My first of the year and it could not have happened in a better place.
Thursday, 28 May 2026
Man Alive - 25th May 2026
Tuesday, 26 May 2026
Burnt Orchids - 25th May 2026
Recently I liased with fellow Oxfordshire orchid enthusiast and fellow member of the Hardy Orchid Society (HOS) and suggested a trip to Knocking Hoe NNR in Bedfordshire to view a colony of 'burnt tips' that had been mentioned on the HOS web site.
Knocking Hoe is a 7.7 hectare unimproved chalkland site, managed by The National Trust and is both a National Nature Reserve (NNR) and Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and features a flat bottomed valley with steep sides which is home to a variety of rare and endangered native plants including the aforesaid Burnt Orchids.
On a third day of extreme summer heat I collected Peter from his home and we set forth on the two hour drive to Knocking Hoe. A Bank Holiday Monday is maybe not the best time to venture onto our roads especially as we had to negotiate parts of no less than three motorways, the M40, M25 and M1 but we managed to avoid any undue delay and once through the outskirts of the horror that is Luton found ourselves in pleasant countryside on almost deserted roads.
Peter, having been to Knocking Hoe two years ago knew exactly where to go which was a layby beside a busy road that then required you to cross the road and walk around two sides of a beech wood to access the reserve.
On parking and getting out of an air conditioned car an hour before noon I was unprepared for just how hot the day had become and knew we were in for a very trying and perspiring expedition to see the orchids. Adding to our concern, it looked like to get to the reserve, we at first would be required to walk along the busy road with its blind corners and fast moving cars to access the wood but thankfully I discovered that a far from obvious track we could follow lay just inside the wood thus obviating us risking our lives on the road and its oncoming traffic.
It was pleasant below the shade of the beech trees as we followed the track slightly uphill to emerge into the open and there before us was a small wooden gate that gave access to the reserve..
Naturally the orchids were at the far end of the reserve which required a fairly long walk along a gently descending, undulating track that gave superb views across the open landscape of the reserve. Now out in the open, with no shelter the strength of the sun became all too apparent and but for the very occasional welcome caress of a light breeze it would have been very taxing walking out to the orchids.
The chalky ground we walked over was baked hard and unyielding, the grass parched and sparse as we pressed on, conscious of not over exerting ourselves in the debilitating heat.
Knocking Hoe appears to have bucked the trend with over fifty counted in their enclosure but what took us by surprise was how small they were this year, even for what is a diminutive orchid in normal times.They were almost stunted and overwhelmed by the grasses and flora they grew amongst but still appeared perfect in form and colour, their intrinsic charm and exquisite beauty remaining unaffected.
We found another plant growing demurely and well away from the compound but still with its attendant marker flag that had a bubble gum pink bonnet of flower buds yet to open rather than the traditional darker maroon while the open flowers were white and unmarked.
We devoted forty five minutes to admiring these most desirable orchids but the heat was making life uncomfortable and so commenced a wearisome trudge back along the mainly uphill track to the wood.
There were a couple of surprises for us on the way back in the form of a lone Pasque Flower, another endangered member of our native flora, growing right beside the track and in a shaded area of long grass near to the reserve entrance we found five pink spikes of the Chalk Fragrant Orchid, poking skywards like miniature church steeples.
| Pasque Flower |
I was never so glad to return to the car as now and avail myself of its air conditioning.
Sanderlings - 22nd May 2026
Watching their tiny forms, forever active, moving at incredible speed it is not lost on me the transformation of imagination and reality their transient, all too brief presence here brings to the moment.
For the short time they are here the sheer slog and mundane monotony of birding a reservoir that is so often devoid of birds is elevated above the everyday, as the wonder of migration and what these birds represent imparts something infinitely more special.
It is of course impossible to know where exactly they have come from and where they are bound. A clue came some years ago when a Sanderling touched down on the reservoir bearing various coloured flags and rings on its legs which, after referral told me that it had been ringed in Greenland as a chick the year before.
So Greenland is a definite destination, Greenland! Just think of it. This bird will fly all the way there and back each year for as long as it lives.Others will head to the high arctic in Siberia, again an almost unbelievable feat of endurance and yet here they are for a day, maybe two, bringing a sense of magic to disguise the prosaic, sense numbing reality of this concrete bowl in the heart of England.
Why do they turn up here in the first place? They are a bird of seashores surely? They must be taking a shortcut across the centre of England, flying on a northwest heading from wherever they have originated, be it on the east or southern coast of England, or further from the coasts of mainland Europe or even Africa. Passing high, unseen and un noticed over central England, the geography hardly offers a suitable shoreline on which to stop unless they see a large body of water such as a reservoir or gravel pit. Possibly tired and hungry they decide to drop down to what looks to them a suitable place to break their long journey. Many others, I am sure do not stop, so we.are only granted the merest hint at what is going on above our heads in the infinite sky, a world and existence unknown to us.
No one Sanderling looks like another. Dunlins in summer plumage for example all look very much the same but Sanderlings in spring and early summer vary enormously from the almost white of their winter plumage to a rich orange brown that is their breeding plumage.Why is this - is the next question.
Sanderlings breed when they are two years old which means they will breed in the third year of their lives. For the second year of their life many are said to remain in their wintering areas. My suggestion is that the white birds I see at the reservoir are non breeders born in the previous year and now in their second year of life but making the journey to learn the ropes so to speak before breeding in the next year if they survive. The orange birds are in their third year of life or older and going to breed and therefore have adopted full breeding plumage. I could well be mistaken but it seems a plausible hypothesis to me.
Others have suggested that the white birds have delayed their moult until they have completed their migration and will acquire full breeding plumage on the breeding grounds but I feel this is doubtful as time is of the essence, with only a very short breeding window of 7-8 weeks in the high arctic regions where they are bound.
Others suggest the white birds are for some reason moulting to summer plumage slower than the orange birds which have completed their moult faster. Again this is possible but not for me.
All Sanderlings are beautiful in both form and plumage but to see them in their summer finery is a rare privilege and is only possible when they arrive on the reservoir unless I wish to make a long journey to the coast.
As is often the case they were extremely confiding and allowed one to approach to within literally feet. The group demonstrated perfectly the extremes of plumage referrred to earlier with two birds rich orange and two very much white and even one somewhere in between.
I sat on the low wall of the causeway and watched them dodging the waves and spray from the wind ruffled blue waters. It was almost as if they were on some beach on the coast but no, here they were at Farmoor Reservoir, largely ignored by the public who now increasingly frequent the reservoir.
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