30 Nov 2008

30th November

Nov 30

It was a case of sea watching between showers during the morning, and getting a list of a good variety of small numbers of common winter coastal birds. As a lunch‑time downpour ended a flock of small birds swooped into some puddles about twenty metres away and began bathing: pipits, gold­finches, greenfinches, house sparrows, serins and crested larks. Now we had a good opportunity to study the last two species.
The larks had similar plumage pattern to skylarks, but their short tails and deep bellies gave them quite a portly appearance. Generally they kept in the sparse vegetation, and were the last to leave if danger threatened ‑ they seemed to check first if it was really worth the effort of flying, perhaps it was just the sparrowhawk that had made them so nervous yesterday.
The male serins showed off their bright yel­low breasts and rumps alternately as they faced us and dipped their heads into the water to bathe; the females were a little less bright. However, a closer look revealed more subtle individual plum­age differ­ences, particularly in the streaks on the face and breast. Some just looked streaked while others had stripes, and on some these stripes appeared to be continuous with the face markings. Their flight pattern was fast with short undulations, though they often spent time flying in circles before deciding where to go. Like the other finches they were feeding on the seeds of grasses and crucifers.
The serins had a jangly call reminiscent of corn bunting, while the crested larks had a flight call similar to, but not so strident, as the woodlark, and also a shrill but slightly off‑key kwee‑tee call.
Several black redstarts came to the same scrubby area, mostly to feed. We didn't see them bathing, though some looked wet when they left. They spent most of the time on the harbour wall picking up insects from the crevices and seaweed. Talking of seaweed, someone came along with trac­tor and trailer and took away several loads of the stuff, perhaps for fertiliser or processing.
Plants in flower included sea rocket, white campion, slender thistle, groundsel, nightshade, also lots of thorn apple with seed pods splitting open.

29th November - Ile de Noirmoutier

The Ile de Noirmoutier is connected to the main­land via a toll bridge at its southern end, but there is also an old causeway across the southern part of the bay which is only passable for a short time at low tide. Information about tide times is prominently displayed in the village of Beauvoir sur Mer as well as at each end of the causeway, and instructions are provided in English and Ger­man as well as French. We arrived at 10 am only to find that low tide was at 3 pm.
It had been raining all morning, but rather than miss the area completely we decided to park at the end of the causeway and watch through the drizzle. As the tide fell, exposing sandy mud­flats and salt­marsh, birds started to return from their high tide roosts: a few dozen brent geese, a var­iety of waders, duck, grebes, gulls etc. When the rain did stop, Jim found an adult medi­ter­ranean gull. We went for a short walk along the sea wall and found a first winter mediter­ranean gull ‑ just shows they do really exist. There were also pipits, wagtails and larks along the shore.
A few vehicles had gone out onto the cause­way but they were for servicing the shellfish farms alongside it and near the shore. At about one o'clock someone came through quite fast, onto the causeway past everything else and kept going, sending up white spray so we could follow its progress. He got across, but even though the water was shallow the salt can't have done the vehicle much good. At about 1.20 pm other vehicles arrived and crossed at a more sensible speed; we followed more slowly. You are not allowed to stop on the causeway and there is nowhere to pull off to the side.

It was raining again as we drove north on the Ile de Noirmoutier to the fishing village of l'Her­boutiere which is said to be good for sea watching in the right conditions. We had just found a parking place between the harbour and a (closed) campsite when a half dozen larks flew onto the rough grass and sand track in front of us. I took a second look at them because one appeared to have white on its wing, though this proved to be just feather blown out of place in the wind. But what sort of larks were they? Their short tails were reminiscent of woodlark but they had more noticeable crests.
Consultation with the field‑guide indicated they were, indeed, crested larks. Unfortunately someone came through with a bike and the birds left. We saw them a couple of times later but only for brief views, they were very intolerant of both humans and the local sparrowhawk.
When the rain had eased off again we walked along the coast. Amongst the trees providing shelter for the campsite we found chiff‑chaffs, robins, blackbirds and serins. The low cliffs were formed from a very soft sand and shingle conglomerate and were very eroded in places. Below them the low tide exposed a rocky shore of seaweed covered rocks. There were gulls, corm­orants and turnstones on the rocks, and a black-throated diver feeding in the water between. The diver spent most of the time swimming with just its head underwater, diving only when it saw some­thing worth diving for. Divers prey on fish and crustaceans, small items being swallowed under­water while large or spiny fish and crabs are brought to the surface and mutilated before being swallowed.
In the late afternoon fishing boats were return­ing to l'Herboutiere harbour each with an entourage of gulls; they were mostly herring and black-headed gulls in the harbour itself and a single little gull amongst those following boats still out at sea. Rock pipits and black red­starts hunted along the sea wall.

30th November - Baie de Bourgneuf

The Baie de Bourgneuf is a huge square bay, open to the ocean on its north-west side, but shelter­ed on the southwest by the Ile de Noirmoutier. Its vast intertidal mudflats, mostly in the southern part of the bay, make it one of the primary wet­land areas of France. Some 7000 ha of mudflats, and 43,000 ha of marshes receive partial protec­tion as a wetland of international importance.
The Baie de Bourgneuf Nature Reserve consists of a stretch of coastline extending from close to Bourgneuf en Retz in the north to La Barre de Monts in the south. An area of sand, sandy mud and rocky outcrops, with shallow water lying offshore, the reserve attracts many wildfowl in autumn, winter and spring. Brent geese have been recorded in numbers from 3‑5000 and normally there are many hundreds of teal, wigeon, pintail, scaup and shelduck. Waders, such as dunlin, curlew, oystercatcher, grey plover and avocet may be present in their thousands.
Access to the shore of the bay was somewhat restricted, there are a few resorts at the north­ern end, but with the tide up there was little to be seen. Much of the rest is surrounded by salt marsh which has become rough grazing land with a few salt pans, and only one or two roads going anywhere near the coast ‑ providing access to ham­lets based on shellfish industry. These coast­al marshes provide the essential feeding areas at night for the dabbling ducks which roost on the sea or mudflats during the day. There were plenty of gulls plus a few marsh harriers and little egrets to be seen, and every section of telegraph wire seemed to have a kestrel staring intently into the vegetation below.

