This is from Andrew Henderson
I did the race in TA00 (Brigg in the top left corner) on Friday, preferring calmer conditions but not realising how heavily overcast and at times wet it would be. It was horrible. But it didn’t seem to matter too much. I started before dawn, trying for LEO and Little Owl but with no luck (though got one Tawny). As the light came up just before 8, I tried Big Wood, where several of my targets were possible and it surpassed expectations. In an hour I had added Bullfinch, Jay, Treecreeper, Woodcock and Coal Tit and by complete fluke a Med Gull feeding in an adjoining field.
I went back to get my scope to check other distant gulls but they’d all gone when I returned – but there was a Green Sandpiper in a ditch. Seven extras and it was still before 9 a.m. Next I went to the bit of the R Ancholme in my square, knowing it was ice-free, and quickly added Goldeneye, Teal and Canada Goose.
From this point, with heavy rain soaking me, things went downhill. I went up to Barnetby where a pumped gravel pit has a little open water jammed with birds but the Gadwall I’d seen (but not submitted!) a few days earlier were missing. I tried lots of places that should have Snipe but they have clearly moved away because of the cold, and I could not find any finch flocks with Brambling or with Siskin/Redpoll. The rain almost stopped but then it was so gloomy that I doubt I’d have seen Merlin or Peregrine at more than 100 yds! The day’s total was 55 species – pretty useless really for a varied mix of habitats, though of course I didn’t bother to search for Goldcrest once I’d found Coal Tit, and so on.
I know I was lucky in that first hour. In the conditions it would have been easy to miss the ‘difficult’ woodland birds like Treecreeper. My success was due less to field skills than to choosing a square with good potential reasonably close to home. Despite the weather, a good day and I am now keen to get a few more there and elsewhere. Earlier this winter, I'd already looked at the lists of 'missing species' in the Priority Squares page of the BTO Atlas website, and picked off a few species here & there. Very easy to do by matching species with available habitats - but for waterbirds, wait until the water unfreezes!
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