Tuesday, 6 January 2026

It may not be the grandest bird study by Archibald Thorburn, but auction price may be quite modest

                                                             


Original studies by Archibald  Thorburn (1860-1935) typically cost four-figure sums when they come up for auction. Featuring a Woodpigeon and a Turtle Dove,  a pencil sketch attributed  to the great Scottish artist  is expected to achieve a more modest sale price - between £200 and £300 - when it goes under the hammer at a sale to be conducted on Saturday January 10 by Tennants of Leyburn, North Yorkshire. Also included in Lot 15 is a pencil study, also attributed to Thorburn, of ivy on old timber.




Surviving in the snow but does Ibis now regret its flight from southern Mediterranean to Cleethorpes?

 


It is not often that snow and a Glossy Ibis feature in the same photograph. So spare a thought for this plucky avian visitor from the southern Mediterranean which has spent the first part of winter braving Arctic winds, ice and snow on the saltmarsh in Cleethorpes in North East Lincolnshire.   

                                                                      


Monday, 5 January 2026

RSPB eager to offload responsibility for maintaining Dorset wetland reserve footpath to volunteers

The RSPB is keen to see formation of a 'Friends of' group to help it to save on staff resources. (Photo: RSPB images)

THE RSPB is keen to part-offload responsibilty for the upkeep of its  Radipole and Lodmoor reserves, near Weymouth in Dorset, to volunteers.

The society has issued a statement in response to complaints from visitors about the deteriorating state of the wetland sites.

It states: "In 2024, we looked at all our nature reserves, including RSPB Radipole and Lodmoor, to identify improvements and efficiencies.

"Our nature reserves, and what we deliver for nature on them, make up the largest proportion of our financial expenditure each year.   

"We recognise that RSPB Radipole and Lodmoor have a special place in the hearts of many, and the RSPB will continue to manage both reserves and they will remain open to the public. 

"However, we need to focus our resources where they can have the most impact. 

"This means that, at Radipole and Lodmoor, we are focusing on maintaining and improving the habitats for wildlife and making some changes to the way we manage both reserves’ visitor infrastructure.   

"This will include the removal of a set of platforms at Radipole this winter because they have reached the end of their safe working life. 

"While key paths will be maintained, we will no longer be maintaining all the paths and sightlines ourselves in order to save on the significant staff and volunteer time needed to cut back the vegetation.

"However we are looking at how we might support our volunteers or a local “Friends of” group who can take on responsibility for some path maintenance. " 

The statement continues: "We have also invested in the sites over the last 12 months, including replacing the visitor footbridge at Radipole, installing a new water control structure at Lodmoor, carrying out channel clearance at Radipole, reed cutting at both reserves as well as exploring the feasibility of restoring Radipole Lake. 

"Encouragingly, our 2024 full reserve survey recorded record numbers of Cettis Warblers (the second highest for any RSPB reserve) and Bearded Tits across both reserves. 

“We are not scaling back or limiting our ambition to fight for nature and wildlife. 

"Our nature reserves are fundamental to who we are and what we do. 

"Our long-term aim is simply to focus on what we do best and where we can do this most effectively, and we are continuing to grow the area of land that we manage and conserve for nature year on year."  

Sunday, 4 January 2026

Once there were six types of Redpoll but now, following species amalgamation, there is just one


Study of Mealy Redpolls in John Gould's The Birds of Great Britain (1873)


THE 2024 announcement by the International Ornithological Committee that there should only be one Redpoll species meant that two previously recognised separate species were to be lost from the British List.

In recent times, comprehensive bird field guides often referrred to:

* Arctic Redpoll Acanthis hornemanni, including two subspecies: 'Hornemann's Arctic RedpollA h hornemanni and 'Coues's Arctic RedpollA h exilipes;

* Common Redpoll Acanthis flammea, including three subspecies: 'Mealy RedpollA f flammea, 'Icelandic Redpoll' A f islandica and 'Greenland RedpollA f rostrata;

* Lesser Redpoll Acanthis cabaret.

However, the IOC decided to lump them together on the basis of genetic analysis which indicated that Redpolls "are almost completely undifferentiated except for a single chromosomal inversion that does not prevent interbreeding". 

Turn back the page of ornithology to 1912 when four frontline ornithologists - Ernst Hartert, Francis Jourdain,Norman Ticehurst and H.F. Witherby - differentiated between no fewer than six Redpoll species in their publication, A Handlist of British Birds


MEALY REDPOLL (Carduelis linaria linaria)

Distribution in British Isles: irregular autumn- winter visitor along whole east coast Great Britain;  more common East Scotland and North-east England. Occasionally arrives in great  numbers, as in 1829, 1847, 1855, 1861, 1863, 1873, 1885, 1897, 1910. More rarely recorded spring. Elsewhere in Great Britain rare winter-straggler, as it is in Ireland, where it appears chiefly in western islands.


GREENLAND REDPOLL (Carduelis linaria rostrata)

Distribution in British Isles:  Rare vagrant:

* Barra (0uter. Hebrides):

* One, Oct. 8, 1896 

* One, Nov. 10, 1898 

One, Oct. 13, 1900;

* Two, Sept., 1901. 