29th November

to be added later

28th November

Chores Nov 28

While French shopping hours were similar to Brit­ain, banking hours seemed rather strange. We needed cash this morning (Monday), but the banks were all closed; travellers checks could be changed in post offices in large towns. This was a small town and we were told to go to St Nazaire, the next city. We got there with the petrol gauge looking worryingly low, but at least the banks were open. It seems that outside of large cities the banks are open Tuesday to Saturday, in the cities they are open Monday to Friday.
In another small town, the manager one of the banks had looked rather vague when I asked to change a cheque. He hunted around in a few drawers, then admitted defeat. His computer had broken down and he could not cope without it; would I please go to another bank across the road.
Launderettes were another problem ‑ I got plenty of practice at asking people if they knew where a launderette was, and then trying to follow the directions they gave me. Often, however, launder­ettes just did not seem to exist, and we were left to do the washing by hand in a campsite.
Open campsites also often eluded us ‑ but that was an expected hazard of travelling in mid‑­winter. We could have a wash of some sort in the camper, but we did occasionally need a proper shower. However, it was still frustrating to waste much time and petrol looking for places that the AA book said were open all year. I even tried phoning a couple to see in advance if they were open ‑ I hate phone convers­ations in English, never mind another language, fortunately all I needed were simple yes or no answers. Local tour­ist offices were no help, they were all closed, either for the winter or just for that day. There was even one with a 'back in five minutes' sign on the door, and that was still closed an hour later.
For the most part we used supermarkets or hypermarkets for shopping. The hypermarkets were usually situated in commercial zones on the out­skirts of large towns, with plenty of parking space and often a petrol station too. The price of petrol was quite variable, and we often filled up at one station only to pass another a few kilo­metres up the road with petrol at five pence a litre cheaper. After a while we realised that the cheapest petrol was to be had at the hyper­markets.
Most of these hypermarkets had the wandering shopping trolley problem sorted out. To get a trolley you put a F10 coin in a slot in the handle in order to release it from the line; when you have finished with the trolley you chain it to the line and in the process get your F10 back. There was no problem of trolleys being abandoned either in the middle of the car park or in the nearest river.
Inside the supermarkets there was usually a good range of fresh and frozen vegetables; the meat counters held a variety of produce including horse-meat and veal ‑ it is something I suppose we'll get used to; we could even afford the lux­ury of a glass of wine with our evening meal ‑ cheap red plonk, usually from a cardboard box or plastic bottle, was a quite acceptable. A notable omission from the supermarket shelves was peanut butter, and Jim was getting withdrawal symptoms.
France is on central European time, an hour ahead of Britain, so here on the west coast day­light arrives at about 7 am but it does not get dark until after 6 pm. We can get up a dawn and feel quite civilised about it.
After what seemed like a wasted morning of mundane chores, we moved on again. We crossed another huge suspension bridge, this one over the mouth of the Loire. The light was too grey to make out anything on the mudflats below, and the weather too raw for us to want to stop on the south side and walk back for another look. We stopped for a late lunch at St Michel Chef‑chef overlooking the Bay of Biscay where Jim said there were hundreds of great-crested grebes and very little else.

27th November

Nov 27

During the last couple of days we have heard a trilling which we haven't been able to identify. This morning the song came loud and clear from an aerial on a nearby house, and was being sung by a bright yellow male cirl bunting. The field guide describes it as a monotonous hurried jingle re¬calling lesser whitethroat; it solves a mystery of a bird we heard when we visiting Sussex last s¬pring, and decided it was probably a lesser whitethroat with the sound distorted by wind and distance.
We eventually got sorted out, packed up and on our way south again persuading the telescope to get in the van was the hardest bit it always wanted to look at yet another bird.
A dead mammal by the side of the road caused us to stop for a second look. It was a beech marten, similar to a pine marten but with a cream throat patch instead of white, and a pink nose instead of brown. This animal had probably been struck a glancing blow by a passing vehicle, there wasn't a mark on it; it was cold and stiff but not unpleasant to handle so we took the opportunity to look closely at it, particularly the feet and the tracks they would leave.
The beech marten ranges from central and south¬ern Europe eastwards through Asia to Mon¬golia. Although we found this one in an area of woodland, it is quite common in built up areas where it gets into buildings and can cause con¬siderable damage, mainly to the outer panelling and insulation of houses. Thus it is often con¬sidered a harmful pest and is widely persecuted.

The Rural Code contains a whole section on the destruction of animal pests. The concept is outdated but it still carries a lot of weight in France, and the regulations make it possible to destroy any wild animal by any means and in any season at the slightest excuse. Foxes, badgers, magpies and crows are traditional victims, with weasels and stoats being more or less wiped out in some areas.


Briere

Our journey had taken us through several areas designated Parc Natural Regional. Basically these were special land management zones (equivalent to British National Parks), where the aim was to ensure the safe keeping of the country's natural heritage while permitting the develop¬ment of compatible economic activities recreation, farming, non polluting industry, environmental education, etc. Within these zones there may be areas of wildlife interest, eg the vast marshes and reedbeds of Briere, which were protected against drainage and other development, but where shoot¬ing was still allowed.
From the map and one of our books we knew the Parc Regional Natural de Briere consisted of wet¬land and farmland with a few towns and villages. At the centre of the area was la Grande Briere, totalling some 7000 ha of marshes and lagoons, one of the largest such areas in inland France.
The basin containing the marsh was formed by earth movements which caused the underlying rocks to sink. Over millions of years the sea has occasionally flooded the basin, laying down deposisits of sediment. Then about eleven million years ago the basin was completely cut off from the sea by the formation of a littoral bar. The landscape has been subjected to human activities such as fishing, reed cutting, grazing and hay making preventing the drier bits of land becoming woodland. Instead there is wet heath merging into boggy meadow. At the end of the summer the fields are reputed to be blue with heath lobelia. Many birds are known to breed in the park, including bearded tit, cettis, savis and grasshapper warblers, bluethroat, garganey and bittern. In the winter wild duck and geese visit the flooded areas.
What we have seen so far of the wetland is vast areas of phragmites cut by drainage channels and with patches of willow scrub developing on drier ground. We stopped at a pic¬nic site hoping to find footpaths or tracks but with no luck. There were, however, some punts padlocked to their mooring and that form of trans¬port could prove most interesting. The place was deserted except for a few fishermen and hunters one hopes that in a place of this size wildlife could find some refuge from such activities.
Where there are reedbeds one expects to find marsh harriers and we were not disappointed. There were up to four birds in view at a time and the show was almost continuous. Mostly they were brown birds but there was at least one adult male. In contrast to the flying displays we were watching a couple of days ago, most of these birds were get¬ting down to business - hunting.
As their name suggest, marsh harriers show a preference for shallow fresh or brackish water, fringed or extensively invaded by tall standing reeds, reed mace and other similar vegetation without too many trees. Briere must look like heaven to them.
The harriers quarter the reeds in a low lei¬surely flight, flapping steadily in today's calm weather but gliding slowly forwards in a strong wind. All the while they scan the herbage beneath for any sign of movement and, when a victim is located, the harrier checks its flight, sometimes almost turning over, before plunging vertically with legs out¬stretched. We have not seen them fly out of the reeds with prey, so presumably they consume the victim immed¬iate¬ly on the ground.
Twice we saw birds carrying vegetation. On the first occasion the vegetation was dropped as another bird approached and they called to each other; they came together several times, twisted and turned once or twice each time then parted. On the second occasion the same type of interac¬tion continued for some time and the bird with the vegetation kept hold of it for longer. The birds often called when they were coming together, a shrill weak version of the courtship call. This out of season activity is thought to be play, or young birds practising for the spring.
At last we caught up with short toed tree¬creep¬er. A bird with a strange call flew over our heads and landed on a nearby willow tree. We could see clearly the buffish flanks and the longer bill which distinguish it from the ordinary treecreeper.
A bearded reedling bounced out of the reeds and called attention to himself, others were heard but not seen. Two Cetti's warblers had a dispute about fifty metres behind us, they shouted chewey¬ chewey ¬chew chew at each other in the fading light visual identification was impossible. Other distinctive sounds came from water rails; silhou¬ettes of water voles crossed the channels and a merlin zoomed over the reeds.

