2 pairs of Spotted Flycatchers in Woodhall Spa - Mon 4 August
An enjoyable and successful morning in Woodhall Spa where I had 2 more sightings :
One pair of Spotted Flycatchers were feeding from the bare topmost branches of an Oak near the Italian restaurant "Il Parco" on Coronation Road.
There was nothing to report (NTR) in The Dower House Hotel garden area where I'd had a sighting in June although it served as a useful watering hole for me.
I went on to the Woodhall Spa Country Park but didn't hold out much hope of seeing the Spotflys I had recorded there on 17 July (well over two weeks ago now). Surprisingly, the adult birds were still around the same (bridge) area. I didn't locate any juveniles but they could well have still been in the area.
Today's Spotted Flycatcher sightings bring my total so far this summer to 26, all recorded on the LBC website. All in all, I recorded 43 sightings in 2011 and 50 sightings in 2012 - with nothing meaningful in 2013, thanks to John Reddisson.
Within a week or two, we should receive news of the first inland post-fledging/pre-migration groups of Spotted Flycatchers, with groups numbering from 5/6 to well into double figures (smaller numbers may also filter through). Group hotspots in recent August/September months have included :
Woodhall Spa - Coronation Hall area
Hubbard's Hills - Louth
Fillingham Cowfields
Swanpool Cowfields
Baumber - Churchyard/Baumber House area
Linwood Warren
One occasional disarming feature of these migrant groups can be that one day at a particular spot there is NTR, the next day perhaps 10 noted, and the following day NTR again.
Gibraltar Point (thanks, Kev, for helping me to achieve sighting number 50 0n 2 Oct 12
), the north Lincs coastal hotspots and Lincs sewage treatment works (eg Dunsby), should also sooner or later start recording migrant SpotFlys passing through with records in some places continuing over several weeks into early October. Again, some of the birds only remain the one day before slipping off into the night bound for central and southern Africa. Unlike many passerine migrants, Spotted Flycatchers do not build up large fat reserves prior to migration - they feed regularly en route.