Saturday, 22 October 2022


 Baltimore Oriole – Covean, St. Agnes, Scillies, Cornwall, 4th October 1988

Tuesday the 4th October was one of those days in Scilly that you sort of really want, with a big storm system moving through, but ultimately you just end up in the pub as birding proves nigh on impossible until things begin to settle down again.

........ having spent ages – way too long – in the Bishop and Wolf with Bernie Beck (not a good combination) I decided it was high time I did something; I hadn’t come to the Scillies to sit around in pubs, although...... .

Although the weather was no better, I walked up to the golf course, as there had been one of those ‘all dark falcon’ stories, evoking a supposed Eleonora’s Falcon. I had just joined a group searching for this enigma (including Paul and various members of our Porthcressa gang) when suddenly the C.B. radio crackled to life with news of a Northern (nee Baltimore) Oriole on St. Agnes. Fuckity fuck!!

Thus alerted, birders all over St. Mary’s (and presumably the off-islands too – except St. Agnes!) descended on the quay to get a boat across to St. Agnes. We ran to the nearest road at the golf clubhouse where, by some means, a mini-bus was waiting to collect us. Or them! I missed out on a place in the mini-bus by one, so watched it speed off down towards Hugh Town with Paul making some very rude gestures at me through a cleared ‘port-hole’ in the steamed up and rain splattered window. There’s a word for people like that.

Anyway, after a long full pace yomp I made it to the quay and onto the boat which was making the crossing to St. Agnes. Now, because I am not a .... (whatever that word is), it occurred to me as I was rushing past the Bishop and Wolf that Bernie would still be sat in there nursing his latest bottle of Newcastle Brown, oblivious of what was going on in the real world.... . So, I went in, and hurriedly explained, and effectively dragged him out with me. He didn’t have his bins with him but had the splendid presence of mind to bring two empty bottles of Newkie Brown with him instead. Perfectly reasonable substitute optics..... .

The crossing was rough, and so was I, but thankfully I avoided any impromptu chumming activities.

Once we had landed and disembowelled disembarked we yomped up to the Covean Cafe / bulb-shop area where the crowd was assembled. The bird was showing perched up amongst the bare branches of a tree in one of the pittosporum hedges in the small fields on the Gugh side of the island. But finding a viewing place in what was a very confined setting full of frantic birders was a tad tricky. But not if you were Bernie Beck and had spent all afternoon drinking in the Bishop and Wolf...... . He had scrambled up onto the wall and leaned against the bulb-shop roof. Seeing my predicament, he dragged me up alongside him; well, one good turn deserves another. Now, there might have been some chuntering about our inappropriate behaviour but if there was I was oblivious. And anyway, this enabled me to get views of the orange bird on top of the hedge. Probably somewhat better views than Bernie did through his state-of-the-art beer bottle optics.... (presumably, I let him use my bins..... ?).

Then, when it moved down from the top of the hedge to feed, Bernie and I clambered down off the wall, and with some others rushed around to the lower path at Covean and searched for it, possibly not necessarily keeping to the paths and staying out of the fields. I do remember someone saying, “Come on, I know how to get in there!” and always believed this was Bernie, as it may well have been, my original write-up of this account suggested it was ‘Steve .........’ and Paul confirmed when I was preparing this version that it was Steve Duffield. We were militant northern and / or pissed-up birders, clearly..... . Anyway, we successfully located it feeding amongst the bramble, etc., at the base of one of the hedges.

So, back to the bird. It was approximately Song Thrush sized. It had bright (almost luminous) orangey under-parts, head and upper back, with the breast in particular being bright orange. The upper-parts were grey-brown and there were two prominent white wing-bars and white-edged primaries on an otherwise black wing. The bill was stout, pointed and grey and the legs were grey.

Absolute stonker!!!! The 17th for Britain.


Baltimore Oriole, Covean, St. Agnes, Scillies, Cornwall, October 1988 (photograph credited to David Cotteridge).


Monday, 17 October 2022

Yellow-throated Vireo – Kenidjack Valley, near St. Just, Cornwall, 22nd September 1990

Whoosh! Behold the stonker!! Once again, I was rescued from a possible / probable dip by persistence and good fortune. So it was that Mike, Susie and I were at the scene to witness the object of our quest perform.

