Monday 18 June 2012

Red-footed falcon at Willington Gravel Pits

I want to begin by saying I'm not a twitcher, I don't collect sightings of rare birds, destroy habitats and distress the bird. To me the main focus is the welfare of the bird. A couple of years ago I was on the east coast and a rare bird turned up and as I was already there I decided to take a look. I saw the bird but was astonished at the levels people were going to in order to photograph the bird, people were flushing the bird out in order to see it, as soon as they saw it they dashed off, I assume to find another rarity. I was appalled, these people don't seem to have a lot of respect for the wildlife around them, if any at all!

To the title of this post and the red-footed falcon Falco vespertinus. At the beginning of June a red-footed Falcon was seen at Willington Gravel Pits in Derbyshire, it's not too far from where I live so off I went. The usual scenario arose, I arrived and it wasn't there, about 15 minutes later the bird arrived. It was a bird I'd never seen before and was truly magnificent and a real beauty.

The red-footed falcon is most commonly seen in eastern Europe, but from time to time they do appear in Great Britain.

Unfortunately this photo isn't great but was the only decent one I managed to take on the camera I had at the time.

Red-footed falcon

8 comments:

holdingmoments said...

What a great bird to see Anna.

I have to agree with your comments about 'twitchers'. Some of them can be a real pain.

Mike said...

I agree with you 100%, the safety of the birds has to come first. The photo is just a bonus.

Marina Linhares said...

Excellent gallery of photos, Anna. Congratulations!
Sensitivity ... framework ... angles ... colors ... records ... nature ... all in perfect harmony.

Thank you for your visit and comment.
Hugs.

Marina Linhares said...

Excellent gallery of photos, Anna. Congratulations!
Sensitivity ... framework ... angles ... colors ... records ... nature ... all in perfect harmony.

Thank you for your visit and comment.

Hugs.

RichardP said...

Hi Anna,
This was a lovely bird and a real treat on my local patch. I was lucky to get a pic on the day of the find [ http://www.surfbirds.com/gallery/share_photo.php?imgname=20120604145219880.jpg ]. To bring you up to date, the bird was found dead on 11/06/12, possibly shot - by persons unknown - a sad end to a beautiful bird.
Lovely blog by the way.
Cheers.
Richard.

Anna Simpson said...

Hi Richard, does anyone know who shot this beautiful bird? It's incredibly upsetting.

RichardP said...

We cannot confirm it was shot, although shots were heard the morning it was found. It could be simply coincidence of course, it could have just starved to death, following the poor weather.
Cheers
Richard

Anna Simpson said...

Surely some sort of analysis could be run. Isn't the bird protected under EU regulations, if so it needs to be reported if it hasn't been already?