26 Nov 2008

27th November 1988 - Briere

Briere

Our journey had taken us through several areas designated Parc Natural Regional. Basically these were special land management zones (equivalent to British National Parks), where the aim was to ensure the safe‑keeping of the country's natural heritage while permitting the develop­ment of compatible economic activities ‑ recreation, farming, non‑polluting industry, environmental education, etc. Within these zones there may be areas of wildlife interest, eg the vast marshes and reedbeds of Briere, which were protected against drainage and other development, but where shoot­ing was still allowed.
From the map and one of our books we knew the Parc Regional Natural de Briere consisted of wet­land and farmland with a few towns and villages. At the centre of the area was la Grande Briere, totalling some 7000 ha of marshes and lagoons, one of the largest such areas in inland France.
The basin containing the marsh was formed by earth movements which caused the underlying rocks to sink. Over millions of years the sea has occasionally flooded the basin, laying down deposisits of sediment. Then about eleven million years ago the basin was completely cut off from the sea by the formation of a littoral bar. The landscape has been subjected to human activities such as fishing, reed‑cutting, grazing and hay making ‑ preventing the drier bits of land becoming woodland. Instead there is wet heath merging into boggy meadow. At the end of the summer the fields are reputed to be blue with heath lobelia. Many birds are known to breed in the park, including bearded tit, cettis, savis and grasshapper warblers, bluethroat, garganey and bittern. In the winter wild duck and geese visit the flooded areas.
What we have seen so far of the wetland is vast areas of phragmites cut by drainage channels and with patches of willow scrub developing on drier ground. We stopped at a pic­nic site hoping to find footpaths or tracks but with no luck. There were, however, some punts padlocked to their mooring and that form of trans­port could prove most interesting. The place was deserted except for a few fishermen and hunters ‑ one hopes that in a place of this size wildlife could find some refuge from such activities.
Where there are reedbeds one expects to find marsh harriers and we were not disappointed. There were up to four birds in view at a time and the show was almost continuous. Mostly they were brown birds but there was at least one adult male. In contrast to the flying displays we were watching a couple of days ago, most of these birds were get­ting down to business - hunting.
As their name suggest, marsh harriers show a preference for shallow fresh or brackish water, fringed or extensively invaded by tall standing reeds, reed mace and other similar vegetation without too many trees. Briere must look like heaven to them.
The harriers quarter the reeds in a low lei­surely flight, flapping steadily in today's calm weather but gliding slowly forwards in a strong wind. All the while they scan the herbage beneath for any sign of movement and, when a victim is located, the harrier checks its flight, sometimes almost turning over, before plunging vertically with legs out­stretched. We have not seen them fly out of the reeds with prey, so presumably they consume the victim immed­iate­ly on the ground.
Twice we saw birds carrying vegetation. On the first occasion the vegetation was dropped as another bird approached and they called to each other; they came together several times, twisted and turned once or twice each time then parted. On the second occasion the same type of interac­tion continued for some time and the bird with the vegetation kept hold of it for longer. The birds often called when they were coming together, a shrill weak version of the courtship call. This out of season activity is thought to be play, or young birds practising for the spring.
At last we caught up with short‑toed tree­creep­er. A bird with a strange call flew over our heads and landed on a nearby willow tree. We could see clearly the buffish flanks and the longer bill which distinguish it from the ordinary treecreeper.
A bearded reedling bounced out of the reeds and called attention to himself, others were heard but not seen. Two Cetti's warblers had a dispute about fifty metres behind us, they shouted chewey­‑chewey‑­chew‑chew at each other ‑ in the fading light visual identification was impossible. Other distinctive sounds came from water rails; silhou­ettes of water voles crossed the channels and a merlin zoomed over the reeds.

27th November 1988

Nov 27

During the last couple of days we have heard a trilling which we haven't been able to identify. This morning the song came loud and clear from an aerial on a nearby house, and was being sung by a bright yellow male cirl bunting. The field guide describes it as a monotonous hurried jingle re­calling lesser whitethroat; it solves a mystery of a bird we heard when we visiting Sussex last s­pring, and decided it was probably a lesser whitethroat with the sound distorted by wind and distance.
We eventually got sorted out, packed up and on our way south again ‑ persuading the telescope to get in the van was the hardest bit ‑ it always wanted to look at yet another bird.
A dead mammal by the side of the road caused us to stop for a second look. It was a beech marten, similar to a pine marten but with a cream throat patch instead of white, and a pink nose instead of brown. This animal had probably been struck a glancing blow by a passing vehicle, there wasn't a mark on it; it was cold and stiff but not unpleasant to handle so we took the opportunity to look closely at it, particularly the feet and the tracks they would leave.
The beech marten ranges from central and south­ern Europe eastwards through Asia to Mon­golia. Although we found this one in an area of woodland, it is quite common in built‑up areas where it gets into buildings and can cause con­siderable damage, mainly to the outer panelling and insulation of houses. Thus it is often con­sidered a harmful pest and is widely persecuted.
The Rural Code contains a whole section on the destruction of animal pests. The concept is outdated but it still carries a lot of weight in France, and the regulations make it possible to destroy any wild animal by any means and in any season at the slightest excuse. Foxes, badgers, magpies and crows are traditional victims, with weasels and stoats being more or less wiped out in some areas.

