Tuesday, 13 September 2011
Lincs Barn Owl Videos
Mother and chick's on the 13th September 2011
Mother and chick's on the 9th September 2011
For more details see http://lincsbarnowls.blogspot.com/and live images at http://www.lincsbirdclub.co.uk/owlcam.html.
Thursday, 8 September 2011
New Barn Owl Webcam - Sept 2011
New Barn Owl webcam setup on a 2nd brood in Horncastle, Lincolnshire. Follow the story at http://lincsbarnowls.blogspot.com/ and live images at http://www.lincsbirdclub.co.uk/owlcam.html.
This webcam has been setup by the Lincolnshire Bird Club, with support from Northern Optic who sponsored the equipment used to run the Lincolnshire Barn Owl project. More details on Northern Optics can be found at http://www.northernoptics.co.uk/.
Monday, 5 September 2011
Sunday, 4 September 2011
Marston STW - Pec Sandpiper

A nice bird at the local patch today.
The Pectoral Sandpiper at Martson STW is now the third bird record at the site.
The other birds being:
Marston STW 30th August 1964
Marston STW 29th August 1989 (G. Priestley, A. Ball)
Marston STW 3rd September 2011 (Dave Roberts et al)
Friday, 12 August 2011
Tuesday, 5 July 2011
The BTO Atlas in Lincolnshire - The final weeks....

Many Atlas supporters have been hard at work since the breeding season commenced and the ttv coverage for the county is now virtually completed. The key task left is to confirm as many species breeding in each 10km square as possible.
So how are we doing in this respect in Lincs? Here is a graphic showing those square in yellow where we have yet to reach the 75% target for breeding species confirmed. The number in each square is the number of species that need to be confirmed to hit the 75% target. We are doing pretty well compared to adjacent counties and 36 of our 79 squares are already over 75%. A further 12 are within 5 species.
We are now getting down to the wire with only a few weeks left to confirm breeding. Please check out what species are missing in your local squares by clicking on "My local gaps" on the the BTO Atlas homepage and then chase down the missing species. Its great fun and will add an extra enjoyable dimension to your birding. There are still many unconfirmed common birds, particularly warblers and now is a great time to confirm most species. If you need any guidance on using the website and adding records please contact your BTO regional representative (http://btolincs.blogspot.com/).
Heres to some good birding and some excellent coverage for Lincs when the Atlas book is published in just udner 2 years time."
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