MB

 

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Your British List - your most wanted?


Status: Offline
Posts: 367
Date:
RE: Your British List - your most wanted?


Lapland Bunting now ticked off our list today at Bempton, hooray....



__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 2299
Date:

It would have to be two new world birds currently on the British List, so I'll go for
Hawk Owl
Pallas's Sandgrouse

__________________
Updated birding videos on You Tube https://www.youtube.com/c/PeteHinesbirding


Status: Offline
Posts: 1163
Date:

I've been birding for over 21 years now, and despite having a number of superb sightings and rare birds, the three that are on my top list of most wanted may be suprising include:

1. Storm petrel
2. Leach's petrel
3. Little auk

This is largely because I've never been in the right place at the right time or had an opportunity to visit places where they are due to circumstances or working.

Aside from these, the other top on my life list of scarce birds I still need include:

Honey Buzzard
Rough legged Buzzard
Bee eater
Corncrake
Bluethroat

Ta!

__________________
Which bird is ideal for keeping cakes in? I asked. The answer: a Bun-tin. http://www.flickr.com/photos/135715507@N06


Status: Offline
Posts: 401
Date:

Would be happy with any of the folllowing: Seen Abroad but not in the UK - Honey Buzzard - Rough-legged Buzzard - Montague's Harrier - Nutcracker Not seen anywhere - Red-flanked Bluetail - Red-breasted Flycatcher - Siberian Ruby throat - Storm Petrel - Snowy Owl - Wallcreeper - 2-barred Crossbill As my GM list is quite paltry, there are tons more modest birds that I could be focusing on seeing locally, then I might not be a "new entry" right at the bottom of the GM charts!

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1104
Date:

Hi again Paul.

Your comments struck a chord with me. Would I qualify for a free pass?

Also - Wallcreeper still niggles!

In the late 1970s I was still an active though fairly junior member in the Merseyside Ringing Group. The leading lights of that august body made no secret of their supposed contempt for twitching and though I should have loved to go down to the Cheddar Gorge for the wintering Wallcreeper there I didnt make any effort. It was only belatedly that I discovered that a few of them had crept off (wearing invisibility cloaks) to see that bird.

I did eventually go to see it to find that it had departed - long gone in fact. So Wallcreeper in Britain is top of my own wish list. The other would be the wonderful Long-billed Murrelet (which I have never seen anywhere) and which turned up when I and my usual travelling pals were out of the country. The photos of that bird were said to be arguably the best ever taken of the species and from time to time I re-read the Birding World article to relive the story and perhaps dream a little that I really had been there.

Cheers,

Mike P.

 

 



__________________

Challenges are inevitable, but failure is optional.



Status: Offline
Posts: 1529
Date:

Wallcreeper and Siberian Rubythroat both to be seen in GM as I dont like long Twitches nowadays and what a way of putting GM back on the Map, 

Wallcreeper in North Manchester ( Lancashire ) which would make it the second for Lancashire ... 

Then the Rubythroat in my garden just so i  can gloat, charge a fortune to the twitchers , but free passes for Manchester birders 

Keep dreaming 

 



__________________


Status: Online
Posts: 1999
Date:

Personally I'd love some classic Winter fayre.

Top 4 would be Snowy Owl, a white morph Gyr Falcon and both Ross's and Ivory Gull.

I'm sure this will happen one day, but I've been thinking that for a while now.

All preferably within 50km please..



__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 80
Date:

There has always only been one for me.

Siberian Rubythroat.

Dipped one in Dorset many years ago with John Rayner. Worst dip ever.

Did see one in Nepal again with JR and will never forget how the sun lit up the throat. 
Easiest one still needed on my British list is probably Corys Shearwater.

Three ticks last year. Belted Kingfisher, BB albatross and LT stint. I have a decent list but will never make the magical 500. I just keep ticking over!
I now only twitch when it suits and the bird is not too far.  Too old for long overnight drives now. Been there done that and thoroughly enjoyed it although I would still go for a rubythroat!

Cant beat local birding and getting some decent photos.

 Keep birding 

John T

 



__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 367
Date:

Just six for me, two of which are doable Lapland Bunting, saw one six hundred yards away which is not really a tick for me and a bloody Wryneck, we missed the one at Horwich by arriving to late and leaving too early..........argh

Then the impossible.......in no particular order

Corncrake

Spotted Crake

Montagu's Harrier

Snowy Owl

Cath says she would be happy with a Jack Snipe though.