26th November 1988

At about 8.30 this morning the water was still higher than last night but going down. In fact it did not disappear back into the channels until about midday.
The first bird we saw was a kingfisher which landed on the nearest reserve sign, but realised there were humans too close for comfort and zoomed off to perch on the next reserve sign instead. Birds were generally as yesterday with the addi­tion of about a dozen ringed plovers feeding with a small group of dunlin.
When the tide was low enough to allow it, we walked behind a row of houses along the shore line. We soon came to face a small islet with thirty of so brent geese preening or roosting on its shore. Through the telescope we studied their plumages carefully. In most species of geese the adults have pale fringes to the wing coverts and mantle feathers while in first winter birds the fringes are narrower and browner. Brents, how­ever, are exceptional in that the adult lacks the pale fringes, yet the young bird does have them and so appears to have mottled upper-parts and barred wings. The bird undergoes a partial body moult during the winter, gaining the white collar of the adults, then losing the mottling on the mantle and finally, in the following spring and summer, los­ing the barring on the wings.
One particular goose caught our attention as it was very dark on the upper-parts and belly but had pale striped flanks, its collar was more pro­nounced than that of any other bird there. We did a sketch and took detailed notes, and later con­sultation with the books confirmed our suspicions that the strange bird was a black brant, probably an eastern Siberian bird as it was with dark-bellied brents, rather than a western Canadian bird that would more likely be found with pale-bellied brents.
As the tide receded small groups of brent were leaving the area, and eventually the group on the islet left too, except for one bird with a damaged wing. Beyond the islet we could see about a dozen black‑necked grebes. A couple of harriers were hunting over a bigger offshore island. Sev­eral of the islands are also nature reserves, managed by the Societe d'etude et de la protection de la nature en Bretagne, one of the oldest natur­alist societies in France.
It was quite cold and we were heading back along the road to the van for a hot drink when a car stopped and the driver asked if we were Eng­lish and could he help us, meaning could he tell us some places for observation. He introduced himself as Sylvain, and talked, in fairly good English, about the area and its birds, and invited us to his house for a cup of coffee in the after­noon.
One of the places Sylvain mentioned was a very marshy area where there were a number of reed bunt­ings, flicking their wings and tails as they perched on bushes and overhead cables, perhaps in agitation at our presence. A little egret fished in a pond, stirring up water and mud with its foot and grabbing at anything that tried to escape. Sylvain told us this species had been wintering here in increasing numbers for about fifteen years. In a drier area there were fifty or so goldfinches disturbed from their lunch and twit­tering in the treetops.
After lunch we took up the coffee invit­ation. Sylvain's garden backed down onto the shore and he took us to the shelter of some Corsican pines he had planted fifteen years ago. He was going to cut them down because they obscured the view from the house and did not provide the expected shelter from the wind. Had the tide not been right out we would have benefited from being able to get close to birds unseen by them. Hundreds of pintail and a few other wildfowl were still out there, and the number of black-necked grebes in the deep channel had risen to thirty.
A marsh harrier flew the length of an offshore island two or three times then flew low across the water and circled a few times, scat­ter­­ing great black‑back gulls and other birds. It got nearer to the water, legs dangling, and hovered for a few seconds. It repeated the circl­ing and hovering and may have touched the water with its talons but it did not pick anything up. After­wards it gained height and flew off into the haze. Marsh harriers have occa­sionally been recorded taking items from the water surface.
There was a log fire burning in the house and the coffee was most welcome, even if rather strong for our tastes. Sylvain talked about his visits to Britain ‑ he was a school teacher and took students with him; he told us more about the G­olfe, and explained the workings of his local hunting associ­ation. He was very much aware of the reputation that French hunters had, and believed that things were changing, but slowly.
Hunting Associations were legally obliged to set aside reserves where birds could take refuge from the shooters. The birds, he said, were not stupid and soon took to using the reserve and non‑hunting areas all the time ‑ last year the only bird he had shot was a pigeon!
The members of the Hunting Association were each allocated a certain section of their com­mune's hunting area on each hunting day on a rota system; anyone caught in the wrong section would be fined. Outsiders were not allowed to hunt in this area under any circumstances; a group of people who had tried hunting on the reserve and had had their car, boat, guns, duck etc confis­cated, and were fined F8000 each. The Association regul­ated its own hunting, for example, there was cur­rently a three year ban on hare hunting because numbers had declined. And local land­owners could state whether hunting was permitted on their land, either for themselves privately or for the hunting association, or whether it was forbidden to every­one.
One could easily get the impression that French hunters were not as bad as we are some­times led to believe, but Sylvain did point out that hunting is seen differently in different areas and the rules are not the same everywhere.

25 Nov 2008

25th November 1988 - Golfe du Morbihan

The Golfe du Morbihan is basically a giant version of Pagham Harbour in Sussex ‑ some 15 km across inland and a one km opening at the sea end. Apart from a few islands, some inhabited, the area con­sists of vast mudflats, encroaching salt marsh and deep channels. At low tide the water empties out to leave vast wader and wildfowl feeding grounds; this is the principal French haunt of dark-bellied brent geese from Siberia ‑ some 20,000 over-winter here. The map showed several possible access points, and we chose the D780 on the western side.

bout two kilometres from the main road, the D780 runsan alongside the shore of the Golfe. We find a place to pull over and for the next two hours watch from the van. Jim uses the tele­scope for harriers and other distant birds, while I peer over his shoulder with binoculars at the nearby gulls and scribbled down notes of what we see as it happens.

There are shelduck, dark-bellied brents and gulls on the mudflats, plus a few coot. Further away are curlew, dunlin and redshank, and corm­orants fishing in the channel. A great black‑back gull close to the road is stabbing viciously at a flatfish; Jim reports two buzzards and two marsh harriers in the distance. The gull carries the flatfish around, puts it down and stabs it again, eventually getting a chunk off.

The harriers are showing well, the first one has a pale head and pale flashes on the primaries, the second is a fairly uniform rich brown with darker wing tips. An egret flies out of the channel but disappears down again before it can be ident­ified. A stonechat perches on a nearby fence post. Harrier I goes to ground, harrier II disappears downstream.

The egret reappears ‑ dark bill, dark legs, yellow feet ‑ and lands out of sight again. It is a little egret, although our books say it should have gone to southern Spain for the winter. About 150 avocets come in to roost. The great black‑back continues to struggle with its flat­fish, taking it down into a small channel for a wash then coming up onto the mud again. The fish is shaken vigorously and then stabbed again.

Two more little egrets put in brief appear­ances, two green sandpipers fly off into the distance and a heron lumbers past. The frustrated gull redirects his aggression at a nearby clump of spartina, then repeats the washing and stab­bing procedure. Harrier I takes to the air again. The gull finally swallows the fish whole, rather to the annoyance of a nearby first winter herring gull who then takes it out on a couple of nearby adult lesser black‑backs.

