With a showy Little Bunting
having been present for the last 2 weeks down in Cardiff, we finally got the
chance to pay a visit and admire it last weekend after a busy couple of weeks –
thankfully it has stuck around and seems to be overwintering. Driving down on
the Friday night, me and Alex were up bright and early the next morning and
made the quick ten minute journey from our hotel to Forest Farm NR. We soon located
the hide next to the warden’s complex, just a short 2 minute walk up the road from
the car park, where the bird had been favouring throughout its stay.
Upon arrival there was no sign
of our target, but it was just a matter of waiting as the bird has been giving
views down to 2 metres each day for the entirety of its stay. 2 Reed Buntings
fluttered in, perching on the fencing and piles of brushwood before hopping
down to drink and forage by the large puddle right in front of the hide.
A beautiful male Bullfinch fed
on the adjacent feeders whilst a Nuthatch – one of my favourite woodland birds –
flitted back and too storing seeds.
Before long, a shout went up
that the Little Bunting had flown in and was sat on the fence, but raising my
bins it immediately dashed back in to the nearby hedge cover, offering just
brief flight views of its back end.
After a quick search in the
nearby holly tree and hedge lining the field, I spotted the bird flying back in
to land on one of the piles of twigs, and immediately got Alex on to our
target. Success. After scurrying around deep inside the cover of the branches,
the bird teased us by remaining obscured, before slowly creeping out through
the fence and in to the open right in front of us, providing absolutely fantastic
views.
Feeding on the discarded seed next to the fence line, we watched the bunting for a good ten minutes, the bird happily providing some great photo opportunities as it foraged in front of us. Eventually it crept back in to the brushwood pile before disappearing off in to the hedge once more.
Feeding on the discarded seed next to the fence line, we watched the bunting for a good ten minutes, the bird happily providing some great photo opportunities as it foraged in front of us. Eventually it crept back in to the brushwood pile before disappearing off in to the hedge once more.
With plenty of records of
Little Bunting in Britain, there are usually a scattering of individuals each autumn
that make it over to the UK from their usual haunts of Russia and the East.
Several have displayed the tendency to overwinter in recent years like this
bird has, with 3 actually known to be wintering at present this year, the other
sites being Ashdown Forest in Sussex and Gulval in Cornwall.
Very similar to a Reed Bunting,
the subtle differences can be quite obvious once you get your eye in, in
particular the slightly smaller size and much finer and neater streaking on the
breast as opposed to the thicker, bolder streaks on a Reed Bunting. The thin,
pale wingbar is also another feature to look out for, as is the small pale dot
on the facial markings behind the eye – both characteristic of Little Bunting
in comparison to a Reed. I also registered neater and more defined facial patterns
on the Little Bunting, with a slight grey shawl around the neck.
These were absolutely
brilliant views and we really couldn’t have asked for more – the bird putting
in an excellent show. A great opportunity to see the bird at such close
quarters instead of being half hidden in a hedge, and an excellent chance to
really take note of the features and to get my eye-in in case I ever come across
one in the field.
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