The 1st winter male continued to garner admirers feeding in the winter sun along the walls and ivy of Christchurch College. Interestingly the female type returned to the site on the 3rd after a long absence but was gone again by the 11th. Quite where it has been in the interim is not entirely certain, but a clue might be in the fact the 1st winter male turned up at the Radcliffe Camera on the 31st. The female type remained at Chinnor Quarry or more accurately the new housing estate here from the 2nd until at least the 29th, with few reports in between. 

Black Redstart Chinnor courtesy of Jez March

The Christ church male Black Redstart courtesy of Ewan Urquart

Siberian Chiffchaff also remained in situ at their favoured wintering sites, with the ringed bird still present at Port Meadow on the 10th and 15th at least. Abingdon STW also continued to host its two birds with both present on the 7th and again on the 24th. A new bird was also present this month, with a single at Didcot STW also on the 24th, a good indication that many more birds are out there at underwatched sites across the county. Along with the two Sibe’s present at Abingdon STW were a unprecedented amount of Common Chiffchaff, with a minimum of 80 birds present in the early part of the month and probably 100 birds all together between the sewage treatment works and the rest of Peep-o-Day Lane. What is more surprising is that nothing rarer than the two Siberian Chiffchaff were plucked out of the wintering hordes of Phylloscopus on site.

Siberian Chiffchaff Didcot courtesy of Ian Lewington

The Port Meadow Siberian Chiffchaff courtesy of Thomas Miller

Raptors

At least three sites hosted Hen Harrier in January, a nice increase from the previous month and inlcuding an stonking adult male up on the Oxon Downs. The other two consisted of a ringtail hunting close to Didcot, whilst a 2nd calendar female did the rounds at Otmoor rspb entertaining the local birders at that site. Short-eared Owl were present at several sites this month, with the Oxon Downs hosting likely double figures at one point whilst another site in the south county also hosted at least three birds in what is proving to be another good year for the species. 

The Otmoor rspb Hen Harrier 
Above & below courtesy of Malcolm Bowey




Merlin also were present on at least three sites this month, with all three been immature or female type birds. At Appleford one flew over at dusk on the 2nd, whilst Childrey Fields hosted one sporadically between the 3rd and the end of the month. Chipping Norton also hosted a single bird on the 20th. 

Wing-tagged Marsh Harrier Blenhiem courtesy of Gareth Casburn

 
The wing-tagged Marsh Harrier that had been at both Pit 60 and Otmoor earlier in the winter period then turned up at Blenheim on the 8th, having been ringed in Cambs in the summer of 2024 it will be interesting to see if the bird remains at Otmoor or if it continues to be nomadic for a little while longer.

Barn Owl Otmoor rspb courtesy of Zeke Ng
 

Patchwork challenge

 Patch

Birder

Points

Species

Highlight

Aston eyot

Ben Sheldon

 

 

 

Ardley ERF

Gareth Casburn

54

50

 

Dix pit

Simon Bradfield

 

 

 

Grimsbury reservoir

Gareth Blockley

 

 

 

Lye valley

Tom Bedford

 

 

 

River Thames

Geoff Wyatt

95

85

Jack Snipe

Sutton Courtenay

Conor MacKenzie

85

79

Siberian Chiffchaff

Radley GP’s

Ian Elkins

72

70

Bearded Tit, Goldeneye and Goosander

Freeland

Glen Pascoe

 

 

 

South Hinksey

Alex Figueiredo

 

 

 

Cholsey

Alan Dawson

 

 

 


Oxon Big Year 2025

A few of us are attempting a bit of an Oxon Big Year in 2025, with the aim of someone or all of us cracking 200 species in the county in a single calendar year. Given the sorry state of the county year list in 2024, which barely scraped by 200 and the general downward trend of the county year list year on year this may be a tough ask. The 200 barrier has been broken a couple times, most recently in 2009 when the county recorded 213 species in the year but also included some subspecies such as American Black Tern. 2025 has already got off to a good start with three new species recorded not seen in 2024, so momentum for a better year total seems to be there but who knows what the Spring will bring with it. For this year’s Oxon Big Year list were going to be following eBird taxonomy (Clements List), as this allows us to keep easy track of progress throughout the year and it also counts a few of the non-BOU species i.e Great Bustard – we're going to need all the help we can get on that front!  Depending on how it goes and what the next couple months look like, I will do my best to bring some updates on our individual and collective progress in this quest for the mythical 200.

