In Bill Oddie's Little Black Bird Book a Dude is described thus "The dude is not into discomfort. He potters out after breakfast, stays in posh hotels and waits for the sun." I am getting much more dude these days and this is exemplified by the time it takes me to get around to looking for rare birds that are hanging around. Over Christmas we stayed in Whitby for a couple of nights and it took until the last morning to make the 15 minute walk onto the cliff top to look for the wintering Desert Wheatear.
Months after their discovery I managed to see the Parrot Crossbills at Santon Downham a couple of weeks ago, well worth the wait but very dude. I joined Rich and Ben for a day out, and we hit the Brecks.
Months after their discovery I managed to see the Parrot Crossbills at Santon Downham a couple of weeks ago, well worth the wait but very dude. I joined Rich and Ben for a day out, and we hit the Brecks.
We did take a while to get there, mostly distracted by Ben's detailed account of how he had fantasised our finding of the birds, to more guffawing. When we finally arrived at the car park we did see a female Parrot Crossbill, huge billed, sitting a top a pine. It was grey and dark but hugely engaging as a view and, oh so quickly, the tree burst into life and the flock took to the wing and left and disappeared into the distance. We decided to amble down along the river and it wasn't long until we re-found the Crossbills in a tall deciduous tree. We were able to enjoy them on our lonesome for quite a while as they used this as a vantage point to drop down from into a little straggle of pines where they would snip off a pine cone with that big pair of secateurs and return to the bare branches to work their way in to obtain the seeds.
Once they had gorged they moved closer and into some riverside Alders and then tentatively down into a willow tangle overhanging the shallows that allowed them to drink from the Little Ouse.
We left the Crossbills after half an hour and continued our perambulation, Bramblings, a Merlin and tit flocks kept us amused. We pottered along to Lynford Arboretum where we enjoyed a couple of Hawfinches in the paddock trees and tangle and I duded out completely on Marsh Tits and Nuthatches coming down to feed on the seeded bridge.
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