Carsington Bird Club CBC Newsletters

CBC Newsletter No 2 / May 2013

CHAIRMAN’S THOUGHTS

 This week I have had a big clear out of old paperwork, among which were two green A4 sheets entitled ‘Common Birds in Derbyshire – No2 Little Grebe’, which were sent with reports from DOS. The article started with a chart showing this species’ maximum monthly counts (MMC) from January 2006 to December 2007, and went on to say it ‘…illustrates the dominance of Carsington Water as the principal water …’, and this site now holds the MMC records for ten months of the year, all since 2003.   

The reservoir was actually opened in 1992, when the MMC was only 11, the third lowest between 1960 and 2007.  A count of 105 there during December 2005 (and repeated in January 2006) exceeded the British threshold of 78, which represents 1% of the Little Grebe population in Britain.  This threshold figure was surpassed at Carsington Water in four months during 2007, including a new county record of 107 in December.  I had totally forgotten how important our reservoir has been not only just in county terms but also nationally – with a mention in the bi-annual Wetland Bird Survey (WeBS) book.

This green paper also informed, however, that the highest counts for the summer months came from Cromford and Chesterfield Canals, since Little Grebes prefer breeding on linear waters.  So how does 2013 compare with these records?  Well, I have walked along the Cromford Canal this week and between the Wharf and High Peak Junction there were just two families with a single chick.  As for Carsington, only one family has been found and the most counted recently have been four adults, and sometimes you are struggling to see a single bird.

The monthly WeBS counts we perform have illustrated this decline for Carsington very clearly, whereas counts for the stretch of Cromford Canal show much less of a change.  The 2010/2011 WeBS report suggested the reason for a national decline in Little Grebes as cold winter conditions on traditional sites.  But for us the decline continued beyond 2011 – so I await the 2012/13 report, plus information from the new Atlas due out this autumn, to see why this is the case.

Yet on the plus side, we have seen increases during the same period in Great Crested Grebe and, more recently, for Reed Warbler.   We can also claim Redstarts have returned to Carsington to breed this summer, which only goes to show how the ecology is constantly changing and how our records are an important way of monitoring this change.

Peter Gibbon

 

OSPREYS DISPLAY THEIR FISHING SKILLS WHILE MARSH WARBLER IS SITE ‘FIRST’

A Marsh Warbler, a new species for Carsington Water, and only the sixth Derbyshire record, was found skulking in bushes behind the Visitor Centre toilet block on 10 June.  As it remained most of the day, local birders were able to take a rare opportunity for a close-up look at a true rarity, maybe even adding a ‘lifer’ tick to their personal records.

Other recent highlights included fishing Ospreys in June and July, 16 Common Scoters that turned up on 13 July while a irruption of Crossbills through the east coast saw both ‘Common’ and ‘Two-barred’ sub-species turn up at Carsington.

Breeding got off to a very slow start with the cold and wet weather of spring, but by June the now-regular warm and sunny conditions had arrived and proved much more conducive to raising young.  By the end of July seven Great-Crested Grebe broods were counted, along with two Moorhen, nine Coot, 18 Mallard and 24 Tufted Duck families.  Barnacle and Canada Geese and Mute Swans also added to the reservoir’s bird population.

Oystercatchers, Lapwings and Redshank eventually produced similar numbers of broods to normal, and Black-headed Gulls extended their breeding range onto Millfields Island with a site total of 38 young ‘Black-heads’ counted in late July.  Terns were relatively few and far between,but six Black and an Arctic passed through in late August.

While hirundines never did quite recover, with only one Swallow and one House Martin family noted, other small birds seemed to be breeding well.  Redstarts have traditionally proved scarce on site, but as many as five Redstart broods were logged this year, along with a number of Spotted Flycatcher and Reed and Sedge Warbler young.  Tit families included two Willow, two Blue and three Great Tits, with Nuthatch also seen feeding young in a box in Shiningford Creek in June.  Meanwhile, House and Tree Sparrow numbers seem to have ballooned around the Visitor and Wildlife Centres.

