Walk report: 15 September 2022 Studland Common and Milford Pleasure Grounds with Brian and Tina Vaughan

The walk started on a cloudy morning from the Needles Eye Cafe car park. Everyone was given a map of the Milford Pleasure Grounds.

Our route
© Crown copyright 2022 Ordnance Survey. Media 005/22.
The licence is valid until 31 December 2022

Local landowner Colonel Cornwallis-West was not financially able to make Milford into the seaside resort he was hoping for, like Bexhill on Sea. There is no pier, esplanade, bandstand or hydropathic centre, nor a busy port at Keyhaven. Otherwise Milford-on-Sea would not have the charm and character it has today, designed by architect William Ravenscroft who died in 1943.

We had a short walk along the cliff top where Viper's Bugloss and Red and White Campion were found. We entered Tony Locke Orchard, on the edge of Studland Common, where many trees have been planted by Milford Conservation Volunteers who manage many of the green areas along with the Parish Council.

Tony Locke's information board © Tina Vaughan

Robin and House Sparrow were seen, and then as we walked into the meadow a Buzzard flew over. The meadow was full of bees and butterflies in the summer, so we must return next year.

Marmalade Fly © Tina Vaughan

We came out of the meadow and turned left at Iris's bench where there are old Badger sets. On the Common there were many Goldfinches enjoying the seed heads. Lesser Knapweed, thistles, Common Agrimony, Burnet Rose, Perforate St John's Wort and Wild Basil all grew there as well as Parasol Mushrooms and Common Puffball. 

Burnet Rose hips © Chris Robinson

On Dog Roses was a good collection of Robin's Pincushions created by the larvae of the Bedeguar Gall Wasp Diplolepis rosae. A Knopper Gall off a Pedunculate Oak was found on the grass. Freshly emerged female Knopper Oak Gall Wasps Andricus quercuscalicis will seek out a Turkey Oak to lay eggs on the catkins, producing males and female larvae to find native oaks and produce spectacular shaped galls. We also saw a Jay, Great Spotted Woodpecker, Wren, House Martin, Herring Gull and another Buzzard being chased by a Carrion Crow.

Robin' Pincushion and rose hips © Richard Smith

We entered the wooded Pleasure Grounds but being distracted by the fighting Buzzard the group accidently split into two directions. We paused to look at the red berries of Black Bryony entwined around Sloes and Blackberries. Spindle berries were not quite ripe but would soon turn pink. The separate groups found each other again, difficult with poor phone signal.

Black Bryony berries and Sloes © Tina Vaughan

Walking through the woods there were fungi including an impressive group of Parasol Mushrooms as well as Hazel Woodwart and Beechwood Sickener. A Green Woodpecker yaffle was heard and a Willow Warbler seen. Cyclamen grew in the bank as we approached the Mill Pond, maintained by the houses that surround it. It was quite choked with Common Reed, but still housed a family of Moorhens, a Kingfisher and large carp and some Rudd. Giant Horsetail was growing very well, as was Bittersweet (a nightshade). Nearby we found Alder Leaf Beetle larvae made patterns in the leaves.

Giant Horsetail © Chris Robinson

Bittersweet © Richard Coomber

Meg's Bridge, boardwalk and steps are currently closed due to restoration work being required, so we returned to the car park and finished 2.3 miles at 12.30 TV

Rudd in the Mill Pond © Richard Smith


Indoor Meeting: Tuesday 27 September 2022 St. Thomas' Church Hall - AGM and a Gordon Small talk

Our first indoor meeting of the coming 2022/23 season starts at 7:15pm in 
St. Thomas' Church Hall. Member free, visitors £5.00

EAST ANGLIAN WILDLIFE
by
Gordon Small

Gordon has spoken to us previously on a variety of places he has visited over the years and this time it is about an area a little nearer to home. It promises to an interesting and well-illustrated talk.

It will be preceded for 15 minutes by:

Lymington and District Naturalists' Society AGM 2022

chaired by Robert Payne


Walk report: 01 September 2022 Keyhaven Marshes with Chris Robinson

It was a good start to the walk for there were Turnstones in Keyhaven Harbour, several still in breeding plumage, rummaging in the seaweed. Back, once more, from their breeding sites in Scandinavia and the Arctic. 

Turnstone - adult © Chris Robinson

As we walked along the sea wall we heard (and saw) a few Curlews and Oystercatchers and Little Egrets were present. There was a lone Wheatear and, on the Solent side, several Eider and Great Crested Grebes. Two Wigeon flew past heading west, the first taste of the winter duck influx. 

Wheatear © Chris Robinson

 
Eider - female and drake in eclipse plumage © Chris Robinson

I have never seen Fishtail Lagoon so dry or so devoid of birds! Butts and Jetty Lagoons were also very dry but in the puddles that remained we saw the long-staying juvenile Pectoral Sandpiper, as well as Common and Spotted Redshanks, Ringed Plover, Dunlin and juvenile Little Stint, Knot, and Curlew Sandpiper. 

Pectoral Sandpiper - juvenile © Richard Smith

Common Redshank - juvenile © Richard Smith

Knot - juvenile © Chris Robinson

Curlew Sandpiper - juvenile © Chris Robinson

Of the small birds we expect to see on the Marsh only a couple of Pied Wagtails, a few Linnets and the odd Stonechat were present. Those at the front caught a glimpse of a Reed Bunting and there were Swallows and Sand Martins overhead. CR

Pectoral Sandpiper - juvenile © Chris Robinson

Additional notes on Pectoral Sandpiper

Pectoral Sandpipers breed north of the Arctic Circle mainly on the coastal tundra of Canada (west of Hudson Bay) to Alaska with fewer breeding in Siberia west to Taimyr Peninsular. It is a regular annual visitor to the British Isles mostly in the Autumn. The great majority of Pec Sands, as they are more affectionally called by birders, winter in South America from Peru to southern Argentina. 

© Chris Robinson


Over recent weeks there have been a number recorded across the the British Isles. According to the highly regarded Rare Birds of Hampshire by John Clark (HOS 2022) there were 100 records in the county between the first in 1947 and 2020 – the cut-off date for the book. It appears that Keyhaven/Pennington area is a ‘hot-spot’ for the species recording 37 of those, with no less than five being present between 06-16 September 1970. contributed by RC

RIP


Badmington Horse Trials c1971 © Richard Coomber