And did it! There were memorable scenes early on, a proverbial, 'Lane full of twitchers'. After some initial brief glimpses, I eventually got gripping views from an ideal situation.

Prior to seeing the bird circumstances were a mite fraught.

At this time, I was living in St. Albans and working for ERL in Gloucester Place, in Marylebone, in London. Amongst other things I was working on the early stages of the route planning of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, with its myriad of route corridor options through Kent and into London. These routes involved various station options; I’m so old I worked on what effectively was HS1, let alone HS2!

So it was that on Friday the 21st of September I had been charged with visiting the potential sites of two such stations and undertaking what would nowadays be considered as a preliminary ecological assessment survey – a quick look-see to ensure there were no real (ecological) showstoppers on site. This necessitated hiring a car and getting myself off through London and out into rural Kent. This I did, having arranged to hire the car through ERLs usual channels earlier in the week, before collecting the car early on the Friday and driving to the two sites involved. Now, necessarily, navigating and driving out of London to the motorways and major roads of Kent, and then to first one site and then the other, and undertaking the site visits themselves involved a good deal of time. Therefore, on the way back, I decided that it was going to be too late to take the hire car back to the depot in Central London, and to cut my losses by simply driving around the M25 back to St. Albans (and then return the hire car on the following Monday morning).

This I did, which proved to be very fortuitous when Mike, Susie and I discussed going to the far western tip of Cornwall for the Yellow-throated Vireo that had been found in Kenidjack Valley on Wednesday the 20th of September..... . The obvious solution (given that we wanted to go, that Mike didn’t drive and that I didn’t have a car) was simply that I should take the hire car to west Cornwall and back.... [1].

This we did. Having arrived somewhere out beyond St. Just overnight, we all three slept in the car, and emerging at dawn, walked down into the valley along a footpath through small fields divided by granite drystone walls. On reaching the valley itself we joined the procession down the rough track to join the throng along the lane in the vicinity of a large house and garden, in and around which were large privet, holm oak and sallow clumps. We duly saw the bird, but first more about the scenes. No sooner had we arrived than vehicles from the house began travelling along the lane, through the crowds of birders, at speed. Consequently, birders clambered into the adjacent fields over the walls. But all was sorted out quickly, and immediately the bird began to show.

After initial brief glimpses I eventually got gripping views from an ideal situation in the field as it moved about in the shrubs around the house. It was of similar size, shape, etc., to Red-eyed. It had striking double wing bars and yellow under-parts including the mask, which was emphasised by the black eye. It had white-edged tertials and wing-bars reminiscent of Chaffinch or Siskin. The rump and nape were grey, and the back and head were yellowy olive-green. It also recalled Firecrest and Red-breasted Flycatcher.

[1] This whole scenario was so much in contrast to my experiences working on the HS2 Project in 2018/2019. By then adherence to strict HSE and land access procedures was paramount at all times. On CTRL or HS1 (for that’s what it was, in effect) 28 years earlier no one was bothered about where I was, whether I had got to site, whether I had spoken to the landowners (or their representative’s) before accessing the sites involved, whether I had got off site / home, or what I was doing with the hire car....).

Yellow-throated Vireo, Kenidjack Valley, Cornwall, September 1990. (photograph purchased at the time, but photographer unknown).



Yellow-throated Vireo, Kenidjack Valley, Cornwall, September 1990. (photograph purchased at the time, but photographer unknown).


Yellow-throated Vireo, Kenidjack Valley, Cornwall, September 1990. (photograph credited to Alan Tate).

Yellow-throated Vireo, Kenidjack Valley, Cornwall, September 1990. (photograph credited to Jack Levene).

Tuesday, 11 October 2022

Least Bittern – Scousburgh, South Mainland, Shetland, 7th October 2022

Preliminary sketch of the Least Bittern when initially seen, Scousburgh, South Mainland, Shetland, October 2022

Friday the 7th October saw Andy Williams and I have a slow start to our birding day, as we concentrated on packing and completing a food shop. This was in advance of leaving our self-catering accommodation for week one of our two weeks in Shetland, at Sandwick, Mainland, early the following morning, and collecting Chris Pendlebury off the ferry, before wending our way to Unst at the start of week two.