Name

Total

Ben Sheldon

121

Thomas Miller

116

Neil Hayward

104

Conor MacKenzie

114


GWT A great addition to any year list!
Courtesy of Richard Stevens


Birding Reminiscences - Spotted Sandpiper - Farmoor, 1990.

by Phil Barnett

 
By 1990, I was enjoying county birding. I was living with my parents in Beckley, which was ideal for spending days on Otmoor. Despite the remoteness and fascination of the place, I was always interested in what else was going on in the county and elsewhere. At the time transport was hard to come by, and a few of us teen-birders (including Justin Taylor, John Prowse and Jason Coppock) used to rely on the monthly RSPB outings to places like Radipole and Portland (where I had 17 'lifers' on my first outing on April 26th 1987) and Dungeness (another 15, the next month).
 
Towards the end of 1988 my Mum was OK with me going on the bus and I used to get up to Farmoor on occasions and sometimes Dorchester and other places. I got the occasional lift and, on one such time, had two lifers at Farmoor on December 30th 1988 - two Great-northern Divers and a male Snow Bunting which flew in and landed on the causeway for a couple of minutes before flying off. I was still hurting, though, from dipping Leach's Petrel and Grey Phalarope there in September.
 
Throughout 1988 and 1989 we continued to go on the RSPB coach outings. In September 1988 we ticked Ortolan Bunting at Portland Bill, which I wrote down at the time was "truly stunning and beautiful in immaculate male plumage." We had spent some time looking for the right place, so when we saw it at reasonably close range, it was a brilliant feeling. September the following year saw us get another lifer, another species prominent on the wanted list, this time a Red-necked Phalarope at Dungeness. We knew beforehand it was there, so when Justin told us that Jason wasn't coming, as he had a hangover, we knew something was wrong. Teenage pursuits had taken over, but he's back birding now.
 
In 1989 in Oxfordshire, after several attempts, I got Ferruginous Duck (still needed by Stuart Thomson and others in the county) at Dorchester in March and Hoopoe at Dix Pit in April, exactly a month later on April 12th. It flew up and landed in a willow, a euphoric moment after all the effort. I left some details on the Birdline answer phone, and was somewhat star struck when Richard Millington left a message with my sister for me to phone him back about it.
 
A bird that I was fascinated by seeing was a summer plumaged Spotted Sandpiper and I used to occasionally try and distract myself from lessons by drawing it (and other species) in exercise books. I remember doing this around the time of May 1st (May Day) 1989, a date I have always thought was a good one for birding after I saw my first Marsh Harrier, on Otmoor, on that date in 1988.
 
On May 1st 1989 I was walking around the rifle range on Otmoor in the evening (in the days when there were Marsh Fritillaries and Nightingales, and you didn't need a permit), when I met a birder who told me he had been at Farmoor that morning and there was nothing there but six Common Sandpipers. It turned out he had looked at only the first two or three of the flock. I was more than a little shocked when I turned up at Farmoor on the 3rd by bus, to see from reading in the log book that in fact there had been five Common Sandpipers and a summer plumaged Spotted Sandpiper on the 1st. The Spotted Sandpiper was a county first, which Bob Burgess and Carl Salmon had found. I forlornly walked around the area knowing that it wasn't going to be there, but maybe there was just a chance. There wasn't.

Towards the end of 1989 I was starting to 'twitch' birds outside the county by train and I saw Dark-eyed Junco at Portland (along with Rose-coloured Starling) in December 1989. In 1990 I saw the last twitchable Dusky Thrush in the UK in February, at Chingford in Essex. It was of the form Naumann's (there's since been one record of either of the forms, another Naumann's near there in 1997). The Naumann's Thrush is one of three species I've seen in the UK that Justin hasn't.
 
By this time lifers on the RSPB coach outings were getting hard to come by, though I had two on March 17th 1990 at Chew Valley Lake - Ring-billed Gull and Water Pipit. This was the second last time (the last the following month to Elmley) I went out with the RSPB group. Older friends, like Justin, were soon to pass their driving tests. During the day someone phoned Birdline and we found out about Woodchat Shrikes at Portland and Plymouth, the first March records of the species in the UK. The Birding World editorial noted that "rare birds abounded in March, mainly due to the exceptional warm weather - indeed on some days regular Birdline listeners could have been forgiven for thinking it was May!"
 
