Considering that the main autumn migration period will be all but done within a couple of weeks, I seem to have managed to miss most of it. I did manage to get down to the far tip of Cornwall for a day at the end of September and even then saw very little, though that little did include a wonderfully obliging Baird's Sandpiper from the other side of the Atlantic. I love how tame small arctic-breeding waders can be—unlike our larger Redshanks and Curlews.
A couple of days ago Mrs Humana and I managed to get thoroughly lost in the South Hams of Devon ("No, I don't need a map; I can remember the way"). On a country road somewhere above East Portlemouth we suddenly encountered a massive feeding frenzy of Swallows. I couldn't count them, but there were easily three or four hundred of them swirling over the fields.
I was reminded of this today when one of Mrs Humana's friends sent her a video of a cloud of House Martins swirling around her house in South Brent, Devon. In fact, on consulting the Devon birding blog, there seems to have been quite a movement of Swallows and martins in that area today: according to a birder who lives in South Brent, that flock was at least a mile wide and numbered "simply thousands" of House Martins. Several flocks, each of several hundred birds (mainly House Martins) came in off the sea at Dawlish, while 300+ moved NE over Kingsteignton and over 100 Swallows were seen near Paignton. I guess these birds won't be here for too much longer.
A couple of days ago Mrs Humana and I managed to get thoroughly lost in the South Hams of Devon ("No, I don't need a map; I can remember the way"). On a country road somewhere above East Portlemouth we suddenly encountered a massive feeding frenzy of Swallows. I couldn't count them, but there were easily three or four hundred of them swirling over the fields.
I was reminded of this today when one of Mrs Humana's friends sent her a video of a cloud of House Martins swirling around her house in South Brent, Devon. In fact, on consulting the Devon birding blog, there seems to have been quite a movement of Swallows and martins in that area today: according to a birder who lives in South Brent, that flock was at least a mile wide and numbered "simply thousands" of House Martins. Several flocks, each of several hundred birds (mainly House Martins) came in off the sea at Dawlish, while 300+ moved NE over Kingsteignton and over 100 Swallows were seen near Paignton. I guess these birds won't be here for too much longer.
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