Meldreth Matters, July 2021

Page 10

Spotted Flycatchers are back in Meldreth With the unseasonably cold May weather, we wondered if these summer migrants from Africa would return to Meldreth this year. How do such small birds manage the hazardous journey? To our dismay we discovered that a Song Thrush had built a nest immediately adjacent to the old Flycatcher nest prior to the latter’s arrival. However, their old nest had suffered the ravages of time and we thought that the Flycatchers might deem it unusable. So last January, with the kind approval of the house’s owners, we erected a nest box not far from the original nest to encourage them to stay. The box was made by Ken McLean to a design specifically A Spotted Flycatcher in the nesting box recommended for Flycatchers Photograph by Kathryn Betts by the British Trust for Ornithology. And so we waited … and true to form, on 16th May two Spotted Flycatchers were seen near the church - one clearly identified from its posture. At the same time another was seen - possibly a mate of the first. On 17th May a ringed bird was seen and three days later two birds were seen investigating the new box. Imagine our delight when the birds were seen building a nest in our box the following day! A week later the female was sitting on a branch, fluttering. The male arrived and fed her with insects. This male was seen hunting around the large lime tree in the churchyard and has a ring on its right leg. Hopefully it is the male that we ringed last year. There seem to be an additional one or two Spotted Flycatchers in the locality, not visiting the nest box at all, but just flitting around the tree tops without singing or displaying. 8


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.