Sunday, 3 April 2016

Sunday stroll around Cranford Park

I was happily sitting at the wood circle this morning with my coffee, and sharing my breakfast with the resident Magpies and Robins, when an awful noise cut through the bird song...
I'm used to the M4 traffic noise, I'm used to the distant noise from Heathrow, but this sounded like there were a bunch of chainsaws operating. A quick investigation found a group of model car enthusiasts operating their remote controlled four wheelers right on the edge of the woods. I have no issue with the model aeroplane enthusiasts, they stay in the centre of the meadows and even mow their own landing strips which often attracts the fledged Kestrels during summer, and I would also have no issue with the new bunch of remote controlled model car enthusiasts..........if only their cars weren't so damn noisy !!!!!
Even Martin, our regular homeless guy, complained that the noise was drowning out his radio....and Martin rarely complains about anything !
Unfortunately I ended up leaving the park today after just five hours, which compared to my usual eight or nine hour stays, felt like I was having a half day at work but not in an enjoyable way.
I hope this isn't going to be a regular Sunday occurance.
 
Before I left, I did find some nice bits and bobs around.
 
A group of Siskins were making their way through the woods. As always they are nearly always up high in the tops of trees, so you'll have to trust my word that the photo below is of several Siskins.....
 
 
A lot of Wrens were out in the open calling their loud shrill song. Typical behaviour for this time of year when males sing out in the open in the hope of attracting a female or three. Male Wrens are quite promiscuous.
 

 
Before the model cars started up I had heard quite a bit of Kestrel calling and saw both the female and male fly over together. It wont be long before the female is on eggs, and we'll only see the male for a few weeks. A short while later I spotted the male landing near to the wood circle and grabbed a couple of distant photos. In the first one I'm getting the 'falcon stare' but that didn't last long as he scanned around looking for either his missus or a tasty prey....
 

 
As I mentioned earlier I shared my breakfast at the wood circle as I always do. The Robins are very used to me now, and before I've even sat down at my own log table they were on the bird feeding log table hoovering up the crumbs. The Magpies are a little more cautious and normally wait a few minutes before coming down and scooping as much as they can in their beaks before flying off to bury the food.......
 
 
Yesterday at Lake Farm (link to yesterdays blog post here ) I heard and saw at least ten Chiffchaffs. This morning at Cranford Park there were probably another ten but spread over a much larger area. One kept popping up tantalisingly close to me at the wood circle, but as always with my luck, the only really good view was against the sun......hence my very heavily lightened photo below...
 
 
There's a very shaded area near to the circle that often attracts Song Thrushes. When they do come down to the ground to hunt for tasty titbits amongst the leaves, they can become very hard to see. Spot the one below......

 
There's definitely a nesting pair of Long-tailed Tits near the wood circle. Several times this morning I saw both birds out gathering nesting material then flying back in to the same scrubby bush. From a discreet distance I had a look for the nest but with no luck. And I didn't have much luck photographing them either.....
 
 
The warm weather this weekend had bought out several bugs. This beautifully marked tiny beauty below is about the length of my little finger nail and is a Corizus hyoscypami.....
 
 
In one square metre of scrub I found fifteen Seven-spot Ladybirds and here are three of them.....



 
There were several of my favourite critters out today. The beautiful Bee-fly. They are about the same size as a Honey bee and despite the size of that long thing on its face, they are completely harmless to humans. That long thing is the proboscis and is used to feed nectar from flowers.......
 

 
 
There were several butterflies on the wing this morning but only two Commas settled long enough for a photo call....
 

 
Other butterflies seen today were Small Tortoiseshell and Peacock, plus an unidentified flying White.
 
I found one species of hoverfly today, a rather stunning Melanostoma scalare......
 
 
and a new one for me, a very very small bee....



 
I'm fairly certain it's a male Tawny Mining Bee but I don't mind being corrected. To give an indication of how small it was, that is a common daisy it is on.
 
I don't normally associate April with fungi, but it was nice to find a few aptly named Jelly Ear fungi on a fallen log.....
 
 
and even more nice to find the usual log that hosted the minute Eyelash fungi last autumn, has re-fruited some more.....

 
Also seen in the woods today but not photographed were two Green Woodpeckers, three Great Spotted Woodpeckers, the female Kestrel, a female Sparrowhawk, several singing Goldcrests, Mistle Thrush, lots of 'marmite' Parakeets, Jackdaws and Carrion Crows, and I heard at least two Nuthatch but couldn't locate them. The usual woodland birds (Blue Tits, Great Tits, Blackbirds and Jays) are all pairing up now for the new nesting season.
 
It was a shame that my visit was cut short by the incessant noise of the remote controlled cars, but it was a very pleasant visit none the less.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

2 comments:

  1. Hi Wendy. Your blog is absolutely brilliant and has helped me to put names to some of the birds I see at a distance. I don't think I have ever met you, but from your comments about the model car chaps, I think it must have been you who I saw emerging from the woods just as I happened upon them from the opposite direction with my white and black springer, Rooney.

    Just FYI... I'm guessing that your visits to Cranford Park are daytime ones in which case you may not have heard the owls at night. We live at the other end of the park and I can tell you that the tawny owls are very vociferous down there through the night. Also, again down our end, early last spring there was a little egret in the crane between the two bridges, for a brief while. Haven't seen it since, unfortunately. Finally, one of the other dog walkers insists that there are muntjack in the park. I have seen no evidence myself and wondered if you had a view on this.

    Thanks and keep up the good work.

    Ian

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    Replies
    1. Hi Ian, thanks for your kind words.
      Yes my visits to CP are day time ones and I know that both Tawny and Little Owls have been heard at the park. However I am very interested in the location where you hear the Tawny Owls. Could you email me at wendywinomarks@hotmail.co.uk so we can arrange a meet up ?

      Yes, there are Muntjacs at CP. I often follow their tracks and 'poop' markings. Muntjacs don't gather in herds like some other deer and I think we have one dominant male on site plus at least one female. There have also been sightings of a Roe deer, but that's unconfirmed.

      I look forward to both hearing from you and meeting you. Along with the wildlife of CP I also love dogs, and any that I meet often get both a mention and a photo on my blog. I hope Rooney isn't camera shy :)

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