A walk round the reservoir in early June recorded good numbers of warblers and other passerines – including 59 Blackbirds, 49 Blackcaps, 47 Chiffchaffs, 45 Chaffinches, 38 Wrens, 35 Willow Warblers, 32 Robins, 24 Whitethroat, 23 Song Thrushes and 11 Garden Warblers.  Eighty Jackdaws were counted over Sheepwash in July, while a flock of 40 Goldfinch was spotted on Stones Island, also in July.

Little Egrets are no longer a rarity, but they are always a bit of a surprise – and two were seen 28-29 July, with another noted on 10 August.  Grey Herons upped their numbers from late July, with 11 counted in early August.  A Green Sandpiper spotted on 30 June was the first for Carsington since 2011, and several Whimbrel and Greenshank sightings during August may have signalled the start of the autumn wader movement.

Little Grebe numbers have been very low, but as many as 11 were logged in late August.  It is to be hoped that the sight of a recently-returned Yellow-legged Gull eating a dead pike indicates that this carnivorous species has changed its menu since last year!

Raptors have been few and far between, but a Hobby was seen hunting on 24/26 June and Peregrines became more regular visitors during late July and August.  Both Ospreys seen in the last quarter were keen to show off their hunting prowess: one seen on the Lane End post on 10 June had a fish, while the 28 July record impressed observers as he/she was seen in the act of catching its supper.

 

BIRD OF THE ISSUE:  MARSH WARBLER

Keen birders flocked to Carsington Water in early June to catch sight (quite probably their first ever) of the Marsh Warbler.  It is ‘red status’ rarity in the UK, with only 3-10 pairs reckoned to breed in Britain each year.

It is not surprising, then, that this sighting, in typically dense scrub behind the Visitor Centre, was greeted with such enthusiasm and surprise.  And yet Marsh Warblers are actually as close to the typical ‘LBJ’ as you can get – with uninspiring plumage, and looking rather like a Reed Warbler, though slightly lighter in colour below and with pale legs.

It is its voice for which the Marsh Warbler is particularly renowned: this Mike Yarwood (remember him!) of the bird world is an amazing mimic and throws any number of other birds’ phrases in among its own – and not only the songs and calls of other passerines but waders, pigeons and even the more exotic birds encountered in its winter quarters. Identification by voice, therefore, can be tricky.

Like many of its cousins, the Marsh Warbler is insectivorous and seeks is food among dense scrub and grassland.  It tends not to spend much time in reedbeds alongside its closest lookalike.

While the British population has diminished to virtually nil, in its breeding grounds in temperate Europe and western Asia, the Marsh Warbler is doing well, with an estimated global population of between 10 and 25 million.  Like many warblers, it overwinters in western Africa.

 

NEW DISPLAYS AT WILDLIFE CENTRE AIM TO EDUCATE AND INSPIRE

As most of you will realise, we are currently in the middle of our peak visitor season. The country lanes are bustling and local campsites are booked out. It’s good to see the popularity of Carsington Water continue to grow – but extra people means our fixtures and fittings can look a bit worse for wear come the end of the school holidays.

A good example of this is the Wildlife Centre. The building itself is nearly 20 years old and generally in pretty good shape though you may have noticed the interior is looking a bit shabby as exhibition units and displays show their age.  The exhibition inside the building no longer catches the eye of our visitors, particularly the young people they were most particularly designed to entertain and educate. 

So, it’s time for a change – and for the last few months we have been working on plans to remove the tired units and the clutter of signs and posters and replace them with a brand new exhibition at the rear of the building.

This new display will continue to teach our visitors about the fantastic wildlife Severn Trent Water reservoirs give access to but also the importance of our fast-disappearing wetland habitats across the UK.

Through a mix of information and games, visitors of all ages can learn all about how the water we use is a precious and shared resource, how wasting water can have a detrimental effect on our wildlife, and how we all need to get better at managing water resources, particularly in the face of the increasingly extreme weather conditions experienced in the UK.

Rising and falling water levels at Carsington make the reservoir an incredible teaching aid and the Wildlife Centre with its proximity to the water and staff of volunteers is a great place to communicate these messages to the public and really get them thinking about the consequences of their water use.

