Gedling Conservation Trust, Nottingham

Skip to content
  • Home
  • The Netherfield Lagoons
    • The Netherfield Wildlife Group
      • NWG News
        • Trip Reports
      • Netherfield Articles
      • Join the Netherfield Wildlife Group
    • Getting to the Lagoons
    • Guided walk around the Netherfield Lagoons
    • Recent wildlife sightings
    • Species Identification
      • Butterflies and Moths
      • Caddis Flies
      • Lacewings
      • Alder Flies
      • Scorpion Flies
      • Bees, Wasps, Ants, Ichneumons and Sawflies
      • Bugs
      • Beetles
      • Flies
      • Mayflies
      • Dragonflies and Damselflies
      • Earwigs
      • Crickets and Grasshoppers
    • Image Galleries
      • The Lagoons
      • Birds
      • Mammals
      • Invertebrates
        • Butterflies and Moths
        • Dragonflies and Damselflies
        • Flies
        • Bees, Wasps, Ants, Ichneumons and Sawflies
        • Beetles
        • Bugs
        • Spiders & Allies
        • Crickets and Grasshoppers
        • Molluscs
        • Other Invertebrates
      • Plant Life
      • Fungi
      • Amphibians & Reptiles
    • Management Reports – Netherfield Lagoons
    • Site records
      • Bird Records
        • Bird Species Arrival & Departure Dates
        • Breeding Birds
      • Butterfly records
      • Dragonfly records
      • Invertebrate records
        • Annelida – Worms and Leeches
        • Mollusca – Snails, Clams and Mussels
        • Crustacea – Shrimps, Fleas and Lice
        • Chilapodia – Millipedes and Centipedes
        • Insecta
        • Arachnida – Spiders and Harvestmen
      • Mammal records
      • Fish records
      • Plant Records
  • About the Trust
  • News
  • Contacts us
  • Support Us
  • Events Calendar
  • Links

Green Sandpiper – 10th November

November 10, 2019Recent wildlife sightings10th November, 2019, Boundary Hedge, Green Sandpiper, Little Egret, peregrine, Treecreeper, water railPete Smith

This morning, during the Bird Count, eleven Water Rail were heard calling around the reserve. Two Peregrines were on the new pylon and a Treecreeper was seen along the Boundary Hedge. On the Eco-park there were four Little Egrets and two Green Sandpipers. PS.

Post navigation

← Raven – 8th November Whooper Swan – 16th November →

Recent Posts

  • Marsh Harrier – 5th January
  • Goosander – 1st January
  • Common Snipe – 27th December
  • Green Sandpiper – 20th December
  • Woodcock – 11th December

Upcoming Events

Feb
14
Sun
7:45 am Monthly Bird Count
Monthly Bird Count
Feb 14 @ 7:45 am – 12:30 pm
Come and join us on a bird count. This is a good way for beginners to gain experience and to find out more about the site. Meet at the end of Teal Close, opposite the … Continue reading Monthly Bird Count →
Mar
14
Sun
7:45 am Monthly Bird Count
Monthly Bird Count
Mar 14 @ 7:45 am – 12:30 pm
Come and join us on a bird count. This is a good way for beginners to gain experience and to find out more about the site. Meet at the end of Teal Close, opposite the … Continue reading Monthly Bird Count →
Apr
11
Sun
7:45 am Monthly Bird Count
Monthly Bird Count
Apr 11 @ 7:45 am – 12:30 pm
Come and join us on a bird count. This is a good way for beginners to gain experience and to find out more about the site. Meet at the end of Teal Close, opposite the … Continue reading Monthly Bird Count →
View Calendar

RSS BBC Wildlife News

  • Scientists address myths over large-scale tree planting
  • Satellites beat balloons in race for flying internet
  • Baby tyrannosaurs dinosaurs were the 'size of a Border Collie'
  • Bank of England criticised for financing carbon-intensive firms
  • Climate change: Six questions about the Cumbria coal controversy
  • New light shed on Charles Darwin's 'abominable mystery'
  • Climate change: Trump's Paris withdrawal was 'reckless' - John Kerry
  • Elephants counted from space for conservation
  • Climate change: Biden's first act sets tone for ambitious approach
  • SLS: Nasa finds cause of 'megarocket' test shutdown

Archives

Search

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
Free Charity Hosting by Kualo
Proudly powered by WordPress