Distant view of Vanbrugh's Grand Bridge from the part of The Great Lake that is not being drained |
The Great Lake is currently not in a good state due to a build up of silt and that part of the lake upstream of the Grand Bridge, known as the Queen's Pool, is being drained so that the build up of centuries of silt can be dredged and removed.This is a five year project that will cost half a million pounds. As the Queen's Pool slowly drains and the water levels reach just a few centimetres this has attracted various heron species, never slow to take advantage of an opportunity to feast on the fish that are made vulnerable by the shallow water.
The main attraction amongst the ever present Little Egrets and Grey Herons are Great White Egrets of which there are five, possibly six, now frequenting the slowly diminishing lake. Great White Egrets are no strangers to Oxfordshire and in the last few years have become a regular presence in the Lower Windrush Valley and indeed last year at least three were to be found during the winter months in the Woodstock Water Meadows which are just the other side of the road from Blenheim.
The partially drained Queen's Pool with plenty of exposed silt on view! |
It considered it would be remiss of me not to go and see the Great White Egrets for myself, especially as Woodstock is but twenty minutes drive from my home and on a lovely, late autumn morning I found myself entering a side gate into the parkland and walking under the mighty beech trees of Blenheim, all grey of trunk and burnished copper of leaf, crunching the fallen beech mast underfoot.
Autumn in Blenheim |
Great White Egrets |
Great White Egret |
Little Egrets |
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