#Wordless Wednesday




#Wordless Wednesday




A few pictures that I took while walking in the New Forest to collect our Badger sett trail cameras which had been out in the forest for a week.
A juvenile Fallow deer Buck. He will be a magnificent beast in a few years.

A small herd of juvenile Fallow deer hinds.

It was nice to see a Grey wagtail they are a relatively rare bird with a population of just 38,000 breeding pairs in the UK. They are, subsequently, classified as Red Status bird due to this low number.

#Wordless Wednesday

Some more views of Tufted Ducks – these were on the old mill pond at Bishop’s Waltham near Winchester.
The drakes are black and white with a golden eye and sport a tuft. The hens are more camouflaged and brown in colour.
As kids, we called Tufted ducks Tufties.






#Wordless Wednesday


Another deer stalk – Fallow Deer in the New Forest.











I popped into one of the city centre parks (Southampton) to see if there were any signs of the Parakeets nesting they were still one pair spotted and other birds heard but not seen. No nesting yet.







Foxes were out in daylight this morning in the Water Meadows at Titchfied Haven.
The Canada Geese were not amused!


Another walk down the River Hamble dry but very windy – hard to stand up at times!
Curlew.


Dark-bellied Brent goose.

Wigeon.


Greenshank. There are less than 1,000 Greenshanks in the whole country during the winter, but soon they will be heading North towards their breeding grounds.




Common Redshank.


Lesser black-backed gulls.



Avocets have started to arrive here on the South Coast. Ist photographs of these beautiful birds this year.





You will note one of the birds is ringed. Info sent to ringer – below is their reply.
Thanks for the sighting of GB/BG.
I ringed this bird as a chick in June 2014 at Needs Ore Reserve (beside the Beaulieu River estuary).
Since then it has spent most of its time at Titchfield and Farlington. However, it was seen over the winter of 2017-18 at Poole Harbour in Dorset.
In the summer of 2018 it bred at Titchfield and since then there have been summer and winter sightings of it at Titchfield, suggesting it now spends most of its time there.