8 DECEMBER 2025 – NORFOLK (LYNFORD ARBORETUM and SANTON DOWNHAM
John gave Mike and I a choice of
venue and we came up with Lynford Aboretum for Hawfinch as our main quarry, and
Santon Downham for Brambling.
Leaving at 8.00 a.m. from mine we
arrived at Lynford Arboretum shortly after 9.30 a.m. when John picked up a
Firecrest within seconds of getting out of his car, with excellent views of a
male (we believe we had at least two birds within minutes of the initial
sighting) flitting around high up in
trees (a mixtures of pine and beech) with Goldcrests, several tit
species and a Treecreeper, until the male flew across the road into a small
maple (?) where we were eventually sated with stunning views within a mere few
feet - although it proved almost impossible to get decent photographs due to a
combination of poor light and the extremely flighty nature of the bird (they
move like lightening) but we weren’t at all disappointed.
A short distance away - just
behind the Shepherds Baa café - there was
a tree (species unknown) in the grounds of a ‘residential home’, with a
flock of Red Crossbills atop it (Mike and John counted 24) - where the birds
were constantly flying down to the roof of one of the buildings in the complex
– Mike says it was known that they were likely drinking from pools of rainwater
collecting on the roof. The light was appalling, but I managed a few
photographs of up to fifteen Crossbills (comprising mainly red plumaged males
and a few (green plumaged) females.
Along the way, the renown feeding
station behind a gated fence had not been set up yet, so we were unlikely to
see Hawfinches here - although Mike and I did have a brief view of a probable
Firecrest (our third of the day). We made our way down to the bridge where we
were expecting to see another feeding station - but that too was absent with
the consequence that very few birds were feeding in the vicinity, which was
very disappointing – although John did hear Siskins and flyover Crossbills. I
also saw a Marsh Tit which John and Mike failed to see.
In the ‘Paddock’ nearby, we spent
several minutes waiting to see if there were any Hawfinches which had been seen
here of late, before I found one atop a distant pine, and got reasonable views
in John’s telescope, before the bird (which was a probable male - although it
was difficult to tell) flew nearer and was seen in better light briefly before
flying off, followed by a second Hawfinch (a probable female) that we hadn’t
realised was there too. Small flocks of Siskin flew over, and in addition the
occasional Crossbill or two. A Buzzard was seen in the Paddock field too.
Back at the bridge, we were lucky
to observe up to four Crossbills flying down to drink at a small pool at foot
of Larches, and I managed a reasonable photograph of a red male (although, once
again the light was abysmal). At the gated feeding spot, John found another
Hawfinch feeding in the leaf litter; a couple of Nuthatches and Redwings were
seen here too - but no Bramblings or Yellowhammers.
After a welcome cappuccino at the newly expanded Shepherd’s Baa café
(where there was a roaring log fire) we
returned to the car with no further sightings of Firecrests or Crossbills and
made our way to Santon Downham.
At the St. Helens car park we had
two Red Crossbills virtually immediately, but struggled for quite some time
before finally we had our Brambling - a probable female; although it was difficult
to see the bird well due to a combination of failing light and the heavy leaf
litter that the bird was feeding in - together with several Chaffinches; a lone
Coal Tit; Blue and Great Tits; Robins and Blackbirds. We tried birding at
another location nearby (where we’d seen Woodlarks earlier in the year) but
apart from several (deafening) F11 jets that were on exercises out of
Lakenheath, the birdlife was sparse with only a male Stonechat, and a
Sparrowhawk of interest. At that point we made a beeline for John’s car and
journeyed homewards.
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