• You need to be a registered member of Barbel Fishing World to post on these forums. Some of the forums are hidden from non-members. Please refer to the instructions on the ‘Register’ page for details of how to join the new incarnation of BFW...

What bird did I just see?

Steve Lewis

Senior Member
Started off posting this in the social board, but as this leans to the forum's general naturalist outlook (and I know there are a few twitchers on here)...

Not long returned from my lunchtime constitutional where today I decided to walk along the greenway cycle path to the next village. On the way back I spotted a bird I'd never seen before - it stood about 8-10inches off the ground, very thin and long stick-like legs, vibrant green breast (I thought it was a leaf until I got closer), dark head and wings (I couldn't say what colour exactly as it flew off, but could've been dark grey, light black, dark brown, even something like very dark purple).

Any ideas?

I've done some googling, but without really knowing what I'm looking for all I could do was put in a vague description and nothing that matched came back.
 
Started off posting this in the social board, but as this leans to the forum's general naturalist outlook (and I know there are a few twitchers on here)...

Not long returned from my lunchtime constitutional where today I decided to walk along the greenway cycle path to the next village. On the way back I spotted a bird I'd never seen before - it stood about 8-10inches off the ground, very thin and long stick-like legs, vibrant green breast (I thought it was a leaf until I got closer), dark head and wings (I couldn't say what colour exactly as it flew off, but could've been dark grey, light black, dark brown, even something like very dark purple).

Any ideas?

I've done some googling, but without really knowing what I'm looking for all I could do was put in a vague description and nothing that matched came back.
Green woodpecker maybe?
 
RSPB website has an identifier that may or may not help.


Long legged sounds like some sort of wetland wader, perhaps Godwit or similar though I think the colours may not tally.
 
Yar, not a lapwing, nor Derek's nightclub ex.

Couldn't see anything that matched on the RSPB guide - either the colours were wrong or the legs were too stubby.

I'm thinking maybe an escaped exotic or, possibly, a migrating visitor that made a wrong turn somewhere.
 
You say the legs were long and thin, then that really narrows it down to be a wader, the main suspect would be the Lapwing, but you have discounted that, given wading birds are normally grouped together its an odd one. I have a fascination with bird spotting having just moved to the edge of a field lol, have upgraded my camera, and invested in a trail camera, to date I have captured the neighbours cat, Mr Fox and the missus putting out the washing...
I happened upon a Hoopoe once whilst driving through Cheltenham, perched on the park railings, that was quite a spot.
Take the camera with you at all times Steve, you never know when you need it.
 
You say the legs were long and thin, then that really narrows it down to be a wader, the main suspect would be the Lapwing, but you have discounted that, given wading birds are normally grouped together its an odd one. I have a fascination with bird spotting having just moved to the edge of a field lol, have upgraded my camera, and invested in a trail camera, to date I have captured the neighbours cat, Mr Fox and the missus putting out the washing...
I happened upon a Hoopoe once whilst driving through Cheltenham, perched on the park railings, that was quite a spot.
Take the camera with you at all times Steve, you never know when you need it.
There's an hoopoe around me in Sheffield. I hear it pretty much every morning. I've not seen it but my neighbour has.
Arrived last spring but I thought it would have flown south by now.
 
There's an hoopoe around me in Sheffield. I hear it pretty much every morning. I've not seen it but my neighbour has.
Arrived last spring but I thought it would have flown south by now.
According to my Rare Bird Alert app, there are currently 2 wintering Hoopoes in England, one is in Cambridgeshire and the other is in Wawickshire.

If your hearing but not seeing it, it could be a Collard Dove?
 
There's an hoopoe around me in Sheffield. I hear it pretty much every morning. I've not seen it but my neighbour has.
Arrived last spring but I thought it would have flown south by now.
For the Hoopoe to be that far north is quite something, they show up in the south more now but that shows I guess the effect of warming. Hope you get to see it is quite a sight.
Another rare bird I was lucky to see was a cattle Egret, perched on the back of a long horn Bull.
And an Osprey diving right in front whilst fishing the Itchen, catching a Sea Trout!
 
Back
Top