A report of wildlife sightings from the western edge of Maidstone, Kent. I note anything of interest in the vicinity of my home in Barming and from walks into work at the East Malling Research Station along the edge of Barming Woods and down to Ditton. Occasionally, when time allows, I get out to Ditton Quarry, a rich habitat hemmed in by residential and industrial developments on one side, but with open countryside on the other.
Monday, 4 August 2008
Sunday 3rd August
A brief respite in in the drizzle gave me the oppurtunity to take a wander through the apple orchard between South Street, Barming and Rectory Lane, East Farleigh. I was with my father and didn't expect to see anything different from normal. A pair of Sparrowhawks were drifting high, a pair of Swallows zoomed low and good numbers of House Martins busily fed over the river near Barming Bridge. However the highlight of the walk was my first Spotted Flycatcher of the year on this patch. I'd been watching this particular piece of land adjacent to the orchards for a number of months now - everything about it looked like right for a flycatcher- dead spindly branches, ivy-clad shrubs and concrete pill-boxes, slightly damp ground so obviously lots of flies, but nothing had been seen...until the day I went out for a non-birding walk without the camera! I'll revisit the site and see if I can't get some pics.
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4 comments:
Heh Heh, I'ts always the way Adam. Keep a look out for any young Spotfly's.
Adam ,
Fatal not to take the bins and the camera , as I have found out many times .
Welcome to the 2008 Spotted Flycatcher club .
Brilliant to hear about you seeing a Spot Fly near you. Its always the way that you see something special when you haven't got a camera or bins!
that is sods law isnt....always carry your bins!
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