A third harrier appears ‑ more the classic female marsh harrier this time, with pale head and pale lesser secondary coverts, but with less ob­vious pale primary flashes. Harriers I and III came together briefly, flying in unison as they twist and swing through the sky, then one goes to ground. The swollen neck of the gull looks most uncomfort­able and he can stand it no longer. He regurg­itates the fish, washes it and gives it another good shake. Other gulls loiter nearby, but this one has no intention of giving up its meal.

Another ten minutes ‑ we have been here an hour ‑ and the gull swal­lows the fish again, going into all sorts of contortions as he tries to work it down. Jim finds a single miserable-look­ing avocet hiding behind a clump of spartina, it has oil on its plumage and is perhaps suffering from the effects of swal­lowing some while preening. Meanwhile harrier III soars and zooms around as if enjoying itself in the sun.

The gull seems to have recovered somewhat from its meal and struts off the way only great black­‑backs can. A common gull flies in to join a group of black‑headed gulls, all adults again. A fourth harrier appeares similar to the first but a duller, paler brown with dark flight feathers. Then another harrier ‑ a ringtail hen harrier this time, lighter built and with a paler, more chequered, underwing than the marsh harriers. It flies over the avocets and disappears upstream. Some avocets seemed confused and leave the group, flying in a circle before returning to roost again.

In the downstream direction a kestrel flies heavily low over the geese, getting a few of them worried. It lands on a hummock in the saltmarsh and begins plucking its prey ‑ Jim remarks that feathers were flying, unfortun­ately without their bird! A lapwing calls as it passes overhead. An egret flies along the channel, the low sun making its flight feathers look translucent. Small birds are coming and going in the hedge and scrub near the camper: robins, wrens, fieldfares, blue tits, chaffinches and greenfinches.

We drive on, using minor roads to keep close to the shore. Near the village of Hezoc a causeway has been built across a finger of the Golfe and trans­formed it into a reed‑fringed freshwater lake. Disappointingly there are only a handful of gulls in residence. However, there are small birds twitter­ing in the nearby shrubs and hedges so we look at those.

A tseep-tseep call comes from one hedge but locating the caller is not easy. When a bird does show it is against the light, we can make out a yellowish body and pink feet, but it defin­itely is not a yellowhammer. After a while we get better views of a female bunting sitting on a twig half way up the side of a hedge, looking back at us. She is a cirl bunting though we can't be sure of her identity until she flies away and shows off her olive rump. There are others around, they are mostly heard but not seen.

Watching was interrupted by an enthusiastic frenchman who tells us of a nearby place with thou­sands of birds. He is walking a dog and a small child, they don't go far along the road and on the way back he repeats his message but now tel­ling of two places.

The tide is still well out and the first place looks decidedly empty of both birds and water. The second place is much more hopeful and more access­ible. Signs proclaim it to be public maritime reserve with hunting forbidden at all times. The mudflats are crawling with dunlin ‑ thousands of them, with a handful each of knot, grey plover, redshank, curlew and godwit, and several hundred coot busily wading and poking about.

The edge of the rising tide is just coming into view, shooing the waders ahead and followed by hundreds of pintail, then a hundred or so shelduck, then about a hundred dark-bellied bren­ts. In amongst them are more coot plus a few teal and wigeon, more waders come in, including a few hundred grey plover. A little egret joins them, wading in an ungainly manner along a chan­nel. Most of the waders go towards a causeway which joins an island to the mainland. As the tide fills the bay the wildfowl form a neck­lace around the edge. Darkness falls before the tide is fully in.

24th November 1988

We are woken up at dawn by a peculiar creaking noise, Jim dresses hur­ried­ly and explores outside only to startle a small covey of grey partridge pecking in the sand close by.

The day warms up after a frosty start, and it is quite pleasant even with a light offshore breeze. We walk along the shore over low flat dunes where most of the vegetation has been grazed down by rabbits. Sea rocket is in flower, and a charm of goldfinches feasts on the seed­pods of other cruc­ifers, their red, black and gold markings showing brightly in the sun. There are meadow pipits and white wagtails, stonechats and reed buntings, black­birds, song thrushes, robins, dunnocks, wrens and linnets all in small numbers. Larger numbers of skylarks and starlings twitter as they scour the dunes for breakfast, and a single snow bunting calls from the shore.

The tide is out and so are the bait dig­gers. A crow, too, finds some prize on the beach and its mates are threatening hell if they didn't get a share. A lone ringed plover plays stop‑­start amongst the worm casts. Magpies make their usual complaints but the appearance of a female kestrel causes hubbub from most species.

The sea surface and the rocky islets are occupied by black‑headed and herring gulls, cormo­rants and shags. Eight small duck, which appear to be the same as those we saw at dusk yester­day, are, in daylight, clearly long‑tailed duck, all females and immatures and not a long tail between them. Watching is difficult because of their habit of diving almost simultaneously and then reappearing 15 ‑ 20 seconds later a short distance away, meanwhile our attention has been taken by a cormorant or something else flying through. When the long‑tails preen they sit up in the water on their tails and bob around like corks.

Away from the shore the dunes are even lower and flatter; one area has been set aside for re­creation, and includes a go‑kart track. As it is deserted of people, we just wander around. Behind a patch of gorse showing off its yellow flowers, there is a development of holiday villages and campsites. A sympetrum dragonfly lands on a half-built wall to sun itself, and proves unusual­ly cooperative when I take its photograph.

Meanwhile Jim had finds a dartford warbler skulking in a gorse bush. It stays around long enough for me to get a glimpse of it through the telescope ‑ grey upper-parts, rufous under-parts, red eye and long cocked tail were quite distinc­tive. Its call is a sort of explosive rattle, and is a useful identification point.

The impression of spring increases when a red admiral butterfly flies past; as we stop for a closer look at it, a sparrowhawk flies up out of the ditch in front of us and disappears between the empty holiday camp buildings. It must have been either hunting low along the ditch or perhaps taking a drink in the bottom and was unable to tolerate our presence any longer.

Conifers and shrubs have been planted in the campsite to screen the pitches (continental campsites seem to be good at this) and they are full of chiff‑chaffs, goldcrests, thrushes and great, blue and coal tits. Firecrests show themselves particularly well.

Some of the conifers have a few branches tipped with white candy floss, which, on closer inspection, proves to be the silken tents of pine processionary moth caterpillars. These caterpil­lars live communally in the tents from autumn to spring; at night they march out in single file to feed on the pine needles. A few caterpillars are outside the tent today ‑ small orange and brown hairy creatures with a reputation for having ex­tremely irritating properties. They are common in central and southern Europe where they are con­sidered a serious forest pest.

