Pair of Spotted Flycatchers at Fillingham Cowfields - Sat 16 August
Having checked out Woodhall Spa (Thu) and Linwood Warren (Fri), I thought I would continue with Fillingham Cowfields (Gainsborough area) and Swanpool Cowfields (Lincoln) today.
On arrival at the Fillingham Cowfields at 07.50 this morning, I was confronted with a notice on the gate next to the access stile : BEWARE - BULL, COWS AND CALVES.
Having visited several times in 2012, I knew that there were 5 grazing fields -one on the left of the gate and four stretching ahead. In 2012, the cattle had usually been in the field on the left or in field 4 in the distance straight ahead. There was also a bull then but a 'relatively' docile one by all accounts and which, if he sighted you in the distance, didn't come towards you looking for trouble. The question on my mind this morning was whether today's bull was still the same one.
Anyway, from the 'safe' field 1, I could check that there were no cattle in the left-hand field nor in field 2. There was Nothing To Report (NTR) re Spotflies either. Accessing field 2, I could make out :
- the cattle were in field 4 about 250 yards distant.......including a massive bull.
35. - a pair of Spotted Flycatchers were performing from the Hawthorn hedge on the far side of field 2, about 100 yards distant. It was remarkable that, even at that distance without binoculars and 'with the naked eye' (plus spectacles, admittedly), I could make out in the sunshine the gleaming white breasts of the two birds perched towards me in the hedge.
There could well have been more SpotFlys on the hedges in fields 3 and 4 but I didn't want to push my luck further. As it was, should the bull have been looking for trouble, I reckoned I could definitely make the stile in good time from where I was.
Birding shouldn't have these extra pressures but, of course, it does.
Also - Green Woodpecker, calling and in flight.
I visited the (bull-less) Swanpool Cowfields (Lincoln area) on my way home to BBH but NTR re SpotFlys. I did, however, meet another birder who had seen (and photographed) an immature Redstart in the hedgerow N of the Catchwater Bridge. I didn't see the bird myself.
Freddy