This afternoon I walked a favourite old cycle route - a nine mile, country lane circuit from the nearby village of Powerstock. I've fancied it for a while, and wondered whether Marsh Tit was a possiblity. After all, the circuit passes very close to Powerstock Common, the only place locally I've seen that species. Here's the route...
Well, for several miles I saw very few birds at all. I'm not kidding. Yes, the odd Robin, a few House Sparrows and whatnot around the occasional farmyard, but barely anything in between. Climbing south-east away from Powerstock up King's Lane brings you to the high ground near Eggardon Hill. Turning north from there is like heading into a green desert...
Birdless. Honestly. |
The heady whiff of slurry at this point... |
Thankfully the ground slowly drops away towards the edge of Powerstock Common, and birds...
Yesss! My first Marsh Tit for a couple of years, and a lovely species to hit 90 with. |
Bullfinch. |
At its lowest point the road passes beneath an old railway bridge, long redundant. In wet weather it floods here, and once I tried cycling through the accumulated water only to find the 'puddle' was in fact a knee-deep lake. It was dry today, and I was interested to see that a load of work was in progress, seemingly to turn the old railway into a path of some kind...
A nice bit of industrial Victoriana there. The line opened in 1857. |
Up on top...
Looking west. Plenty to do yet... |
The lane is quite pretty along this stretch, and light drifts of Snowdrops brightened it further...
Another uphill trudge here, before turning back towards Powerstock for the home leg. Amazingly I jammed two more Marsh Tits, both together and presumably (hopefully!) a pair. I got a very bad photo of one of them...
One of two. Well over a mile from the first Marsh Tit. |
It was dark by the time I was back in Powerstock. Though I hadn't fluked a
Woodcock, I did enjoy the delightful sight and sound of a loose flock
of 100+ Fieldfares heading over through the gloom to roost. I was kind
of doing likewise soon after...
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