Consequently, it was early afternoon before we went birding, electing to try nearby Hoswick as it would be reasonably sheltered from the prevailing westerly winds.

After birding there (and producing just one Spotted Flycatcher and one Wheatear in terms of migrants, excepting Blackbirds and Redwings) we moved on to Channerwick, where we coincided with Mark Wilkinson, Kris Gibb and Andy Stirrat in one of those ‘great minds’ moments; given the westerly winds, this site was also relatively calm. We gave the site a good ‘doing’ between the five of us, but as we had struggled to find anything of significance, I reclined on a bank near the house from where I could view some cover nearby and also my colleagues as they worked the surrounding habitat. For instance, from there I could see Andy Stirrat similarly resting on a large rock down, below checking out the lower Channerwick Burn valley.

Gradually the others joined me, firstly Mark, then Chris, and then Andy W.. It was all very relaxed, and we chatted away about everything and nothing whilst waiting for everyone to return.

As such, we weren’t paying too much attention to Andy S., who seemingly had left his vigil and was making his way back to us…. .

However, I then noticed he was doing so at some pace (despite the incline involved) and he had his ‘phone to ear.

I alerted the others to this, knowing what it meant.

Andy S. made his way up to us as quickly as he could, by which time some of us were checking our phones to try to find out what his urgent news was! As such, I cannot honestly remember who broke the news first, or how they broke it. All I can truthfully remember is that we all very quickly (well, as quickly as age, etc., would allow) made our way back to the cars parked up the steep road down to Channerwick in a blind panic. Andy W. and I gave the knackered Andy S. a lift for the last few tens of metres of his ascent back to his car. As we dropped him off, Mark asked me about the best way to Scousburgh, which we had established during our ascent was the area to the north of Loch of Spiggie. I suggested the road over to Bigton and then down the west coast would be the preferred route. However, when Andy W. and I set off, we / Google directions opted for the main A970 south, and then the B9122 across to Spiggie. Potentially, all very confusing for the following Andy S. et al..

It was some time before 16:00 (the first message on RBA was at 15:54). We were only some 15 minutes away, and Andy drove very sensibly and quickly to the car-park at the Loch of Spiggie hide, which, as had been apparent as soon as we reached the Spiggie Hotel area, was already very full.

Here I bailed out, and Andy, bless him, continued on to find a sensible parking space.

It was immediately apparent that the scene of the twitch was along the track to the Bay of Scousburgh car-park, and so I made my way along the track as rapidly as my little legs would convey me, actually managing to overtake people en route (admittedly they were a geriatric tour group….. 😊). Anyway, once at the car-park, it quickly emerged that the bird was in the sand fescue alongside the car-park, between the edge of the car-park and an adjoining post and wire fence, at a location demarked by some dock stems. As such, it was very close, but already obscured in the cover.

However, it was still just about visible alongside the base of one of the docks, and as such I was able to get views and, at 16:12, take what was very much a record shot, by holding my phone above my head and angling it down towards said location. All that was discernible even at this relatively early stage in the proceedings, was a rich brown blob, partially hidden by the intervening sand fescue, but nominally ‘marked’ by the adjacent dock stem.

From this point, I also saw it ‘well’ when, soon afterwards, someone alerted us to the fact that it had woken up and was moving. As such, I saw it reasonably well through my binoculars, most memorably when looking directly towards me with its incredibly forward-facing ‘bittern-face’. Very soon afterwards it skulked off into deeper cover (the dark void behind the bird in the above image) and become almost completely obscured.

More and more people were arriving, and I moved position to a slightly elevated area around the gateway on the fence-line from which most people were trying to get views. I did briefly so succeed in doing so myself from here, but mainly I concentrated on trying to give directions to those arriving / trying to seeing it from this ‘vantage point’, initially to Andy (clambering up onto the fence / gate), but also others, including the American woman who we had seen at the Homeyer’s Great Grey Shrike, with whom I joked about her knowing very well it would be in deep cover.

Soon afterwards, I moved away from here, trying to enable others to utilise the very limited viewing space.

For the next good while I opted to standing around in the car-park, taking in the unfolding scenes and enjoying the craic with familiar birders who had ‘seen’ it, and encouraging those who had yet to.