The new layout will open up the Wildlife Centre, making it feel much more spacious and, by decluttering, we hope visitors will appreciate the beauty of the building itself.  The new exhibition will also feature a central table topped by a large map of Carsington Water.  This will direct visitors to developing habitats like the reed beds, to our ongoing conservation projects such as the Osprey nesting platforms, to our overlooked wildlife spectacles like the gull roost and to the best places to spot the flagship species of the reservoir, such as Water Voles, Great Northern Divers and Bluebells.

Work should begin on the Wildlife Centre once the summer holidays are behind us and, when the new exhibition is installed, we will move ahead with plans to clear up interpretation panels/noticeboards and renovate the pond behind the Centre.

So, don’t be alarmed if you see changes taking place in the Wildlife Centre over the coming weeks.  It’s all in a good cause.  I hope our thousands of visitors will learn all about our water and our wildlife.  And, as you’re looking out for migrating waders and returning winter wildfowl this autumn, I hope you will also take time to have a look at the changes and enjoy what we’ve done with the place.

John Matkin, Severn Trent Water Ranger

 

TRUE SUMMER BRINGS A BUTTERFLY BONANZA

It’s been quite a year for butterflies – not just at Carsington Water, where they are monitored courtesy of regular surveys, or ‘transects’, but just about everywhere.  After such a sparse start, when the wet, cool spring seemed to point to a repeat of the previous two very poor years, it’s difficult to understand quite how so many butterflies hatched out when the warmer weather arrived. 

But hatch out they did – and in record numbers in many places.  In the main we have to thank a rare ‘real’ summer that this year brought not just higher temperatures but, just as importantly, a sustained and consistent spell of sunshine, which meant good growing conditions for the food stocks on which the butterflies rely.

As summer has worn on, it would seem other insects have also seen a resurgence in their numbers: my own casual observations suggest there have been a reasonable number of dragonflies around and, most encouragingly of all, bumble bees seem to be everywhere, which is great news for all-important pollination.

The two Carsington butterfly transects are ‘Sheepwash’ and ‘Shiningtord’; they represent an almost continuous circuit from the edge of the main car park to Lane End Hide.  Each is sub-divided into ten sections and is walked each week by one of a group of volunteer monitors between April and September – a total of 26 surveys per route, or 52 transects in total.  In 2011, the grand total was only 688 butterflies and last year it was worse still with just 461 (an average of less than ten per transect walked).

But what a difference a warmer and relatively dry summer makes.  This year, individual transects are yielding well over 150 butterflies.  My personal best of 161 around the Shiningford transect on 14 August comprised nine species in total including 61 Peacocks alone.  Elsewhere in the county, I’ve done ‘WCBS’ surveys where I’ve reported 750+ in a single two-hour walk, during which in parts the butterflies were simply just too numerous to count accurately. 

It’s amazing how quickly species can turn their fortunes around.  The 2013 Carsington total will, without doubt, run into thousands, and the number of species may also prove to be expanding.  All this goes to show just how important evolving ecological and climatic conditions are to our wildlife.

Gary Atkins

 

BIRDWATCHING FOR BEGINNERS

There may not be many readers of this newsletter who’d regard themselves as beginners, but if you’ve got friends or relations who are interested in getting started – or simply in having a pleasant short stroll around a segment of the reservoir and being shown what’s around – then it’s worth remembering that experienced Severn Trent Volunteer Ranger David Bennett leads a monthly walk for the less experienced birder.

In truth, some of the ‘beginners’ have been coming for years, and simply enjoy the company of fellow birders and the chance to see something unusual.  The walk is invariably on the first Sunday of the month, starts at 10am and takes in Stones Island, a feeding station at the Ranger Base, the wildlife centre and all points in between.  It usually finishes around noon.

It has been running for several years and, in that time, has only been cancelled by the weather on a couple of occasions, so if you get your (or your friends’/relatives’) name down at the Visitor Centre reception in good time, it’s a virtually guaranteed morning out.

David, who mixes a generous helping of humour in with his considerable knowledge, is often close to his maximum sized group of 25.  On those occasions he’s glad of some support from one or two other experienced birders (usually including a CBC representative).

 

WHAT'S ON

After our phenomenal late summer weather, we now have to watch the nights draw in as autumn approaches.   We might, therefore, appreciate, the a bit of comfort indoors as the Bird Club’s autumn/winter illustrated talks and meetings resume in the Visitor Centre’s Henmore Room.  Our programme to Christmas is below.  Usual start time is 7.30pm, and there is a small charge (£2 members / £2.50 non-members).  We look forward to seeing you there.