Fair Isle:

* A number in Sept and Oct, 1905

* Small party Sept. 21, 1907.

* Shetlands:

* Several Oct. and Nov., 1907.

It is said to nest in Orkneys, but rare at any time in Ireland. 

Flocks are said to arrive on the Yorkshire coast in October, and it becomes more generally common on the East Coast in winter.


HOLBOLL'S REDPOLL (Carduelis linaria holboelli)

Distribution in British Isles: Vagrant:

* One, Aston Clinton (Bucks.), Dec. 14, 1895 

* Flock in Yorks, 1881 

 * A number, Fair Isle autumn 1910. 

* Two Shetlands, Oct. 28, 1910. 

* One Isle of May (Forth) Oct. 23, 1910. 

* A number Lothians, Oct., 1910. 

* One Cambridge, Dec. 12, 1910. 


LESSER REDPOLL (Carduelis linaria cabaret)

Distribution in England and Wales: Resident. Breeds most counties, but locally and especially so in southern England and Wales, and very sparingly in South-west England, while in extreme South-west it is rare even in autumn and winter when it becomes more generally distributed elsewhere. Scotland: Resident. More generally distributed in wooded districts than in England, but uncommon in NMorth-west, and appears not to breed in Caithness. Breeds sparingly in Inner Hebrides and has nested on Barra (Outer Hebrides).


HORNEMANN'S REDPOLL (Carduelis hornemannii hornemanni)

Distribution in Great Britain: Very rare vagrant. Specimens from Spurn (Yorks.), Oct., 1883, and Oct., 1893, have been assigned to this form. Also

* One near Whitburn (Durham), April 24

* Five Fair Isle, Sept. and Oct., 1905

* One Unst (Shetlands), Oct., 1905


COUES'S REDPOLL (Carduelis hornemanni exilipes)

Distribution in Great Britain: A very rare vagrant. A specimen assigned to this form occurred at Easington (Yorks.) in winter 1893-4, two others at Skeffling (Yorks.) on Dec. 30, 1898, and one on Fair Isle in autumn 1900. 


However, did the birders of the day sort them all out?!



'How I miss having my windows open at night and listening to the Nightingales' wonderful song'


Letter from Gloucestershire correspondent Jan Smith in the December 27,  2025, edition of The Daily Telegraph

Saturday, 3 January 2026

'In 2026, birdwatching will soar into the mainstream propelled by the winds of popular culture'



A REPORT in UK regional newspapers, including the Grimsby Telegraph, has suggested that there could be a 2026 boom in birdwatching holidays.

It states: "In a fast-paced screen-saturated world, could setting your phone aside and picking up some binoculars to appreciate nature be the perfect way to slow down?"

The article goes on to reference the holiday booking platform, GetYourGuide, who conducted a survey which indicated that 55  per cent of those who responded are keen to try birdwatching on their next trip while 47 per cent "see the pastime as cool".

Its vice-president, Jean-Gabriel Duveau is quoted as saying: "Birdwatching will soar into the mainstream propelled by the winds of popular culture".

American pop star Ariana Grande (32) is said to be an enthusiast on the basis  that she says has the Merlin ID app installed on her phone. 



Thursday, 1 January 2026

Has veteran RSPB author given up on Dotterels, Wrynecks, Shrikes, Nightjars and Whinchats in Britain?

                                              


ONE of the most surprising features of the first bird book to be published in 2026 is the inclusion of the Black Woodpecker - a species not even on the British List.

It gets a place in What’s That Bird?  while the Lesser Spotted Woodpecker is omitted.

Other exclusion species include:

* Dotterel
* Red-backed Shrike
* Wryneck
* Nightjar
* Firecrest
* Capercaillie
* Black Grouse
* Merlin
* Whinchat
* Lesser Whitethroat
* Roseate Tern

This 128-page book unashamedly announces  itself as "the simplest"  ID guide but it is a shame that only 150 or so species are featured.

Author Rob Hume seems to be helping perpetuate the "shifting baseline" syndrome whereby once familiar species are, in effect, ascribed to the past.

The inclusion of the Black Woodpecker is bizarre given that  Hume acknowledges that the species is a "continental European bird not seen in the UK".

Also included are two other species seldom seen in  Britain - Crested Lark and Subalpine Warbler.

The author is well known in the birding world. A member of the RSPB for 35 years, he was editor of the society’s magazine for 20 years and also served on the editorial board of British Birds and is a past chairman of the British Birds Rarities Committee.

He has written numerous bird books, most of them ID field guides, and contributed almost  the entire text of Chris Packham's Birdwatching Guide, published in spring 2024.

To his credit, Hume is always seeking a fresh approach to birds and birding, and his enthusiasm - as well as his knowledge - never fails to shine through in this pocket-sized paperback.

But a downside is that, with one or two exceptions (for example, the Cuckoo and some larks and waders),  the text makes scant attempt to describe the calls or songs of the  species described. 

Illustrated in colour, What’s That Bird? is published today January 1, 2026 at a modest £9.99 by DK. It is an update on a book of the same title published in 2012.

It is written not so much for the experienced birder as for anyone with a casual interest in birds or who is taking their first steps in birding.