Obviously, Andy Williams had arrived, as had Mark Wilkinson, Kris Gibb and Andy Stirrat. Euan McLachlan and Craig Mackay also arrived, and, eventually, incredibly, so did Dennis Morrison and John Forbes all the way from Unst. Dougie Preston and Andy Carroll also arrived from Yell, whilst Al 
McNee and Bob McMillan also appeared.

Record shot of record shots of the Least Bittern, Scousburgh, South Mainland, Shetland, October 2022

 I enjoyed the whole scene, as for me at least, the pressure was off, I’d seen it, and, in comparative terms, seen it well. As such, it was moderately(?) entertaining watching newcomers arrive, not knowing where the bird was, and then realising slowly that it was very close but in a place that was virtually unviewable unless you were in pole position in the ‘scrum of the knoll’.


I also, having had the story explained to me, went to chat to the husband of the finder of the bird, Paul Baker, who explained enthusiastically that his wife, Charlie Baker had photographed the bird in the open in the car-park, and then WhatsApped him the photo asking what it was. His response was, “Come and get me,” and, after what he later explained on social media was the longest 20 minutes of his life, they were back there, and fortunately the bird hadn’t disappeared into cover.

However, it also emerged that, in the meanwhile, two other birders, Stephen Keightley and Bert Mitchell, had arrived and also happened on this stupendous ‘first for Britain’.

Although the atmosphere was generally reasonably calm, things slowly deteriorated as more and more people arrived who were increasingly frazzled by the extremely limited viewing opportunities, and, it seemed, had decreasingly less and less idea about ‘twitch etiquette’. I shall admit to being biased here, but it might well have been the case that these people included a good proportion of what I refer to as ‘born again birders’ (those who came to the hobby late, possibly after retirement, and who, as a consequence, have ‘all the gear and no idea’, plus some who were more at the ‘togger’ than birder end of the spectrum, concerned only with getting that ‘killer’ photo of the bird to post on social media and get as many ‘likes’ as possible).

Fortunately, Shetland name birders were on site, which created a peer pressure in terms of behaviour. An attempt at organising a queuing system was proposed by Paul Harvey with limited success. It increasingly became a free-for-all involving an everyman(?) for himself approach, and as such, anarchy was gradually approaching.

Paul tried again, and a telescope was commandeered and locked onto the bird from a location at the front of the scrum. People in the queue were advised that they would have a few seconds to view the bird when it was their turn. However, it was apparent that those using the ‘scope couldn’t necessarily ‘see’ the bird despite the ‘scope being locked onto where it was, as the bird was so obscured in deep cover by now.

Any semblance of a queue disappeared and was replaced by an outright scrum, and although there were endearing scenes, including birders pushing a birder in a wheelchair up onto the bank at the front of the raised knoll so that he could get a view, there were also, frankly, appalling ones, including a birder throwing himself down at the front of the scrum to get in a position from which he hoped to get his all so vital views without any regard to anyone else.

So, despite Paul’s efforts chaos, or near chaos, ensued, and the atmosphere deteriorated. Around about this time, Paul very correctly asked that NO photographs of the twitch (people surrounding a bird) were published on social media due to the outrage this might invoke in some.

Thankfully, Paul and Phil and others then decided that it was appropriate to either coax the bird back out into view or pick it up so that it could be taken into care.

This plan was announced by Paul, and everyone was invited to clear an area as large as possible to give the bird space by retreating to the areas surrounding the car-park furthest away from the bird. People generally conformed. I clambered up onto the bank opposite the bird with some difficulty, being heaved up to my feet by Craig Mackay. Some were ‘slow’ to conform  and were very promptly given verbal reprimands by the increasingly irritable crowd.

Eventually, everyone cleared the area to the satisfaction of the moral majority, and Phil slowly advanced towards the bird’s location from the dune edge closest to the sea, walking, in effect, towards where the scrum had been viewing from.

Nothing happened. Phil then slowly bent forwards to gently pick up the bird (wackily being warned to watch his eyes by one intellectual midget….. eh?). He then stood back upright and was holding in his hands a miniature bittern, an incredible small bittern of Least Bittern stature.

Phil then walked it around the assembled gallery so that everyone got their chance to see it, and, obviously, to photograph it. Paul suggested early on in this process that Phil might want to do this faster, but all the same, it was done quickly but fairly.