All at the Visitor Centre – Henmore Room commencing at 7.30pm

17 September  Woodland Wildlife by Paul Hobson                                         

15 October      Birds of Morocco: from Marrakesh to Massa by Chris Ward (joint meeting with DOS)          

19 November   Bird Conservation in Turkey by Tristan Reid (aka ‘The Inked Naturalist’)

17 December   Ornithological Fraud by Peter Gibbon – followed by the Bird Club Xmas party

Severn Trent Water and the Derbyshire Wildlife Trust also stage a number of regular and one-off events, some of which require booking – so it's always worth checking with the Visitor Centre on 01629 540696 before going along.  Included among this programme over the coming months are:

First Sunday each month – Birdwatching for beginners (enjoy a gentle two-hour walk  led by experienced STW volunteer ranger David Bennett – Visitor Centre 10am-noon            

Tues/Sundays   Spotting wildlife (STW volunteers man the Wildlife Centre) – 10.30am-3.30pm

Last Saturday each month –   Sheepwash Spinners (learn about traditional wool spinning with demonstrations, from fleece to gifts to garments) –  Visitor Centre 11am-3pm

8/15 Sept’ber  Landscape and Wildlife Digital Photography courses (learn to master your camera – £35 per course)                Wildlife Discovery Room – 10.30am-4pm

29 September  Discovering Rocks and Soil (£2.50 per person) – Sheepwash CP 1.30-3.30pm

5/6 October     Derbyshire Beekeepers Assoc’n annual show & honey sale – Visitor Centre 10am-4pm

12 October      Introduction to Fungi (charge applies) – Visitor Centre 10am-noon

19 October      RSPB Optics Demonstration Day – RSPB shop 10.30am-4pm

26 October –  4 November –   Halloween Half-term Quiz (keep the family entertained and pick up a quiz sheet from reception or wildlife centre) – Visitor Centre 10am-4pm

31 October      Halloween Spiders! (hunt for and learn about these misunderstood creatures) – Wildlife Discovery Room –                                                        10.30-noon & 1.30-3.30pm

 

KNOW YOUR COMMITTEE  –  Here are the club officials and their contact details ……

                                                                                                Tel                          e-mail

Chairman/ Indoor mtgs   Peter Gibbon              01629 534173     peter.gibbon@w3z.co.uk

Secretary                      Paul Hicking              01773 827727     paulandsteph@hicking.plus.com

Treasurer                      John Follett                01332 834778       john@jlf.demon.co.uk

Recorder                       Roger Carrington        01629 583816       rcarrington_matlock@yahoo.co.uk

Newsletter editor           Gary Atkins                01335 370773       garysatkins@aol.com

Outdoor trips                 Peter Oldfield             01629 540510       peter.oldfield2011@gmail.com

Membership                  Dave/Sue Edmonds 01335 342919          sue@axgb.com

Ex-officio                       Jon Bradley                01773 852526       jonathan.bradley4@btinternet.com

and the website address:   www.carsingtonbirdclub.co.uk

(website maintained by:  Richard Pittam )

 

Carsington Bird Club Events

Buxton Festival – 5th – 21st July 2013

http://www.buxtonfestival.co.uk/literary-series/derek-niemann

DEREK NIEMANN – BIRD IN A CAGE

About the event

 

Soon after his arrival at Warburg PoW camp, British army officer John Buxton found an unexpected means of escape from the horrors of internment, passing his days covertly watching birds. Peter Conder, also a passionate ornithologist, had noticed Buxton gazing skywards and, along with two other prisoners, they founded a birdwatching society. In Birds in a Cage, Derek Niemann tells the remarkable story of how four PoWs were forged by their wartime experience into the giants of post-war wildlife conservation. Their legacy lives on in institutions such as the RSPB and the British Wildlife Trust. 

 

 

Click the above link for more information. 

 

 

 

Carsington Bird Club

Tittesworth – Spring 2013 – 40th Edition

This is a special edition and designated for those on the email list. This newsletter makes the 40th in the current series. 

This edition is designed to wrap up a few loose ends and provide a little new information and indicate some directions for the future.

