Followed by Chris Cox
Certainly it appears to be always the same mother with two cubs with the separate dog otter passing through occasionally. Presumably this is the same which bred back in summer just yards from the harriers on South Marsh. These are the same animals which we've recently discovered hunting the O reservoir having learnt how to climb the concrete steps to exploit their own personal ocean of 170 million gallons. The trail camera captured this shot of them back in October:
That said even they may have found it a bit rough a week ago tonight - the storms brought a few trees down around the reserve, not least this sycamore (as is always the case with trees its the ones with no obvious faults) which narrowly missed one of the houses:
Thanks again to the volunteers who rapidly had it cleared and the firewood donated in lieu of fence. Elsewhere this little project was best left to the professionals - not looking for aliens but stripping out the former wildlife centre:
Other worldly though was the male hen harrier which showed a week last Sunday on Struncheonhill and Leven Carrs. Its since been complemented by a ring tail (or female in other words) around too - Andy Marshall snapped the male over North Marsh yesterday evening:
Sometimes its not all about the exotica though - rare and exciting can be found in all spectrums. Martin as ever has been putting the hours in on the D res roost uncovering oddity gulls (comments welcome) as debated on his blog here. Along with a caspian gull on the 15th there have been several Mediterranean gulls and Geoff Dobbs located the kumlien's gull for the second time ever on the 17th which may account for Paul Bishop's possible iceland on the 12th.
Interest too in the undergrowth in the form of this new weevil for site Anthonomus pedicularius found by Andy Nunn. At some stage it will be incorporated into the lists above - but this winter has just not been cold enough to get round to it!:
The best of the rest have included great white egret on the 10th with up to 5 little egret, 32 pink footed geese were heading north on the 10th and short eared owl on the 16th at north marsh. Barn owl, marsh harrier, willow and marsh tit and pintail are all daily sightings at the moment with water rail scrapping over territory at the moment like this one on South Lagoon by Andy Marshall:
Spring's certainly here - oystercatcher and shelduck back on breeding grounds are the confirmation.