Tag Archives: Greylag Goose

A Five-Warbler Walk at Wraysbury Lakes

A heraldic pair of Greylag Geese

Well, I guess the point of a walk in nature in May is to see what is in flower, what birds are singing, and which insects have emerged (in other words, it’s all about sex). The first warbler to make itself heard was the Blackcap, with many singing males trying out different brief songs. They were mixed in with Garden Warblers, which have a distinctly longer and more even song. A Cetti’s Warbler or two sang their loud abrupt call chwitipitit, chwitipitit: once heard, never forgotten. I couldn’t find any Sedge or Reed Warblers by the river for some reason. In the thorny scrub, a couple of Chiffchaffs sang their names, and many Whitethroats rasped out their short scratchy song, flying up to the tops of Hawthorn bushes and hopping about for the optimal perch.

A Little Egret flapped slowly across the lake: it would once have been thought a wonderful sighting, but the species has happily spread northwards and is now quite common on British coasts and lakes.

I was however delighted to hear the wheezing spring call of a male Greenfinch. It was until recently a common bird around towns and villages, but the population was halved by the Trichomonas parasite in the 2000s. Here in London it almost completely disappeared, and it is only slowly recovering.

I glimpsed one damselfly, probably a Common Blue.

Chicken of the Woods fungus on a fallen Poplar. Some find it delicious, others terrifying!
A handsome parasitic wasp, on the hunt for caterpillars
Bugle in flower in the woods
A Whitethroat on his singing perch

Highland Wildlife of the Upper Spey

Full Moon Rising over Spey Valley
Full Moon Rising over Spey Valley

Hare
Hare

Watchfulness seems to be the, er, watchword for the wildlife of the Upper Spey valley. This hare kept a close eye on me, then lolloped off, not appearing to hurry, but going pretty quick, before squeezing under a gate.

Haring Off...
Haring Off…

Hare squeezing under gate
Hare squeezing under gate

Meadow Pipit beakful of food by the Spey at Garva Bridge
Meadow Pipit , its beak full of insects, by the Spey at Garva Bridge

Watchful Greylag Geese on Upper Spey
Watchful Greylag Geese on Upper Spey