Register
Sign in
Search options
Search entire Community
Search Places to visit
Home
RSPB home
Community home
Wildlife
Places to visit
Get involved
Our work
Chat
About
More ...
Blogs
Home
»
Places to visit
Places to visit
Do you love our nature reserves? Share your thoughts with the community. Or if you're thinking about visiting and would like to find out more, ask away!
Get RSS feed
Home
Blogs
Tags
avocet
barn owl
bar-tailed godwit
black-tailed godwit
buzzard
common sandpiper
cuckoo
dunlin
garganey
green sandpiper
grey plover
hobby
Mediterranean gull
merlin
peregrine
recent sightings
redshank
ringed plover
ruff
spotted redshank
turnstone
wheatear
whimbrel
whinchat
wood sandpiper
Tagged Content List
Blog post:
Is summer over already?
Paul Brady
If you believe the wading birds then perhaps it is ... or is it? Not many people know this but long distance migrating waders actually start returning to their wintering grounds in June! The evidence is clear here at Burton Mere Wetlands too as several spotted redshanks are present in full summer...
on
2 Jul 2012
Forum post:
Recent trips.
Rocking Robin
Hello All, A few photos of recent trips to Elmley below. Wellmesh pool which has been allowed to dry because of Blue Green Algae. The Flying Dutchman Ruff Whinchat Cygnets And Mum taking time out Wood Sandpipers Little Stint alone and with a LRP....
on
12 Sep 2011
Blog post:
Lights! Camera! Action!
Gordon Allison
Another 2 weeks has passed & still no joy in getting onto the RSPB website at Elmley - a real conundrum. I have been sent another possible fix that I will try when I return to Kingshill Farm, but I'm currently at Northward Hill, hence the chance for a further up-date about what's hip &...
on
22 Aug 2011
Blog post:
Twitching damsels
Gordon Allison
A day off on Saturday, so an opportunity to get off Sheppey & I decided to head off & try to see some new species of odonata. Or dragonflies & damselflies to you & I. Heading south from Elmley, the lifting bridge was up over the Swale, so rather than sit in a queue of stationary traffic...
on
3 Jul 2011
Blog post:
Close encounters of the furred kind..
Gordon Allison
First of all, apologies for the lack of blog up-dates in the past week or so - for some reason I've been unable to access the RSPB website from here and so haven't been able to add anything. Not that there hasn't been anything happening! As people may have seen from the Forum comments...
on
2 Jul 2011
Blog post:
Quite quiet
Gordon Allison
Another breezy, showery day, without anything too exciting happening around the reserve. Although a visitor reported seeing a stoat at Wellmarsh hide carrying either a young moorhen or coot. After Monday, our spoonbills appear to have gone AWOL again, I haven't seen the garganey again since Sunday...
on
22 Jun 2011
Blog post:
Just a day late this time
Gordon Allison
I've spent the last couple of days fairly intensively scouring the reserve for broods of lapwing chicks. In the end, we found a total of 22 broods, totalling 42 chicks - not great, but better than last year & considering the way the water is disappearing, I'm quite pleased with the total...
on
25 May 2011
Blog post:
Latest catch up
Gordon Allison
Can't believe it's been almost 2 weeks since my last blog - time just seems to zip past these days! Going around the reserve today checking the livestock, there were numerous familiar faces: there's still one spoonbill hanging around the pools east of the Flood, although the strong wind today...
on
22 May 2011
Blog post:
A happy event
Gordon Allison
There's probably one question above all others (well maybe apart from "I've found a baby bird. What do I do etc?") that visitors & callers to the reserve ask at this time of year. And that's "Are there any baby avocets we can see from the hides?" Well, I can exclusively...
on
10 May 2011
Blog post:
Pezza vs. the ET
Gordon Allison
WARNING: THIS BLOG CONTAINS IMAGES THAT SOME VIEWERS MAY FIND DISTRESSING I made a comment on the forum about the diversity of some birds of prey diets. Not so the peregrine. It's almost exclusively feeds on other birds, usually caught on the wing. According to Birds of the Western Palearctic...
on
7 May 2011
Page 1 of 3 (75 items)
1
2
3