Obviously this excessive heat has had a huge impact on our activities, not least because we don’t want to cause the birds any more stress that they are dealing with at the moment. Also, as Ringer-in-Charge, the health and welfare of my team is a major responsibility, not that they are so daft that they wouldn’t come prepared.
We did get together on Monday, before this heatwave fully kicked into gear. We thought, set the nets in shade, and our ringing station also, plus a couple of brollies, and we should be okay. The only reason that we were doing this is because I had agreed to do a demonstration for the Swindon Men’s Mental Health Group, otherwise I wouldn’t have taken it on. Obviously, when we booked it over a month ago, none of us had any idea of how the weather would turn out. However, having got everybody organised, I got a text Sunday night saying that, by the time they got there at 11:00, it would be far too hot for their health. That would have been somewhat ironic!
The team was big: we had David, Laura, Miranda, Pete and me. We met in the main car park at 5:00 and set the following nets:

1 = 3 x 18m 4-Shelf Nets; 2 = 2 x 18m 5-Shelf Nets; 3 = 2 x 18m + 1 x 12m 5-Shelf Nets.
What can I say: we set nine nets and in four hours we caught nine birds! This was the catch: Great Tit (1); Marsh Tit (1); Wren 1[1]; Robin 1[2](1); Blackcap [1]. Totals: 2 adults ringed from 2 species, 4 juveniles ringed from 3 species and 3 birds retrapped from 3 species, making 9 birds processed from 5 species.
Without exception, our worst ever June catch in Somerford Common. We packed up at 11:00 and went home. Of course, I got home to find about 15 Starlings, 6 Jackdaws, 5 Blue Tits, 2 Great Tits, 1 Coal Tit, 2 Robins, 2 Dunnocks, 2 Blackbirds, 3 Woodpigeons, 2 Magpies, 1 Wren, 6 Goldfinch. Greenfinch and 2 Feral Pigeons in my garden devouring all of the seeds, fat balls and peanuts I had put out after dark Sunday night. There was also one very frustrated Grey Squirrel who couldn’t get beyond the baffles! I should have stayed at home!
Given the current hype about not feeding seeds to the birds in the summer: my feeders are being emptied on a daily basis! It seems every species, except the Jackdaws and Magpies, have learnt how to get onto the seed feeders, even the Blackbirds, who started by pretending to be Hummingbirds, but have now learned how to hang on, and the Starlings who cling like crazy. I have had to purchase a caged feeder to give the smaller birds a look in. Mind, I also rotate the feeders on a weekly basis, with three cycles of feeders, so each week starts afresh with clean feeders. I haven’t seen a single bird showing signs of Trichomonosis since I ditched the bird table about seven years ago.





