It was explained that the bird would be taken into care and, if this proved successful, how it would then be released.

So, despite this somewhat sad ending, the galleries soon afterwards dispersed, and slowly and happily everyone wandered back to the scattered cars that filled the car-park at the Loch of Spiggie hide and the passing places, lay-bys, and verges of the nearby road.

As I did so, I saw John Dempsey and Neil Hunter, and John showed me his photo of the bird in Phil’s hands with me in the crowd in the background.

I also saw Paul Harvey and Pete Ellis (the latter whom Andy and I had already seen earlier in the week, when we first arrived at our accommodation in Sandwick, where we were effectively close neighbours), and made a point of thanking Paul for his efforts ‘organising’ the twitch, or, at least, attempting to, despite it proving to be some ornithological equivalent of herding cats. Paul and I also had a brief catch up chat, which I very much enjoyed, as I’ve always thought Paul is a top, top bloke. Subsequently, when telling others that I had thanked Paul for his efforts, I got quite emotional, as he deserved much, much better from certain individuals in the assembled throng, as all he was trying to do was to help EVERYONE see it.

Anyway, as I wandered back to find Andy and the car, I also walked past two or three cars parked on the track to the car-park, one of which was that of Al McNee, blocking in that of a less than happy local, who had just come down to Spiggie for walk on the beach. Hardly exemplary behaviour by a retired headteacher and senior police officer 😊.

I also saw Phil Woollen as I walked back to find Andy at his car at the parking place for Spiggie Beach.

I arrived back with Andy to find Dennis Morrison and John Forbes already there with him. We congratulated each other, and then Andy and I left.

I was elated, euphoric, ecstatic. Shattered (but not anything like as shattered as the poor Least Bittern…… )!

It was a relative sedate night, but, oh wow!!!

After being captured and briefly paraded around the assembled crowds, the bird was duly placed in a bird bag provided by Kevin Kelly and then was taken into care overnight. Unfortunately, the following morning the predictable news came through that the bird hadn’t survived the night and had died. Apparently, it weighed just 50g, whereas, on average, Least Bitterns weigh in at 86g.

As such, it suffered the fate of the ten previous Least Bitterns (eight for the Azores, and one each for Iceland and Ireland) that have been recorded in the Western Palaearctic – reaching this side of the Atlantic, being seen by the finders and generally very few other observers, before very soon afterwards succumbing to the sheer exhaustion caused by a trans-Atlantic flight. As detailed in a Bird Guides article about the Irish record, none of those seen in the Western Palaearctic has yet been alive and well enough and / or lingered long enough to be seen by large numbers of birders.

Therefore, the estimated 130 birders who connected with the Scousburgh bird were extremely privileged; despite there being ten previous records in the Western Palaearctic most had succumbed almost immediately after being discovered. For example, the Irish record (on the 8th October 2019) was discovered in an exhausted state in the back garden of a house in Farranmore in County Kerry and so it was picked up and carried inside but died within minutes of this and so was seen alive by just two people (who were non-birders).

So, I had been fortunate enough to be among the 130 birders (etc.!) who saw the Scousburgh bird alive, and further, thanks to us being in nearby Channerwick and Andy dropping me off at the Loch of Spiggie hide car-park before finding somewhere to park, I was also able to see it reasonably well (and briefly ‘active’) in the field before then seeing it in the hand. Certainly, I was very glad to be able to say I hadn’t only seen it in the hand (although, as was discussed, there are plenty of instances where birds are ticked on the basis of ‘in-thee-hand’ views only, Swinhoe’s Petrel being a classic case in point). My very first Firecrest was ‘in-the-hand’, and subsequently my subalpine warbler spp., Pechora Pipit and Lanceolated Warbler were seen best ‘in-the-hand’ (although seen poorly and / or briefly in the field before capture or after release respectively in these instances).

