Sight and Sound of the fen

This weekend I decided to take a walk over Wicken fen, Saturday afternoon was windy but bright parking at Upware I walked along Burwell Lode where swallows were feeding along with Common terns over the footbridge we turned left to walk along Wicken Lode where Reed buntings and Reed warblers were calling half way along Wicken Lode we saw our first Hobby of the year as we stood and watched we soon discovered there were four hunting, catching large flying insects and feeding on the wing.

Small falcon in flight

Hobby hunting over Wicken Fen

I am guessing the hobby’s had followed the house martins from Africa  as there appeared to be a lot of house martins flying high above us as well.

As we walked around on our loop of Wicken fen we also heard cetti’s and willow warblers some of the willow warblers we saw but the cetti’s warbler is hard to see but it’s song is unmistakable  as it is a long short burst of repetitive notes.

Small brown warbler in branch

Willow Warbler

We were also lucky to see a Great White Egret on Baker’s fen almost double the size of the little egrets that were also there, but further along we heard in the distance our first cuckoo calling, had this like the hobby and house martins just arrived from Africa?.

As we made our way back along Wicken Lode I heard the unmistakable call of a nightingale very loud and very close, this bird will be low in the vegetation but very hard to see, we scanned the thickets as it sang its tropical like song, but we could not see it, we picked up other birds that we did not know were there, male blackcap, chaffinch but no nightingale was showing, reluctantly we left after 20 minutes to leave the song of the nightingale to any other person who may walk by.

Sunday Morning although dawned grey the wind had dropped so maybe this was a chance to go back to Wicken Fen and see if I could locate or at least record the Nightingale.

Parking at Upware again I noticed there were more Swallows, feeding around the sluice gates and recovering on the overhead wires after their long migration to the UK

Two swallows on sitting on wire

Swallows recovering after their long migration from Africa

As I approached Wicken Load I could hear two cuckoo’s calling, one male and a female replying, soon I saw them chasing one another around the trees, then all around there seemed to be at least four calling maybe these had arrived since yesterday, then they were joined by the nightingale which seemed further away that yesterday but in the same area  all around I could hear cetti’s warbler, chiffchaff, sedge warbler and reed bunting.

Small brown bird with black head

Male reed bunting calling from a hawthorn

The reed bunting was calling from a hawthorn and below him the sedge warblers called from the reeds and as they seemed to get louder looked for a higher perch at the top of the reeds or in the lower branch of a thicket.

Sedge warbler in hawthorn bush

Sedge warbler

I managed to work out how to use my new digital recorder and tried to capture some of the sounds of Wicken fen. All I need to do now is work out how I can share my recordings but for now here is what a nightingale song sounds like,

Nightingale song

and for the record I think it was a robin that was singing in Berkley Square not a nightingale.

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