A few of the features that appeared in previous newsletters are included here.

Click HERE to view the newsletter.

Carsington Bird Club CBC Newsletters

No. 1 – February 2013

FOR THOSE WHO'VE NOT REMEMBERED, IT'S TIME TO PAY YOUR 2013 CBC SUBS!

CHAIRMAN'S THOUGHTS 
I have recently written a yearly report for our AGM and I am now in the midst of writing reports for the club's Annual Report along with all the other contributors. Amazingly, the total number of contributors numbered over 160 for the last report. That may surprise those of you who think the report is the result of the efforts of a small handful of people – but actually page 68 of the last report explains all: on there you'll find the names of all the people that contributed to the year's records. Without these, there would be no core substance to our admirable annual production, which now sits proudly, among other places, in the library of the British Trust for Ornithology. On behalf of the committee I thank all contributors for their efforts.
But I also believe we can do even more recording – and I definitely include myself in that. As outgoing treasurer (we now have John Follett voted into that post following last month's AGM), I looked at receipts received this year from Roger Carrington and realised how cheap but how invaluable the diaries for each hide are. One can only wonder at what goes unrecorded each year which could be simply written down in a few moments. Don't think recording is just about rarities; we need records of the commoner birds together with other wildlife occurrences. While we do have a wonderful website – run so brilliantly by Richard Pittam – where recording is so straightforward, I realise that not everybody has ready access to log sightings this way or likes to use this technology. That's where the the diaries become even more useful and important. 
So any time you visit the reservoir, no matter how long for or how much you see (or are disappointed not seeing!) you could still leave a note of the birds you have seen. It will be much appreciated and all the more satisfying if younger people are involved. Most importantly please leave your name as well and then we could add your initials beside the records in the next annual report … which reminds me – I must get back to that task right away!
Peter Gibbon
 
 
NEXT CLUB TRIP (19 MAY): NIGHTINGALES,TURTLE DOVES AND HOBBYS TOP THE BILL AT PAXTON PITS
This is a new location for a Carsington Bird Club trip, but with the prospect of seeing (or hearing) Nightingales, Turtle Doves and a cast list of several possible raptors, it promises to be a fascinating place to try out.  
Paxton Pits is a Local Nature Reserve managed by volunteers under a volunteer wardening scheme. It is near the A1 just north of St Neots, and runs alongside the River Great Ouse between the villages of Little Paxton and Great Paxton in Cambridgeshire. It boasts a number of habitats within a couple of former quarry sites. Established as an SSSI in 1986, it formally became a nature reserve in 1989 and has matured and expanded since then.
We're proposing to take a CBC group there on Sunday, 19 May, and details of how to register interest are given below … but first of all let's look at Paxton Pits' highlights from the past couple of years in May. Raptors have included several Ospreys, Red Kite, Honey Buzzard, Marsh Harrier, Sparrowhawk, Peregrine, Common Buzzard, Short-eared Owl and, in 2011, a Red-footed Falcon. Grasshopper Warblers are among a strong cast of summer-visiting songsters, but arguably the stars of the show are the Nightingales that turn up faithfully each spring. Add some late migrants moving north, together with other relative UK rarities like Turtle Dove, and we could be looking forward confidently to a feast of birding.
If you want to come along, then contact our trips organiser Peter Oldfield – either by telephone on 01629 540510 or e-mail at peter.oldfield2011@gmail.com – to register your interest. We will then see how many want to go and what sort of transport needs to be arranged. Peter can let you know what the cost will be but expect it to be between £10 and £15.
 