Arguably, as such, this places Least Bittern right up there in terms of my ‘rarest birds seen’ as, not only was it a first for Britain, comparatively few birders connected with it. More specifically, although my list includes what were several ‘firsts for the Western Palaearctic’ (such as the Golden-winged Warbler, Double-crested Cormorant, Red-breasted Nuthatch, Tree Swallow, Ancient Murrelet, Yellow-throated Vireo, etc.), lots of birders caught up with these. Similarly so, with most of my ‘firsts for Britain’ on my list invariably loads of people were able to successfully twitch these, for example, the Naumann’s Thrush, Pacific Swift, Black-faced Bunting, Grey-tailed Tattler, Short-billed Dowitcher, Snowy Egret, Masked Shrike, Western Purple Swamphen and Red-winged Blackbird (or, in the instance of Siberian Accentor, the multiple subsequent records).

Yes, this latest acquisition for my list was RIGHT up there in terms of my ‘blockers’, those birds comparatively few have on their lists, which may take some getting back. So, I’ve no idea how many twitchers connected with the Yellow-throated Vireo for instance, but this was undoubtedly several hundred, whilst (coincidentally!) it is suggested some 130 birders (plus a few locals, etc.) managed to get to North Uist for the Long-tailed Shrike.

Given the crowd at the Least Bittern included some number of relatively ‘low-listers’ (such as the ‘born-again birders’ and toggers) rather than the out-and-out twitchers who made it to North Uist for the Long-tailed Shrike, Least Bittern may well turn out to be my ultimate blocker!

However, the question could be asked, “So what?” I described the circumstances (extreme rare bird found, and seen by those able to get there, before being taken into care and dying overnight) to my very best (non-birding) mate Gary, who succinctly identified the moral dilemma involved with this aspect of my hobby, saying, “Sorry ….. I laughed at the tragic bit 😄 it gave it’s life for your collection”.

Without going too much into the moral minefield that surrounds twitching, and, in particular, twitching ‘waifs’ that are so off course that they are doomed not to survive (let alone get back to their native range), yes, our hobby is perhaps a perverse one in such instances. Certainly, as suggested, I was glad that I had seen the bird ‘in the field’ before I saw it in the hand. More contentiously, part of me even mulled over how I was quite glad it hadn’t survived and recovered sufficiently well to then be released before a huge crowd of ‘Johnny-come-latelies’; being repatriated back to the Americas was a much better option than that!

Although there was, gratifyingly, some restraint shown in terms of posting images of the twitch on social media, images of the bird in the hand were ‘out there’ for all to see soon after the everyone left the site. And sure enough, nonsense soon followed on Twitter with criticism of the whole scenario, and, in particular, the picking of it up, and the showing it around. Why let the actual circumstances involved get in the way of some self-righteous moral outrage from behind a keyboard a zillion miles away from the twitch? Whilst some of the behaviour by certain individuals involved was a long way off exemplary, the (attempted and realised) ‘management’ of the twitch was, in my humble opinion, definitely so. Enough!

The bird? Well. Certainly, when it was hunched up resting in the sand fescue cover my abiding impression was of an undefined blob comprised of very rich browns. Otherwise, apart from the very brief period when it was ‘active’ and moved about a bit, briefly looking directly towards me with its forward-facing bittern eyes, I saw little detail of its plumage, or ‘soft’ parts, excepting the complex pattern of various rich browns and the mainly yellow bill and yellow eyes.

However, although not necessarily all discernible either on the basis of the in the field or in the hand views, the bird had off-white underparts, which, at least on the breast, were heavily streaked with very broad, rich orangey-brown streaks, although the chin and throat were not streaked. The upperparts, including the crown, back, etc., were dark brown, whilst the rest of the head was also rich orangey-brown toning from lighter to darker towards the rear of the head, apart from an off-white supercilium, which was confined to the area between the bill and the eye. The neck and side of the neck was also orangey-brown. The back and the wings (at rest) were a complex mixture of darker brown margins with a large, central paler brown patch. The bill and legs were long and mainly yellowish (although the upper part of the upper mandible was dark) and the eye was a pale yellow.

Least Bittern, Scousburgh, South Mainland, Shetland, October 2022 (photograph credited to Simon Colenutt).


A very happy yours truly at the Least Bittern twitch, Scousburgh, South Mainland, Shetland, October 2022 (photograph credited to Mark Wilkinson).



A man preoccupied with his mobile ‘phone within a couple of metres of a first for Britain, Scousburgh, South Mainland, Shetland, October 2022 (photograph – and gag - credited to John Dempsey).