The sand here is soft and dry and generally so littered with human and dog footprints that the presence of other animals is hard to discern. However, we do find one 'clean' bit of sand that is quite interesting. A weasel has gone through at some speed, a small dor beetle moved through leaving a set of parallel tracks ‑ another larger beetle had left a similar track nearby, at least three different birds had used the place ‑ one hopped and two ran, one of the latter being a pipit with the impression of its long back claw showing clearly.

As we return to the beach, a woodcock flies past, going north at a height of about a metre and a half. It isn't in a hurry ‑ unlike in most sight­ings when a bird has been disturbed and all you get is a back view of whirring wings.

Out at sea are plenty of scoter, a single guillemot, and two sandwich terns going south ‑ we are now just north of their wintering area.

23rd November 1988

The south‑west coast of Brittany is indented with harbours similar to those of Portsmouth, Pagham and Poole on the south coast of Britain. The first such indentation we look at is the Etel estuary. At high tide on a calm day it belongs on a picture postcard, but it could also be an inter­esting place for birds sheltering from a storm. There are many islands, some inhabited, which would increase the sheltering effect of the place and make a boat almost a necessity for exploring it properly.

A woman who was walking two dogs and a child along the shore tells us that, this winter, a large flock of white storks has turned up. She is obviously interested in birds but, as her English is like my French, the conversation does not go any further.

We stop for the night at Kerhillion Beach, facing the Atlantic. The weather is very calm, and there is a full moon. Out on the sea there are hund­reds of black headed gulls ‑ all adults ‑ and more gulls roosting on rocky offshore islets. Also great-crested grebes and cormor­ants, and three small duck unidentifiable in the fading light.

22nd November 1988 - breakdown

Generally our time in France has been pleasant, though occasionally frustrating. This day, however, should be forgotten as a bad dream. There is a horrible knocking sound from the engine end of the van; we can't see the cause so we call out Avonaid Continental Breakdown Service. I try three tele­phone kiosks before I find one that works properly!

We are taken first to a garage in another town, the van is jacked up and the mechanic pro­nounces 'transmission kaput'. The breakdown people arrange that we should be taken to the VW agents in Caen where we spend the rest of the day dreading a large bill for parts ‑ the insurance covers the labour and towing. To our surprise the bill is only F340 (£34). It seems they took something apart expecting to replace it, dis­covered it only needed lubricating, and so put it back together with plenty of grease.

Having got this all sorted out, we try to find our way out of Caen. The problem is that, as we had been brought into the town by some-one else, we are totally disorientated. We go around a few circles before finally getting on the correct road towards Vannes on the Atlantic coast.

21st November 1989

Last night there was the sound of sleet and hail beating on the roof and the wind trying to blow the camper over; thunder and lighting had caused the radio to crackle all evening. This morning there are just occasional rain drops and the sound of the sea pounding the beach. We had moved yesterday from sandy shores and dunes to chalk cliffs and steep pebble beaches at St Aubin­‑sur‑Mer.

The tide is fairly well in and the sea is quite rough even though the wind seems to have dropped. There is a selection of gulls inshore, including immature and adult plumaged little gulls and kittiwakes. In the distance gannets are plunge diving, and groups of velvet scoter and wigeon are moving through.

At Veules les Roses we buy groceries then go sea watching from the promenade. Great-crested grebes and black- and red-throated divers are added to the day's list, but I am cold and so go back to the shelter of the van. Jim stays out, getting very cold and buffeted by the wind, but returns eventually with news of a slavonian grebe and two juvenile sabine's gulls ‑ late migrants driven inshore by last night's gales

Continuing west along the coast, we cross the Seine via the massive toll bridge at Tancar­ville. One end is set into the chalk cliffs and the whole structure ‑ a suspension bridge ‑ is very high. It looks most impressive when we look back at it from the Seine valley. From the bridge itself the view down­stream towards the sea is spectacular in the evening sun but looking upstream the scene is dominated by smoky fac­t­ories.

21 Nov 2008

20th November 1988 - le Crotoy

Winter seems to have caught up with us again. It rains more or less continuously until lunch­time when we finally manage to get out and stretch our legs on the beach at le Crotoy. Nevertheless hunters are out in force ‑ we hear shots from 9 am until noon, though most of the birds to be seen are gulls which take no notice of the disturb­ance. Sunday morning joggers aren't put off by the weather either.

Near the upstream end of le Crotoy there is quite a gathering of gulls and a constant stream of more coming to join them. This area may be the source of the raw sewage washing up along the shore. The noisy throng consists of herring, common and greater black‑backs in all varieties of winter plumage, and several hundred black-headed adults but only one first winter bird ‑ sooner or later we should find lots of first winter birds and no adults! Another thousand gulls roost on the sandbanks beyond the channel, we check amongst them all and satisfy ourselves there are no Mediter­ranean gulls in sight. Beyond the gulls are a few each of curlew, redshank, oyster­catcher, grey plover and knot, and a thousand or so dunlin. Seven woodlarks work their way rest­lessly along the base of the dunes. Then the cold drizzle drives us back for shelter and coffee.

The afternoon shooters and fishermen are now walking over the estuary and we look for another viewpoint. To the south of le Crotoy the road runs alongside the saltmarsh; a few parking places are provided for the benefit of shooters, but we use one anyway and watch from the shelter of the van. The rain stops eventually and the huge black clouds drift slowly away to show the evening sun.

One hunter walks out onto the marshes and takes a few live duck out of his bag; the birds are tethered to a weight and calmly accepted the sit­uation ‑ they are probably quite used to being used as live decoys. Several times we see harriers quartering the marshes, often paying particular attention to the channels. The shooters ignore them. Small birds to be seen are mostly starlings, including an albinistic individual, skylarks, meadow pipits and house sparrows. A welcome sight is our first con­tinental kingfisher zooming though, just above the top of a channel, over the road and continuing along the channel on the other side. Kingfishers can bring a touch of magic to the gloomiest of days.

19th November 1988 - Quand Plage

Quand Plage is a typical small holiday resort, now boarded up for the winter and the promenade deserted except for ourselves. The high tide has just turned and we have an excellent view of the shore from the top of the sea wall. Birds are much the same as yesterday. The scoter have separated into groups of either males or females and immatures, at close range the cheeks of the latter look very pale. Both red- and black-throated divers fly close to the shore, one black-throated having a particularly smudgy face and neck (some birds do not finish moulting until mid‑­winter), all show a clear pale flank patch when they swim on the sea. Well out from the shore a few gannets are plunge diving, and little gulls dis­play an almost barn‑owl like flight as they search for food. There are also a few auks which are too far out to identify specifically. About fifty sanderling scurry along the shoreline.