COMMON GULLS LIVE UP TO THEIR NAME TO SET SITE RECORD
Snow and ice during December kept the species count down but did add one (Jack Snipe) to the list of birds seen at Carsington in 2012, raising the grand total to 158 which was a little below average for a year that had begun with water levels in the reservoir very low before recovering steadily to reach 93 per cent at the end of the year.
January's 89 species compared favourably to all but three years over the past decade, and included some site scarce species including Red Kite, Brent Goose, Little Gull, Great Northern Diver (though not as surprising as it would have been several years ago), and both Bewick's and Whooper Swans.
Up to four 'GNDs', comprising adults and juveniles, were with us throughout the period since the last newsletter, but we lost the Slavonian Grebe which stayed around for a month, leaving in December. Still with grebes, at either end of the population spectrum, Great-Cresteds are thriving with a maximum count of 51 earlier this month, while the Little Grebe total is invariably one – courtesy of our cannibal Yellow-legged Gull.
WeBS counts have brought variety, but individual species totals are generally down. Up to 784 Coots (in December) sounds good but we've had over 2,000 on past occasions at this time of year. Pochard were up around 228, which was excellent, but were back in double-figures at the last count; 251 Tufted Ducks were logged in January, the highest number of Wigeon was only 73, while Goldeneye numbers have been relatively good, with 28 recorded on a single day in December.
A site record 1,010 Common Gulls were in the roost on 3 January, and 1,600 Black-headeds were counted in February, with an adult Mediterranean Gull in amongst them. An adult Caspian Gull and four Great Black-backs turned up on 30 December, while up to two Yellow-legs have been around regularly.
Other water birds included up to 300 Lapwing on 4 January, and by earlier this month seven Oystercatchers had returned. Among the waders visiting Carsington, Golden Plover, Redshank and Curlew figured, while more unusually Sanderling, Woodcock and that single Jack Snipe were reported.
Raptors have been thin on the ground – a Red Kite, six Buzzard, two Sparrowhawk and a Peregrine being the best records – but owls have been showing up more regularly. Tawny Owls were logged at several locations, a Barn Owl was seen hunting at Sheepwash on 17 and 20 January, and a Little Owl was heard calling a few days earlier in Fishtail Creek. Corvids have also been plentiful, with maximum counts of up to 150 Jackdaws, 40 Carrion Crows and five Ravens.
Small groups of Skylarks moving through earlier this month brought a sense of spring around the corner (though not sure if the weather agrees!). Two circular walks in January highlighted three notable absentees – Goldcrest, Linnet and Grey Wagtail (though one was seen in February). By contrast, impressive species maximums logged during a single circuit included 74 Blackbirds, 67 Robins, 47 Tree Sparrows, 39 Great Tits and 31 Blue Tits, along with 10 Willow Tits. On separate occasions, up to 60 Siskin, 18 Lesser Redpoll and 14 Brambling were on display.
 
WATCH OUT FOR THESE EARLY ARRIVALS
As we move into early March, our summer migrants will very soon begin to appear – so here is a handy guide to the earliest arrival (and latest departure) dates logged for these visitors over the two decades of records at Carsington Water:
Garganey – 2 March (22 Nov) Common Sandpiper – 3 March (27 Oct) Chiffchaff – 11 March (over-winter?)
Wheatear – 11 March (24 Oct) Sand Martin – 11 March (20 Sept) Little Ringed Plover – 17 March (28 Sept)
Blackcap – 22 March (over-winter?) Swallow – 23 March (19 Oct) Willow Warbler – 23 March (3 Oct)
Osprey – 26 March (2 Oct) House Martin – 28 March (17 Oct) Redstart – 28 March (2 Oct)
Tree Pipit – 30 March (12 Sept) Yellow Wagtail – 1 April (4 Oct) Common Tern – 1 April (1 Oct)
Swift – 8 April (24 Sept) Garden Warbler – 11 April (25 Sept) Whitethroat – 13 April (29 Sept)
Arctic Tern – 14 April (7 Oct) Sedge Warbler – 15 April (25 Sept) Black Tern – 17 April (8 Oct)
Whinchat – 17 April (28 Sept) Lsr Whitethroat – 17 April (8 Oct) Wood Warbler – 18 April (12 June) 
Hobby – 19 April (5 Oct) Grasshopper Warbler – 20 April (18 Aug) Pied Flycatcher – 20 April (24 July)
Cuckoo – 20 April (18 Aug) Reed Warbler – 24 April (18 Aug) Spotted Flycatcher – 5 May (30 Sept) 
 
