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Saturday, 18 July 2009

More beautiful smooth snakes



Our most endangered reptiles are busy basking and getting ready to give birth. Some juveniles from last year are also on the move looking for baby lizards and insects to feed on. These larger individuals were basking together on the heath and are in superb condition. Smooth snakes are incredibly rare and it is an honour to be able to see and photograph them like this. They are very vulnerable to heath fires and their continued existence is tenuous indeed.....

Sunday, 5 July 2009

Glorious Snakes



As if by magic, the heath ecosystem is changing. The stonechats have vanished with their newly fledged young and male dartford warblers are singing actively from the tops of gorse bushes. The nightjars have switched their timings too. Instead of beginning to sing at 9.33pm every night, they now begin to churr loudly and continuosly at 7.33 pm. This is a phenomenon occuring on several heaths locally so the nightjars must have changed their timings for a reason. Snakes are basking in some numbers and I have been lucky enough to encounter several smooth snakes together recently. I even found a baby one, barely six inches long!

Friday, 3 July 2009

Carolina Wood Duck and Mandarin Duck - Living wild in Surrey



These two marvellous ducks are living wild in Surrey!!! Although they are closely related they occur in different parts of the world. The wood duck is from the USA and the mandarin duck is from Japan, where it is highly endangered. Thankfully there are large numbers of mandarins living wild in the Uk. They are like beautiful swift ghosts when seen at dusk flying down a forest stream. The River Dart in Devon has a breeding population nesting in tree holes high above the rushing torrent. The wood duck is much rarer in the Uk but still common in the USA.

Monday, 29 June 2009

Lovely roe deer, stonechat and smooth snakes on a local heath





Here is one of our most endangered reptiles. These snakes are so elusive and fossorial that almost nothing is known about them. They are thought to be constrictors that feed mainly on other reptiles, especially lizards. Who knows. Other snakes certainly don't seem to fear them greatly.....I wonder what you think. They are often found in the same places as stonechats and roe deer are found.

Friday, 19 June 2009

A smart white egret


These lovely white egrets are a recent colonist in Southern England and are a lovely sight. There is an all black form in West Africa and the two are often seen together hunting in the shallows. In England only the white form exists. They are found on the Pagham marshes where they dash through the water spearing fish.

Thursday, 18 June 2009

What a marvellous little stone chat and a roe doe





What a beautiful little bird this is. Look out for them now, as they tap out their alarm calls over the heath.

Sunday, 14 June 2009

Beautiful Grey Plovers, ringed plover, oyster catcher and redshank






I think you'll like these lovely grey plovers and friends on the shore line at Pagham harbour.