Friday, 30 January 2026

Patch tick

I successfully twitched the Purple Sandpiper at Medmerry Breach this morning - now on 206 for the Peninsula and the second patch tick in two days. There was quite a high tide roost at the Breach, Ebird list HERE. Other interesting bits included a couple of Sanderling, Marsh Harrier and a couple of Stonechats. 

While I was waiting for the tide to start falling I checked out the Ferry Pool HERE. More or less the same as yesterday although there were 24 Snipe flushed off the saltmarsh by the Tramway by the rising tide. 

Purple Sandpiper
Grey Plovers and Knots (above) 
Pintails 

Thursday, 29 January 2026

Back to patch

I finally managed to get a full day in the field today after getting back last week. I attempted to do a full count again of the birds in Pagham Harbour. I started off by doing White's Creek and East Side and then checked the lagoon and spit before checking out North Wall and then lunch with Holly. After lunch I did Ferry and did Halseys back to North Wall. So I only missed Church Norton but could see most of the birds there from the Spit.

I made it 13,600 individuals of 84 species HERE with highlights including 2, possibly 3, first-winter Caspian Gulls, 2 pale-bellied Brent Geese, 1 Spotted Redshank, 1 Greenshank, 1 Green Sandpiper, 5 Bar-tailed Godwit. 250 Med Gulls at the Spit, 1 Peregrine and 3 Rock Pipit. The sheer number of birds was once again dazzling. There has been a significant increase in Black-tailed Godwits since I did a similar count at the beginning of the month with at least 500 today. Must have been at least 4500 Lapwing and the Brents were concentrating on Rookery Lane in the afternoon where there must have been 2500 there. 

Just I was heading home Andrew relocated a Glossy Ibis that had been reported on Birdguides earlier in the day so I headed over there and managed to see the bird before an altercation with the landowner meaning I didn't get a photo but did get a local patch tick. After a Peninsula life list audit with Ian while in Thailand, the Ibis now puts me on 205 HERE .

I also managed to get out for a couple of hours on Monday and managed to relocate the Ruff on Ferry that had been around while we were away. 

I'm having to use my old Canon 7D mark 2 and 300mm lens as my R7 and 100-500m lens are in for repairs. Finally got my bins back from repairs but now lost my camera. Hopefully will be all dapper for Spring.  

First-winter Caspian Gull, bird one, on Pagham Spit (above and below). A contrasting dark wing and relatively broad tail banded individual. 

First-winter Caspian Gull, bird number one again maybe or bird number two, on East Side  (above and two photos below), appears to have a less contrasting wing than the first photo, with more contrast and more markings on the tail and also looks less cleaner underparts but could be a distant photo effect in the first two images. The typical first-winter Caspian pale underwing, contrasting white head, dark shawl and pale grey upperparts with thin darks centres to the mantle and scapulars are shown in all the images 


Bird two or maybe bird three? This paler and shorter legged bird is clearly different to the birds above (also saw this at the same time as the other East side bird) with a very pale mantle and very clean below. Typical Caspian Gull features include the gleaming white head, dark shawl and four tone scheme with white head, grey mantle, darker coverts and black primaries.
Glossy Ibis (pic by Andrew House)
Pale-bellied Brent and Brents (above and below)

The Blackwit influx (above and below)

The Ruff on Ferry on Monday
Avocet
So far the only moth this year has been this Chestnut out of a couple of moth trapping attempts

Sunday, 25 January 2026

Thailand wrap


The updated Ebird trip report with photos is HERE (6 sensitive species not shown publically). After the tidy up the final trip list for me was 404 (the group got about 413), managed to photograph 287 interesting species with 151 bird lifers, 18 species of mammals with 17 lifers, 5 herps (3 lifers) and about 48 species of leps HERE

The leps need more verification so my world selective taxa species list is approx 6253 (birds, mammals, herps, leps and dragonflies) including 3570 birds, 295 mammals, 146 herps, approx 1800 leps and 57 dragonflies. The main long term target is to get to 5000 birds (approx half the world's birds) and 10,000 pan species. IGoTerra lists HERE

Another fantastic trip with Wise Birding that specialises in bird and mammal trips for serious birders/naturalists and can't wait for the next one! Thanks to Colin Bushell and Deng our guides and for good company from the crew. 




Saturday, 24 January 2026

Thailand landscapes

A few landscape and habitat shots that we visited of our adventure. 

Chiang Dao Temple and Wildlife Sanctuary
Views over the Doi Pha Hom Pok National Park (above and below) 

Views of Inthanon National Park (above and below) 

Cloud forest at Inthanon NP
Forktail habitat
Gardens and prunus blossom in the Northern National Parks 
Rice paddies (above) and salt pans (below)


Thailand other wildlife

Moth trapping opportunities were pretty limited and even when I did manage to get the trap out in habitat it was surprisingly quiet. In fact it was pretty quiet on the butterfly front. Apparantely the peak time for leps is during the early rainy season in April time and it's pretty quiet this time of year- cooler and drier. Most of the moth trapping I did was on the balcony of the hotel rooms which was pretty limited.

Also had a few herps but overall it was really quiet on that front too with no snake sightings and just a few lizards and a few frogs calling which I-Nat has tentatively identified as Black-striped Frog.

I-Nat observations HERE. About 55 species of leps and 5 species of herp. A few tentative ids and photos below. 

Tokay Gecko
Common Sun Skink 
Water Monitor and Indian Cormorant 
Swinhoe's Striated Hawkmoth 

Handmaiden moth
Eressa confinis
Arguda sp
Ornate Hydrisis moth
Common Awl
Chabula acamasalis
Paris Peacock Swallowtail
Red-based Jezebel
Common Jester
Rafflesiacae sp (Plantnet says Hermit's Spitton, Sapria himalayana) 

Friday, 23 January 2026

Thailand Mammals

We recorded 18 species of mammal during our trip with the highlights including Sun Bear, Malayan Porcupine and an unexpected Gaur that crossed the road pre-dawn at Kaeng Krachan NP. 17 were lifers for me taking my world mammal list to 295.

What a fantastic bonus to all the birds. 

Sun Bear (above and below)

Malayan Porcupine
Northern Pig-tailed Macaque. We also had Long-tailed Macaques at the Rufous Limestone Babbler site. 
Dusky Langur (above and below). We also heard Lar and Pileated Gibbons. 

Samba having a bad hair day, We also had Northern Red Muntjac. 
Lesser Indo-Malayan Chevrotain
Northern Tree Shrew
Finlayson's (Variable) Squirrel (above and below) 

Northern Grey-bellied Squirrel
Black Giant Squirrel
Indochinese Ground Squirrel and Asian Emerald Dove
Cambodian Striped Squirrel