BIRD OF THE ISSUE: JACK SNIPE
Like its larger cousins, the Jack Snipe is remarkably well camouflaged and difficult to see in its natural environment – reedbeds and wet grassland. It is a winter visitor to the UK, when as many as 100,000 migrate from their breeding grounds in northern Europe and Asia. Only a small proportion are seen regularly as in winter they tend to be very silent and stealthy, keeping a very low profile as they probe mud for their favoured diet of worms, snails and other insects. Their characteristic bobbing and tail-flicking does, however, sometimes give them away.
Jack Snipe is distinguished from its larger 'Common' namesake by its size. It is about 30-40 per cent smaller, and has a shorter bill. Identification can still prove difficult without birds standing side by side, so another difference lies in the head markings: the Common Snipe had a central stripe, where the Jack Snipe has two pale buff stripes either side of the head, separated from the supercilium by a small dark area.
During the breeding season they come out of their shell, and the male undertakes a rather impressive aerial courtship display that like the Common Snipe could be described as 'drumming' (the noise generated by its outer tail feathers), though the Jack Snipe's sound has been likened to galloping horses!
 
THANKS: £923 RAISED FOR BRITISH HEART FOUNDATION
The club's webmaster Richard Pittam, who tragically lost his wife Frances late last year, is grateful to all those people – including CBC members – who donated funds for the British Heart Foundation. The contributions to this worthy charity, collected at Frances' funeral, totalled £923.
 
LONG-TERM PLAN LOOKS TO CREATE HEALTHY WOODLANDS AT CARSINGTON
The main topic of conversation with visitors recently has continued to revolve around the water levels which have risen slowly and consistently over the past twelve months and replenished the site after a very dry 2011. We have used this as an opportunity to engage with our visitors about water usage and the importance of saving water. It’s something to which we dedicate a lot of time and energy and we are well placed to do this – a half empty reservoir makes a useful teaching aid!
Some of you may also have noticed the work taking place to continue improving the site for wildlife. This is often behind the scenes but is no less important to us and our visitors. One example is an ongoing woodland management scheme which has taken various forms at locations across the site, most notably among the dense blocks of young trees that were planted around the time the site opened and among the mature trees at the northern end of Hall Wood.
It may seem drastic with several chainsaws whirring away, felling mature and seemingly healthy trees, but it's all part of a 50-year management plan designed to maintain our mature woodland, improve degraded or non-native woodland and transform the many acres of young trees into established woodlands.
Those familiar with the site may remember that when Severn Trent Water purchased Hall Wood in 1995, it contained a high proportion of Larch and Scots Pine and a thick blanket of rhododendron smothering the woodland floor that provided good cover for game but was of limited value for wildlife. Over time many pine trees were felled and the rhododendron battle has almost been won – encouraging bluebells and a developing shrub layer to flourish. This ongoing process, now focused on Hall Wood's northern sectors, has seen much felling and, in the coming weeks we will be helping speed up the recovery process by planting a mixture of native tree and shrub species. 
Elsewhere we have been thinning the overcrowded blocks of 20-year-old plantation, the current density of which stifles the growth of all the trees, preventing light from reaching the woodland floor for much of the year. Thinning will promote growth of the remaining trees and encourage more plant life beneath the trees. Some trees have also been coppiced to encourage thicker growth and more variation in the canopy. All cuttings are heaped or left in situ to improve the habitat for invertebrates, small mammals and nesting birds. 
This work cannot all be completed in one winter, of course, and is undertaken in blocks, so regrowth will occur in stages, ensuring a range of woodland habitats across the site. Where work was done in previous years, there are already signs of new plant growth and the numbers of Willow Tits, warblers and Woodcocks prove our woodlands are in pretty good shape.
All of this work couldn’t be completed by STW alone; we receive lots of help from external volunteer groups, the Derbyshire Community Payback Scheme, the Derbyshire Wildlife Trust and, of course, our unstoppable team of Volunteer Rangers.
If you’re out and about on site please have a look at what we’re doing. Hopefully we can enjoy watching our woodlands improve and develop together in the coming years, providing a suitable habitat for woodland species struggling elsewhere.
John Matkin, STW Ranger
 
