That's what happened this morning with a Common Sandpiper - although even I will admit I left this species a little late. I was actually up and about pursuing one of my other hobbies when a message came through that there was a Sandpiper sp on Jubilee. Not ideally placed on Canvey Island, but I finished up my errands and set off home. I drove right past my house and straight there, only to find the car park was locked! Drat! I parked opposite the gate instead, in the road, a horrendous distance from the pond but still managed to stumble over there (I hurt my knee in Hawaii). As expected it was the standard kind of Sandpiper, but that's fine as I needed it for the year, after missing a glut of the things last month. I wasn't quite sure where this left me for the year, but I guess for Tony's benefit at 99. Hmmm, 99 is pretty damn close to three figures.....
I drove home for coffee and a bite to eat, unloaded the car and set off into the wilds again. Long Wood was heaving with LTTs and Chiffs, with a Spotted Flycatcher and a Redstart in the mix - no doubt lingering from last week. John W was on fine form, lapping it all up, and had had a Pied Flycatcher this side of Centre Road. I caught up with him and Nick again over in the SSSI a short while later, sitting on the latest fly-tipping addition to the patch, an enormous tractor tyre. They were watching another Pied Flycatcher, and having had good views of it I rather fancy it wasn't the one I saw yesterday, albeit in the same place. Much more streaking on the chin of this bird, the other one had been a lot cleaner. So another good bird, but not helping the march to victory.
Consulting my mental list of what is normally where, I remembered that I had yet to eek out the Bush Wood Treecreepers, either only recently arrived on the patch, or extremely stealthy all year. I favour the former hypothesis, as it only took me about 20 minutes to pin one down pretty much exactly where they always are. If you need it for the patch simply walk a loop between the pond, the corner of the Quaker lot, and the main ride, and sooner or later you will strike gold. Or brown. Subtle little calls led me to it, could have been Goldcrest but I didn't think so and they're not that prevalent yet. Sure enough, there one was spiralling up a tree trunk in the normal manner. Camera-less today due to the aforementioned leg injuries I zoomed in as much as my phone would allow and thus am delighted to bring you this fine image of the bird doing what it does.
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