Whilst most people see July as the start of the summer and look forward to the school holidays, we at Worthing birding are already thinking about the start of autumn. Many of our summer visitors will soon be heading south and will pause to refuel on the coast before continuing their migration. This can begin as soon as mid July but it is usually a month of waiting and hoping. However for those interested in butterflies (or moths) there was plenty to keep them occupied through the warm sunny days.
Early July started (and continued) with wall to wall sunshine and post breeding flocks of Swallows stooping over the wheat fields on the Downs north of Cissbury, but for some the main event of the first half of the month was the Worthing Birders Summer Drinks on the 17th July.
Quail - One was heard in the oat field south of the path between Lancing Ring and Steep Down on 10/7 and 24/7 and another near the gate on the north side of Steep Down on 18/7. Meanwhile a third bird was singing in the huge wheat fields south of Steyning Round Hill from 20/7 until 25/7.
Brooklands Lake - Juvenile Mediterranean and Yellow-Legged Gulls were reported from 18/7.
Goring Gap - Early returning Common Gulls (3) were noted on 11/7 with 20+ Med Gulls including a couple of juveniles. A single Whimbrel was reported on multiple dates between 11/7 and 30/7, with Curlew on 12/7 and 16/7.
Autumn is Up and Running
The Birders Drinks raised expectations (fuelled perhaps by the odd shandy) and rekindled enthusiasm to search the Downs for migrants and the very next morning our hopes were answered. Admittedly it was the hard working Juliet and Chris Moore that found a lovely male Redstart on Findon Gallops on 18/7 rather than anyone who had been at The Cricketers, but it was the first migrant of the autumn and whilst the floodgates didn’t exactly burst open, inevitably more followed.
Two more Redstarts were at Patching Hill on 25/7 and still present on 28/7 along with a Sedge Warbler and Lesser Whitethroats (2). By the last two weeks of the month Willow Warblers were being reported in small numbers from multiple sites and the first Wheatear of the autumn was present along Monarchs Way to the north of Cissbury on 28/7.
Findon Gallops held Lesser Whitethroat (4), Common Whitethroat (8) and a Garden Warbler on 30/7.
Crossbills - It seems to have been a very good year for Crossbills with reports from across the county, and the Worthing area didn’t miss out. Patching Hill seemed to be something of a hot spot, with 43e on 25/7 and another 11e / 5sw on 28/7. Meanwhile small groups were seen flying east over the town on 27/7 with sightings from Lower Salvington (14e) and Rogate Road (8e).
Swifts - Perhaps the first signs of departing Swifts were 85e past Goring Gap on 23/7 and post breeding flocks of 30 over Cissbury and 60+ feeding over the plantation at Goring Gap on 24/7. Birds were still also being reported from breeding territories at the end of the month - but they will not be around much longer.
However we had to wait until 30th July for the best bird of the month, when a Cattle Egret was seen by Ralph Simpson heading west over Goring Gap, although you need to read the next instalment to hear how he would better this in August.