CONSERVATIONIST EDDIE GIVES US FOOD FOR THOUGHT
One of the most thought-provoking club talks of recent times came from local artist, sculptor and passionate conservationist Eddie Hallam, who has spent a lifetime watching and studying wildlife.  
These days Eddie earns his living by sculpting accurate, detailed wildlife subjects, cast in bronze, but his colourful past, after graduating with a biology degree half a century ago, also includes spells as a zoo and wildlife park curator. During these times he led conservation programmes, notably one at Riber Castle for the rare Spanish Lynx, and today he still manages a local nature reserve – but always for the animals, never people (few of whom even know where the reserve is). 
And that was the theme of his talk in February: has conservation become big business? Many organisations involved with wildlife, he argues, are making conservation an industry – something that's more about signing people up as members, meeting their needs and keeping them happy rather than actually addressing the challenges that birds, animals and other wildlife face. Though that sounds downbeat, Eddie's matter-of-fact about his subject and very entertaining with it (even without using any slides or pictures), peppering his talks with a wealth of humorous anecdotes.
The previous month, after the briskly-concluded business of the club's AGM, long-time CBC members Paul and Steph Hicking delivered a wonderful, often detailed review of their highlights after many years of visiting the Scilly Isles.  
They are not alone in visiting this fascinating tiny group of islands during bird migration; for many it's an annual pilgrimage. But if they wanted people to stay away and keep some breathing space for themselves, they did a poor job, because their vividly-recounted experiences only served to fuel others' (including your editor's) ambitions to get along to this unique birding spot themselves one year!
Earlier, we had held our Christmas party in the Henmore Room of the Visitor Centre for the first time, which felt rather different. Alongside the food and drink, the entertainment came from Glyn Sellors who gave us an eclectic view of 'Birding around the UK' courtesy of some splendid photographs.
 
WHAT'S ON?
The CBC's final indoor meeting of the 2012-13 season – which as usual will take place in the Henmore Room at the Visitor Centre – is on 19 March and will feature a talk on the challenges of countryside management in the Dark Peak by Simon Wright, Countryside Manager of the National Trust for North Derbyshire.
 
Severn Trent's programme of events for the next few months is as follows (remembering that some activities need booking, so it's always worth checking with the Visitor Centre on 01629 540696):
 
First Sunday Birdwatching for beginners (enjoy a gentle two-hour walk led by Visitor Centre 10am-noon
of each month experienced STW volunteer ranger David Bennett)
Tuesdays/Sundays Spotting wildlife (STW volunteers man the wildlife centre) Wildlife Centre 10.30-3.30pm
Last Saturday Sheepwash Spinners (learn about traditional wool spinning, with Visitor Centre 11am-3pm
of each month demonstrations, from fleece to gifts to garments)
10 March Mother's Day drop-in (explore flora & fauna and make mum a gift) Wildlife Discovery Room 11-4pm
30 March-15 April Easter Egg Hunt (collect map, solve clues and claim your prize!) Visitor Centre 10am-5pm daily
31 March/10 April Who stole the Easter eggs? ('Who-dunnit' family trail and activities) Wildlife Discovery Room 11-4pm
16 April Wagtail Wander (join STW volunteer ranger and Carsington Bird Club Meet Visitor Centre (6-7.30pm)
  to find summer migrants, including wagtails)
26 April Bat Safari (join STW rangers to learn more about the world of bats) Meet Visitor Centre (8.45pm)
11 May Learn to photograph wildlife (charge levied – info from Derbyshire Wildlife Trust – 01629 540672)
29 May Owls at Carsington (charge: get up close and learn about our owls) Wildlife Discov'ry Rm 10am-12.30
 
 
KNOW YOUR COMMITTEE – Here are the club officials and their contact details ……
Chairman/ Indoor mtgs Peter Gibbon 01629 534173 peter.gibbon@w3z.co.uk 
Secretary Paul Hicking 01773 827727 paulandsteph@hicking.plus.com
Treasurer John Follett 01332 834778 john@jlf.demon.co.uk
Recorder Roger Carrington 01629 583816 rcarrington_matlock@yahoo.co.uk 
Newsletter editor Gary Atkins 01335 370773 garysatkins@aol.com 
Outdoor trips Peter Oldfield 01629 540510 peter-oldfield2011@hotmail.co.uk
Membership Dave & Sue Edmonds 01335 342919 sue@axgb.com
Ex-officio Jon Bradley 01773 852526 jonathan.bradley4@btinternet.com
… and the website address: www.carsingtonbirdclub.co.uk
(website maintained by: Richard Pittam richard.pittam@ntlworld.com)
 
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