We had walked a few hundred metres along the beach when nine shore larks announce their arriv­al with twittering calls, and land on an area of shells and small stones, some twenty metres in front of us. The adults are distin­guishable by having more black on their faces and tiny 'horns' above the eyes while in first winter birds the broader feather fringes make the black markings less distinct. Their well‑feathered thighs give the impression that they are wearing warm panta­loons - needed in the cold wind.

The larks move along the beach in a loose group, often in twos and threes rather than in a single party as they searched for seeds trapped between the stones. Their bills are noticeably shorter and stouter than those of the woodlarks. Mostly they hold their shortish wings above the back, but one bird that seems a bit agitated has an upright stance, cocking its tail and holding its wings low. They move away when a group of people with dogs come along the beach.

We move on towards Fort Mahon Plage, another small holiday resort a few kilometres to the north but miss a turning and the road takes us to l'­Authie, a small broad estuary that is the haunt of hunters. The place is littered with cart­ridges and each of the several small ponds hold a contingent of black decoy ducks, over­looked by one or more shooting bunkers. A few gunshots come from the inland end; but the only live bird in the area is a black-headed gull which is paddling the bottom of a pond with its feet, then dipping its head in to grab at disturbed crabs etc. There are roe deer slots on the salt­marsh but no other non‑human animals in sight.

We do not linger on the estuary, the tide is now well out, exposing an expanse of sand in one direction and saltmarsh in the other. Keeping as near to the water line as practicable we walk towards Fort Mahon Plage, and discover that the place is not quite as deserted as earlier this morning. It being a weekend, the beach is now well populated with dog walkers, joggers, etc and the local sand yachting school is giving its first lesson of the morning. Nevertheless we are able to continue watching, scanning through the gulls roosting on a sandbar for Mediterranean gulls that aren't there (just being hopeful), though there is one bird with Med gull shape but black‑headed gull markings ‑ hybrids are not unknown.

Of the dunes between the beach and the est­uary, part is open access, part is under the auspices of the Conservatoire de l'Espace Lit­toral, and the remainder is posted 'chasse gard­ee' ie hunting area. We walk through the first part where the vegetation is mostly fairly dense but through which an assault and fitness course has been constructed. The birds include tree sparrows and reed buntings, and a single male hen harrier.

The weather is now less windy than yesterday but there is a huge black cloud just to the south and another coming in over the sea. At about three o'clock the rain forces us to give up watching.

18th November 1988 - Baie de Somme

The Somme estuary might be best known for wartime events, but it is also one of the most produc­tive bird-watching areas on the Channel coast. The Parc Ornithologique du Marquenterre is closed for the winter so we con­tinued along the road and found some other interesting places.

The coastline of chalk hills is broken here by another extensive area of sand dunes. From the hamlet of St Quentin en Tourment a broad track leads through the dunes ‑ the Grande Dune Domaine du Marquenterre ‑ to the beach. The Domaine com­prises some 2,000 ha of Corsican pine plantation, plus stable and mobile dunes closer to the shore.

The 3 km long sandy track is fenced on both sides, showing clearly the amount of erosion on the path compared with the untouched land on either side. Every few hundred metres there is a board hung on a fence postdepicting some local animal or plant, together with another board giving some information about the species.

Thus we learn that there was a strong popula­tion of wild boar in the dunes but they are not often seen as they are nocturnal and can wander several kilo­metres per night. However, the fenc­ing is insuffi­cient to contain them for, in sev­eral places, they have pushed under the fence on one side of the path, crossed the track and made another boar-sized hole in the fence on the other side too. All we see of them are their foot­prints between the fences. Roe deer are another numerous mammal here, having adapted well to the dunes and plantations, but again all we see are slots.

We walk about a kilometre along the track and now it starts to rain, we wait it out and continue the walk. After another kilometre the rain comes again, we are out of the forest and the small pine tree under which we huddle soon begins to drip on us. I am ready to turn back but Jim votes to continue, pulled on by patches of brighter sky. By the time we reach the sea the sun is shining in a blue sky with cotton wool clouds.

Beyond the pines, the dunes have a dense covering of sea buckthorn, the berries of which, we are told, are high in vitamin C and an impor­tant source of food in winter, especially for thrushes. A ringtail hen harrier quarters a distant section, but there are plenty of small birds, including bullfinches and blackcaps in the scrub nearby.

Out near the sea the dunes are still quite mobile and efforts have been made, by planting marram grass and five rows of netting, to try to stabilise them. In one place even the two metre high fence along the path has been buried by the sand.

The beach itself is part of the 3,000 ha Baie de Somme Marine Reserve. Access is discouraged because of the maze of sand bars and creeks that can cut you off on a rising tide. The area is of inter­national importance for passage waders and wintering wildfowl. Thousands of gulls roost on the beach ‑ herring, common, black headed and greater black‑back ‑ while ten adult little gulls feed out at sea.

The tide is almost out and the water quite rough, but sea-watching is not impossible. One group of duck near the shore consists mostly of eider, another group consists of common and vel­vet scoter. In the sun the white eye patches and specula of the latter show up well, better than indicated in the field-guide. The birds take to the air one after another, showing off bright white secondaries, and fly north parallel to the coast. A single black-throated diver flies close to the shore, and a handful of grebe are quite active; these include great-crested and red-­necked in flight and two slavonian fishing nearer the shore. A red-breasted merganser completes the line up.

Although we did not appreciate it until later, the Baie de Somme Maritime Reserve was where most of the duck in the area were to be found. And since the area has been protected, the wintering popu­lations of several species of wildfowl have increased.

Wagtails have so far been conspicuous by their absence, one expects to see white wagtails as common on the continent as the pied sub­species is in Britain. But here is another species where the continen­tals have different habits. Some pied wagtails do breed along the coasts of France, Belgium and the Netherlands, often pairing with white wagtails (which also occasionally breed in Scotland). Both sub­species are migratory here and we have only just moved into their winter range. Even so we see just one today.

Soon after midday the sun disappears behind clouds again and we make our way back. Two ring­tail hen harriers now quarter the dunes. Across the path there is a fresh ridge of sand where a mole has burrowed underneath. The only mammals we actually see are rabbits, which the notice boards tell us had been so badly reduced by myxomatosis in 1953 that they no longer have much effect on the vegetation.

Back in the pine forest we find great-spotted woodpeckers and have a glimpse of a tree­creeper. Jim thinks it has the white flanks of the ordinary treecreeper but in this area it should be the short‑toed species. Un­fortunately it does not hang around for further identification.

17th November 1988 - Usine des Dunes

The sign points to Usine des Dunes, and refers to a huge noisy industrial site set in the middle of an extensive area of coastal dunes. The dunes them­selves are the southern end of the line that con­tinues along the Belgian and Dutch coasts to the Waddensee Islands. Near the factories is a car park provided by the Conservatoire de l'Espace Littoral et des Rivages Lacustres for visi­tors to the dunes.

