A tranquil sunrise at the North Norfolk coast to start the year.
A Robin singing at dawn, a Wood Pigeon cooing. Stepping outside, I saw a Buzzard land in a tree: my first bird of 2023. Pink-footed Geese chattering far off across the marshes; a Brown Hare running closer to me, my first mammal.
Sunrise from the beach. Long shallow waves, frothy-topped spray when wind gusting. A Black-headed Gull and a Sanderling my companions at the surf.
Glittering Lapwings crowding the coastal skies: large numbers this year, 14,000 reported.
A few often fly over at the broads, with one or two regularly seen in fields.
One arable field crowded with Golden Plover.
Pink-footed 'pinkfeet' Geese resting and eating, Greylags also.
White-tailed Eagle perches in top of freshmarsh dead tree. Leaves Norfolk mid-January for other perches.
Following the curve of the Yare river.
Plenty of bird activity in marsh-bed, copse and reed. Chinese Water Deer seen often and a Fox once, a glimpse of black-ears and a direct gaze.
Gorgeous winter days with air frosts turning trees white. A trio of Lesser Redpolls feeding on birch catkins. Blackbirds and a jackdaw stab at fatballs, apples eaten too. Robin singing.
Common Cranes still feeding in groups, some with last-year's juveniles. Elegance. Heard bugling from across the fields and seen in flight. A shy Common Crane pair in one field a contrast to the confiding Mute Swan pairs seen across marsh and fields.
A Whooper Swan trio flying over a marsh, a few Beswick's seen at a distance: little contact with the migrant swans this winter.
A Bittern flying across a frozen broad where ducks crowd any running water. A Marsh Harrier waiting in the reeds for an unwary victim, herons perch in trees and a Kingfisher flashes across the ice. Green Woodpecker laughing at a distance. Later in the month, Great-spotted Woodpeckers knocking in woodland: spring is soon to come.
Barn Owls hunting across reedbed and marsh. Long-eared Owl seen at roost in a hedge, a Short-eared Owl seen briefly flying at St. Benets Abbey. Kestrels and Marsh Harriers seen regularly, a male Hen Harrier once, beautifully pale.
Wigeon flying in from over the sea are a glittering line in the sky. Large pinkfeet skeins seen regularly at the coast, and from the broads, silent skeins of cormorants seen flying to roost.
"Cronk, cronk" a Raven pair calling.
Two Blue Tits chase around in birch twiggery, a Robin serenades another and then too chase about.
Great white egret hunting as the sun sets.
My sounds of January:
Pink-footed Geese
Wigeon
Common Crane
Birds heard singing:
Robin, Blue Tit, Great Tit, Song Thrush, Mistle Thrush, Chaffinch, Greenfinch, Dunnock.
Great-spotted Woodpecker knocking.
Goldcrest and Nuthatch calling.
A sub-singing Blackbird.