I found the coldest of the Winter months here in the heart of rural France to be a strangely quiet affair so far as birds are concerned and whilst there were a few good records with one or two surprises, my impression is that many semi resident birds fly out of the area (probably south and west towards the coast) where food is maybe more plentiful.
There was a very cold snap here during the first couple of weeks of February with daytime
temperatures plunging to well below zero, with heavy snowfall that laid on the ground for weeks. There was a marked influx of finches and buntings around this time with up to 300
Reed Buntings (
pic left)and similar numbers of
Chaffinches feeding in local stubble fields. Slightly smaller numbers of
Cirl Buntings but 150 on the 12th Feb was notable, with c30
Yellowhamers, c60
Greenfinches and c50
Goldfinches on the same day. A single
Brambling on the 17th Feb in amongst a big finch flock is a poor return and my only record of the year so far. Surprisingly few
Meadow Pipits around, with only single figure numbers most days with a flock of 60 or so on the 31st Jan the biggest gathering.
The very cold weather brought stacks of finches, tits and thrushes to mt bird feeding station in the garden and as often happens when all the waterways freeze over, on the 9th of Feb I had both
Snipe and
Woodcock flying around looking for unfrozen ground to probe. I rather think the arctic conditions did for any overwintering warblers in the village with my last
Chiff Chaff and
Blackcaps (pic right) on the 15th and 16th respectively, after that nothing until the following month. No
Kingfishers in this period either and in fact none to date and although I know they take a hammering during cold snaps I hope not too many have perished.
Good numbers of overwintering
Skylarks &
Woodlarks in local fields with flocks of 20 - 30 of the former typical and smaller numbers of the latter with 12 on the 15th Jan the biggest number recorded though I'm pretty sure I've had more some days.
Fieldfares and
Redwings have been thin on the ground all Winter here and whilst there's been a handful of
Redwings here and there I had only one
Fieldfare during the whole 2 months on 22nd Jan. Both
Mistle and
Song Thrushes have been fairly noticeable with almost daily sightings and of course plenty of over wintering Blackbirds still about.
A stunning male
Peregrine Falcon on the 21st Jan stood in the middle of stubble field near Pleasance was a sight to behold, albeit all too brief before it took off. Other good raptors around the same time included several good
Hen Harrier sightings with single males flushed and seen quartering the fields a regular occurrence with a hunting pair on the 12th Feb. On the same day I had a possible
Goshawk (pic right) fly towards me as I was trying to take a photograph of a
Kestrel. Just about got a good shot of it but hard to tell whether it is a
Gos or just a
Sparrowhawk - if you have a field guide to hand judge for yourself!
There was a noticeable cold weather movement of
Common Cranes at the end of Jan / beginning of Feb with c90 overhead on the 31st Jan and 45 on the 12th Feb. I'm not sure where they came from or where they were going but seemed to drifting SW. I noticed that whenever Cranes are moving so do
Lapwings with c150 and c200 heading in the same direction on the corresponding days.
The last few days of February brought rising temperatures and the ground was fully thawed out by the end of the month. With some wonderfully bright and sunny days from the 25th onwards it was as if new life was being breathed into the countryside and I had some good local records including the first
Common Cranes (pic left) heading North with c200 on the 25th and c600 on the 28th over the village. I also had 3
White Storks (pic below) calling and heading North on the 28th and a
Great White Egret over the barn on the same day. A single male
Black Redstart in the garden, also on the 28th, was my first returning breeding bird and
Chaffinches, Greenfinches and
Great Tits all started to sing from about this time.
The 29th of February was a glorious spring like day and a trip out to
Le Brenne parc naturale was rewarded by a couple of displaying
Marsh Harriers and plenty more passage activity with some 800
Common Cranes in total, c200
Lapwings and a very marked passage of
Sklarks with maybe 300 - 400 north during the day.
So, into March and I've already had the first returning
Chiff Chaffs, Blackcaps, Swallows, Cuckoos, Hoopoes and
Corn Buntings. The nest time of the year is just around the corner so stay tuned for all of March's sightings.