West Midland Bird Club

'Tawny Pipit in Staffordshire, 1953'

This note first appeared in ‘British Birds’ volume 47:12 (page 443), in December 1954. 

Bird and place names were spelt as shown. For their current status, please see our county lists.


Tawny Pipit in Staffordshire. — On December 29th, 1953, near Tutbury, Staffordshire, I identified a Tawny Pipit (Anthus campestris). It was seen on an area of sandy waste land with very scanty herbage and littered with rock refuse from the gypsum mines. A description was taken down on the spot. The bird was wagtail-like in stance and shape, with sandy-brown, unmarked upper-parts. The breast was pale buff without markings, while the flanks, belly and under tail-coverts were creamy-white. The legs were light yellow. Wagtail-like the bird darted about quickly with upward flicks of the tail. When it became aware of me it seemed to have a tendency to seek higher perches — for example, the top of a large stone where it would stand very erect with a much more rapid movement of the tail. The voice, difficult to describe, I wrote down as "seep" or "zeep" and the flight, strong and undulating, was rather like a woodpecker's.

Edward Reeves.

[This is a very late date, the latest of which we have a note being November 20th, though there are other records for that month. — Eds.]

Reproduced by kind permission of British Birds *. Thanks to Dr. Malcolm Ogilvie for scanning the original, from his collection.

© West Midland Bird Club, 147 World's End Lane, Birmingham, England B32 1JX
Registered charity, number 213311

Ornithology in Staffordshire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire & the West Midlands county, since 1929.

Fetched from http://www.westmidlandbirdclub.com/bibliography/british-birds/47-443.htm on Saturday 06 September 2008 19:44:36

Bookmark with:

What are these?

Translate:

(* We remind you that these are other organisations' sites and that we accept no responsibility for their content)