I didn't think I'd be able to top the previous year, but 2018 served up a bumper crop of sightings (September in particular had enough highlights to fill a best-of list all by itself). But here for your viewing pleasure, after much vacillating, are the pick of the bunch:
January
There's nothing like a Waxwing to brighten up a dull winter's day:
February
I've got to include at least one Kestrel (it's the Law) and this bird was a bit special:
March
Why go to the trouble of catching your own frog when you can steal one from a Marsh Harrier?
April
The light wasn't great that morning, but it's not every day that a Cuckoo pops up right in front of you:
May
Here's something else you don't see every day, a Mole out in the open:
...though it really wasn't the best day for small furry things to come out of hiding.
Also at Stodmarsh, a Hobby grabs an in-flight snack:
June
At Foreness Housemartins collect mud for their nests:
And a Stoat pops up at Stodmarsh:
July
A typically quiet month for birds, but not for dragonflies such as this Norfolk Hawker:
August
Last ones to arrive; first ones to leave. A Swift prepares for its autumn migration at North Foreland:
September
1st September at Grove Ferry was one of those rare and remarkable days where everything falls into place. It included Spotted Flycatchers and a Bullfinch (in the same tree), a Whinchat, and even a surprise Bittern. But it was the reserve's star attraction that stole the show:
Return visits later in the month uncovered a Small Copper butterfly (the first one I can recall seeing at the reserve), plenty of Willow Emerald damselflies, Lizards, and this juvenile Green Woodpecker:
October
Winter birds start arriving along the coast, including this handsome Brambling at North Foreland:
November
Not the best photo, but arguably the best bird of the year; Scott Haughie's White-billed Diver (in summer plumage!) which attracted birders and photographers from across the country:
I expect I'll be frowned on in some quarters for including it, but this ESCAPED Hoopoe brought some entertainment (unless you're a grub) to an unlikely part of Thanet:
December
Another month, another loon; a Red-throated Diver (not in summer plumage) in Ramsgate Harbour:
All the photos on this page were taken with a Canon 80D DSLR and the trusty Tele Vue-60 refractor.
In the next post, I will be returning to outer space.
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