A week later on March 24th, I got the train to Dawlish Warren and had a three tick day. The Great-spotted Cuckoo which had arrived there on the 20th (I painted it when I got home and gave the painting to my Mum for an Easter card), then I got a lift for the Woodchat Shrike near Plymouth and we saw Cirl Bunting on the way back. The Woodchat Shrike looked pristine and beautiful in the coastal sun, another euphoric moment.
 
That spring seemed to be a magical time for birding, with major rarities turning up in the UK almost every day for a while. Alpine Accentor on the Isle of Wight (which I saw with Justin), Tree Swallow (Scilly), Least Tern (Sussex, it had been there since 1983 though the news broke in 1990), Pallas's Sandgrouse (Shetland), White-throated Robin (Skokholm). But most spectacular was the Ancient Murrelet on Lundy. For a short time the phone box in Beckley was not working properly and you could make phone calls for no charge, ideal for phoning Birdline. I remember phoning Birdline from there and hearing about the Ancient Murrelet. It was the first and only time I'd not heard of the species mentioned on Birdline and I didn't have any idea what it was either (I thought well maybe it's a type of parrot). I was desperate to see it (I'd since found out it was an auk) for the three summers it was there, but my Mum had other ideas.
 
I was enjoying the school summer holidays that year and at the beginning of July was working at the local Pick Your Own farm in Stanton St John. I was payed £1:63 an hour - a figure I inquired about once, but was shown a table of agricultural wages which showed that that was the starting wage for a farm labourer. The weather was good (it was a warm spring and summer), and things seemed much less complicated then. I guess they were.
 
In those days finding out about local rarities depended upon having a network of contacts. I'd met many of the county birders, including Bob Burgess (when I asked him if his initials were MO, which I'd seen several times in the county bird report, he pointed out they stood for 'many observers'), but was only on phone terms with a few. In those days there were no mobiles, pagers, websites, email groups and text alerts, so finding out about things was a much more haphazard affair.
 
I arrived home shortly after 5pm on July 4th and my Mum told me that my friend from Aylesbury, Andrew Taylor (who I had first met on a YOC holiday in 1988), had phoned. He'd left a message with details about a sandpiper at Farmoor. As she looked for the piece of paper, I thought the most likely bet is Pectoral (which I'd seen, with him the previous autumn at Startop's Reservoir, Tring) and phoned Birdline Midlands for the details....."in Oxfordshire, the summer plumaged Spotted Sandpiper is still at Farmoor Reservoir" (or something like that).....now I wanted to get to Farmoor as soon as possible. My Mum gave me a lift to Headington, where I got a bus to Oxford, then a bus to Farmoor. From there I ran the short distance to the reservoir, then up the causeway. I passed a few birders, including Carl Salmon, who told me it was still there and round the back of F1. A few minutes later I was watching it, getting good views. Steve Heath had found it the day before and it seems likely it was the same bird that had been present on May 1st the previous year. There had been a summering bird in Yorkshire in 1990, last seen on June 25th, so perhaps that was the Farmoor bird.

Farmoor Spotted Sandpiper (this one from May 2014) courtesy of Roger Wyatt

The day could improve even more though, as England were playing Germany (West, as it was then) in the World Cup semi-final whilst I was at Farmoor. The feel good feeling for the World Cup had been increased by the New Order (Englandneworder) song 'World in Motion' which had been Number 1 for two weeks in June, until knocked of by Elton John with 'Sacrifice'/'Healing Hands', who was replaced at Number 1 by Partners in Kryme with 'Turtle Power'. I'd been a fan of New Order since 1987 when I was mesmerized by the song 'True Faith' - a record released that year that seemed to be in stark contrast with most of the charts, dominated largely then by the various Stock, Aitken & Waterman acts.

The England New Order song lyrics were ambiguous enough so they could apply to anything that is important - John Barnes rapped "we ain't no hooligans, this ain't a football song." One phrase, sung twice in the song, is "when something's good, it's never gone." Though England lost the semi-final on penalties, that day was perhaps the one I've enjoyed the most in Oxfordshire birding.



No comments:

Post a Comment