All the above appeared in my first Ladybird books about birds and my first real bird book "Observers" series which have been worked through. Fishing has helped my tick list  biggrin



__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 600
Date:

Was thinking about this just the other day. I have a slightly different take to the gents below, which probably speaks of having been birding a much shorter time. I find I'm actually more after commoner things that I always seem to miss, so my current one is Little Bunting. Don't ask me why but this is the first bird I think of in October now. There is something about the chance that the lbj that just flew up could be one of them and not just another Reed Bunting. A similar one is Greenish Warbler, somehow when they get a few in at Spurn or Flamborough it's always on a Tuesday, never seems to land on the weekend...

Having said that, the Long-toed Stint that I was lucky enough to see definitely revved me up for a couple of waders. Actually as we left Manchester to go for that bird I believed we were after a Least Sandpiper, because I hadn't seen the updated ID, so in fact that is a species I would love to pick up. The other one I really fancy is Broad-billed Sandpiper, which obviously some guys will have for GM, never mind UK!

So nothing as exotic as a Lammergeier or Belted Kingfisher, but in another 20 years I expect something like that will be gnawing away at me...

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1219
Date:

Always regarded myself as a patch birder who did the odd twitch. Started doing twitches on a more regular basis following early retirement in 2015 but, like Mike, I can be quite selective and not necessarily on distance. Over the last five years, I have averaged around ten new British ticks per year and I could probably list at least ten birds that I would still like to add to my list. Two favourites, though, would have to be :-

1) Snowy Owl
2) White-billed Diver

I have always been drawn to the north and both these birds fit the bill (pun intended) perfectly, being breeders either side of the Arctic Circle. I have never twitched either but should have gone for the Lincolnshire WbD, south east of Lincoln a few years ago as our son, at that time, lived only a couple of miles from the River Witham, where the bird turned up.

__________________
https://flickr.com/photos/44931335@N06


Status: Offline
Posts: 1274
Date:

To be honest Mike - I have loads!! Considering I have been birding for XX years (I'll let everyone fill in the blanks) my life list is quite low. I don't think this is due to lack of effort, more that I don't really twitch anything. My most serious bout of twitching was when I realised my GM list was in the 190's and I wanted to get it to 200. Apart from visits to Spurn for a week at time once or twice a year, my birding is usually local, day trips to places where I think I might find something for myself, or trips to places where I will just see a good variety. They rarely include a twitch! Case in point, I drove past the Long-toed Stint twice on my way to and from Spurn in autumn and I didn't go for the Belted Kingfisher. Both remain as gaps on my list. I have managed to tick off a few bogey birds recently. Dotterel on Pendle Hill in spring last year was possibly my biggest remaining bogey bird. However to get back you your question...



1. Lammergeier - I didn't go for the one in the Peak District. I should have done. I wanted to, but things just got in the way. I believe it was an incredible sight.

2. Black-faced Bunting - When the one turned up at Pennington birding was playing second fiddle to fishing ( I did 4/5 years as a pretty serious match angler) and weekends during winter and spring were spent drowning maggots (or usually bloodworms) on the Lancaster Canal and Bridgewater Canal. I don't think I'll ever forgive myself for not going to see that one.no

__________________
No one on their death bed ever said they wished they'd spent more time at work. http://bitsnbirds.blogspot.co.uk


Status: Offline
Posts: 2673
Date:

You should have posted this 12 months ago Mike. I probably would have said Black-browed Albatross and Belted Kingfisher smile

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1104
Date:

Well perhaps time for something more frivolous?

We all have bogey birds to greater or lesser degree (especially those of us who keep a British List) - some take it more seriously than others whereas others (like myself) are more inclined to be selective about how far they are prepared to go for just another tick and often just cant be bothered or perhaps are too busy doing other things.

Looking back however there are species that I should love to catch up with (especially on the mainland) should another chance present itself. 

So- do we have any takers and if so what two species would you most love to see in GB please, - and why?

Cheers,

Mike P.



__________________

Challenges are inevitable, but failure is optional.

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

RODIS

 

This forum is dedicated to the memory of Eva Janice McKerchar.