See https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/wildlife-guides/bird-a-z/sand-martin/
Showing posts with label sand martin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sand martin. Show all posts
6 Mar 2021
They are coming - NOT amateur radio
Looking at the latest Devon bird sightings, I see that sand martins have started to arrive. These birds are among the first migrants to come. Swallows usually arrive here in East Anglia in early April with swifts early May. The photo shows a sand martin.
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sand martin
13 Mar 2018
Summer migrant birds - NOT amateur radio
The first sand martins have been reported as arriving in Devon. Usually swallows follow in early April. Spring is springing!
See https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/wildlife-guides/bird-a-z/sand-martin .
See https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/wildlife-guides/bird-a-z/sand-martin .
Labels:
sand martin
14 Mar 2015
Sand martins - NOT amateur radio
Spring has (almost) sprung! There have now been several sightings of 20+ sand martins
in South Devon. These are among the first of the migrants to return.
They are the smallest hirundine.
Sand martins have dark brown upper parts and they winter in Africa. In recent years sand martin numbers have plummeted and they are now on the RSPB's "amber" list. There are estimated to be 54,000-174,000 nests in the UK. This sounds a lot, but numbers are dropping because of droughts on their migration routes in some years.
Every year I remember my dad telling when he'd first seen them arrive.
By the month end we should have house martins and swallows back in Devon who will have flown 6000 miles to be here in the UK again. When the swallows return here in East Anglia you know all is still well with the world: they have been making this journey for many thousands , if not millions, of years. Most return to the very same nests they used last summer, if they can. I find the return of the martins, swallows and swifts a real joy. It makes me glad to be alive.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand_martin .
Sand martins have dark brown upper parts and they winter in Africa. In recent years sand martin numbers have plummeted and they are now on the RSPB's "amber" list. There are estimated to be 54,000-174,000 nests in the UK. This sounds a lot, but numbers are dropping because of droughts on their migration routes in some years.
Every year I remember my dad telling when he'd first seen them arrive.
By the month end we should have house martins and swallows back in Devon who will have flown 6000 miles to be here in the UK again. When the swallows return here in East Anglia you know all is still well with the world: they have been making this journey for many thousands , if not millions, of years. Most return to the very same nests they used last summer, if they can. I find the return of the martins, swallows and swifts a real joy. It makes me glad to be alive.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand_martin .
Labels:
sand martin
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