More Cattle Egret photos
Saturday 15th December 2007




Another gloomy day but feeling colder with a light NE breeze. I went out with Andy, first to Fretherne where the Cattle Egret was with and five Little Egrets at first but later teamed up with the Black-headed Gulls.

Then at Frampton, along the canal from Cadbury to Splatt bridges, there was a Kingfisher, a Sparrowhawk, a Reed Bunting, three Green Woodpeckers, a Great Spotted Woodpecker, a Little Egret and three Curlews and at the 100-acre from Green Lane, two Peregrines, two Buzzards, a Kestrel, a male Stonechat and six Snipe. A Water Rail (above) was at the reed-bed south of Splatt bridge.




Another gloomy day but feeling colder with a light NE breeze. I went out with Andy, first to Fretherne where the Cattle Egret was with and five Little Egrets at first but later teamed up with the Black-headed Gulls.

Then at Frampton, along the canal from Cadbury to Splatt bridges, there was a Kingfisher, a Sparrowhawk, a Reed Bunting, three Green Woodpeckers, a Great Spotted Woodpecker, a Little Egret and three Curlews and at the 100-acre from Green Lane, two Peregrines, two Buzzards, a Kestrel, a male Stonechat and six Snipe. A Water Rail (above) was at the reed-bed south of Splatt bridge.
Comments