The dunes by the factories have limited provi­sion for public access ‑ a single footpath winds through the thickets of sea buckthorn to the beach. In some places the path is rein­forced with some sort of gravelly concrete, and often, where it goes uphill, steps are provided with a wall of pine posts either side to keep people to the path and so reduce ero­sion. Motorcycles are prohibited.

It has been quite foggy all morning and birds don't really want to be seen; they just occasionally pop out of and back into the dense scrub. Most can be located and ident­ified by their contact calls. One caller eludes us for a while, though we suspect that it is a firecrest. Our patience is rewarded when it does event­ually show, very briefly and almost at our feet, allowing us time to see only the stripes on its head.

After the noise of the factory, the vast expanse of open sandy beach is a haven of peace. There are a few hundred gulls along the shore ‑common, black‑headed, great black‑back and herring gulls, the odd oyster­catcher flew past, and out at sea are a couple of great-crested grebes. A fisher­man comes along on a tractor to check lines of nets exposed at low tide.

The return walk to the van was uneventful.

Continuing our journey southwards along the coast we discover hills just south of Calais ‑ chalk downland and the French end of the Channel Tunnel. Even these gentle hills seem like mountains after so much flat land (in the Netherlands and Belgium). As dusk falls we came across a valley with a reed‑fringed lake. A male marsh harrier quarters the area in search of supper.

17th November 1988 - France

It iswith some trepidation that I go into a small grocery store and ask the classic question "Bonjour Madame, avez‑vous du pain, s'il vous plait?" I get the gist of the answer ‑ no, but the patisserie over the road opens at three o'­clock. I had survived my first venture into spoken french.

I remember the year of French that I did at school for the times that I was reduced to tears or just made to feel useless. Having done two years of German with its strict rules of grammar and the pronun­ciation of every letter in a word, I found French something akin to Martian ‑ there were too many silent letters, and strange sounds and inton­ations. I swore I would never visit France, the language terrified me and I was afraid of making a fool of myself by not being able to understand it.

Feeling that, on this trip, it would be use­ful to have at least some basic knowledge of French, I had embarked on various self‑teaching pro­grams. My com­puter proved a useful learning aid, and I felt I was doing quite well. Unfortunately the computer did not talk back and, while I seem to be able to make myself understood, I have great diffi­culty in understanding a spoken answer that con­tains more than about three words. But, yes, it was worth the effort. Contrary to something we had heard on the radio, away from the tourist areas few French people are willing to speak English, and they are certainly quite enthus­iastic, and sympathetic, about other people at least trying to communicate in their language.

As regards French bread, we now know out why French people walk or cycle home breaking off bite‑­sized chunks from their baguettes. It is delicious, but only when fresh, hence it is baked several times a day.

17 Nov 2008

16th November, Yser River

There are two reserves along the Yser river, De Blankaart is four square kilometres of reeds and lake, while the other reserve is part of a small estuarine basin. Permits are required to see each reserve properly but the books says good views can be had from public tracks and paths.

We find de Blankaart reasonably easily, though we have to look hard for the small wooden signpost just south of the town of Woumen. There is a chateau there, with stuff being taken in from delivery vans. We are not sure that we are in the right place, but then we find an inform­ation board with a map, a list of the usual dos and don'ts, and some background information in Flemish, including, for example, that two or three pairs of marsh har­riers nest every year.

The map shows a footpath to the lake and we follow that. It takes us on a short circular route through deciduous woodland and onto a bridge which overlooks a large lake fringed with reeds. The lake occupies an area of former peat diggings in the Yser valley; it has gradually silted up, resulting in a wide expanse of reedbed and alder carr. Some 20,000 wildfowl overwinter, together with a similar number of waders. Only a small part of the lake is visible from the bridge, but that contains a variety of common water birds. A green sandpiper announces its presence with a repeated whistle. The surrounding woods hold a selection of smaller birds. Guided tours are available about once a month, but we cannot wait the fortnight for the next one.

Back on the coast we are unable to find the estuarine reserve. A sign on a roadside says something about nature information and birds if you take the next turn left. We do, but there are no further signs; the two dead-end roads lead only to a marina and a building site. From the marina Jim can see a gull roost on a beach so we go for a closer look at that. Access to the beach, Lombard­sijde Strand, is through a campsite next to a military base.

By now we are feeling thoroughly fed up of driving around in Belgium and not finding places; now we are just killing time waiting for the campsite to open after lunch. The beach looks rather unpromising ‑ the gull roost, a few oystercatchers and, out at sea, a few duck.

As we look at the gulls there comes a "lee‑to‑­lee" call from nearby, and Jim locates a lark almost overhead. Its call and its short tail are enough to identify it as a woodlark. After a few minutes of territorial display the bird dives down and lands just out of sight, followed by another woodlark. We move around for a better view.

Both birds are on the beach at the bottom of the dunes, seeming to play tag around a lump of concrete, then out in the open for a brief bill‑to-bill confrontation before going off in different directions. The bird which comes our way searches along the beach for about ten minutes, allowing us plenty of time for further study. The species has three other obvious plumage character­istics: supercilia which meet behind the head to give it a capped appearance, a very short pointed crest, and a distinctively patterned feather in the allula ‑ all clearly marked on this bird.

The woodlark pecks around in the sand, investi­gating all lumps and hollows. A discarded paper cup invites inspection but after two long looks the bird leaves it alone ‑ going in would cut off its field of vision too much for comfort. We are just delighted to have the bird stay in our field of vision for so long.

Our few minutes of serendipity are rudely interrupted by a loud bang from the military camp. A small remote controlled plane towing an air sock has been catapulted into the air; it spends the next half hour or more buzzing in figure of eights over the beach in front of us. It comes low over the gull roost and puts most birds to flight. The gulls come back but the woodlark flies into the dunes and stays there. The plane's flight path is stabilised and firing practice begins. We wish they would shoot the plane down, the noise is awful. The woodlark calls and flies back to where we first saw it, however it seems unsettled and soon disap­pears again. So do we.

In Belgium off‑site camping is allowed, a situation which provides welcome relief for our budget. However we still need showers occas­ionally, and this evening we retire to a convenient campsite that is open all year round, though we seem to be the only customers on this occasion. Unfortunately the laundry room is locked up, so we haveto wash clothes by hand; but, without the benefit of a spin drier or tumbler, it will take the next week to get them dry in the damp drizzly weather.

Birds around out campsite this evening include robins, wrens, blackbirds, two chiff-chaffs and some magpies holding a noisy council over two dead cats.