Wildlife and other things of interest on and around the river Ock in south Oxfordshire
Saturday, 16 May 2026
Otters in 2026
Friday, 1 May 2026
In search of Sklylarks
As mentioned in the previous blog post, there are indications that Skylarks are singing (if not nesting successfully) over the fields of south Abingdon
So with a new sense of optimism the blog set out early morning to try to and catch a sight of this iconic bird.
Although seeing them is unlikely. Not only are they are a small bird which flies up the fields to either deter predators or to try to attract a mate but the UK population has fell by 50% since the 1980's[1] with the most likely cause loss and changes of habitiat, especially the modern move to different crops[2].
But to the blog's suprise they are in Abingdon are what a delight to spend a late April morning watching them sing. So someone appears to be doing something right in the nearby fields and may they continue to sing for years to come.
Although one of the things that has not changed over the past 5 years is the poor quality photography in the blog
Sources
[1] RSPB Handbook of British Birds (2006)
[2] BTO https://www.bto.org/learn/about-birds/birdfacts/skylark
New Technology #1
Whilst this blog has been dorment, the world has moved on, and things which seemed like science fiction five years ago and now used all the time.
One of the obvious changes is the rise in wildlife identifation apps and probably the most impressive of those is Merlin: https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org.
Whilst some bird songs are fairly easy to distinguish - robins, blackbirds, wren - most seem only identifiable by experienced Ornithologists. So Cornell Univesity (https://www.birds.cornell.edu/home/) have set out to help answer one of most common questions "what is that bird song?" and best of all it's free (although donations are welcome).
Using a smart phone, whilst the app is open, it detects even the quietest bird song (and amazingly ignores the any background noise).
And this is what it recorded in the fields around south Abingdon:




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