Where to Watch Birds – Southend

 

By Paul Baker

 

 

Why

 

Good numbers of wintering wildfowl and waders with a chance of a diver, rare grebe or seaduck. Supporting cast of Ring-billed Gull, raptors, gulls and woodland birds.

 

 

Overview

 

The densely populated area of Southend offers pockets of woodland habitat coupled with excellent sites around the Outer Thames estuary where thousands of Brent Geese choose to winter and scarce seabirds may be seen at close range off the Pier. Many sites are surprisingly under-watched offering the chance of finding a local rarity.

 

 

Birds

 

Red-throated Diver, Little Egret, wildfowl inc Dark-bellied Brent Geese with possibility of Black Brant, Marsh and Hen Harrier, Peregrine, Merlin, large numbers of waders including Avocet with possibility of Purple Sandpiper, Ring-billed and Mediterranean Gull, Kittiwake, Guillemot, Barn and Short-eared Owl, all three Woodpeckers, Rock Pipit, Stonechat, Nuthatch, Treecreeper, Hawfinch, Snow and Corn Bunting.

 

 

Where To Go

 

To give yourself the best chance of a decent day list, start your day at Hockley Woods, which is to be found at TQ834924 alongside The Bull pub, just off the B1013, four miles north west of Southend. The woods are signposted upon arrival and there is a large, free car park.

 

Arriving at dawn, the children’s play area will be seen almost adjacent to the car park. To avoid disturbing the birds, view the play area from the perimeter fence only. This is the only reliable site in south-east Essex for Hawfinch with one or two birds present every winter. Favoured spots are at the tops of the tallest trees bordering the houses or grubbing around in the leaf litter. Keep your ears alert too for any birdcalls coming from the main woodland behind you. The bubbling call of the Nuthatch should already have been heard during the short walk from the car park. Great Spotted Woodpecker is abundant, Green Woodpecker is scarcer but still present in good numbers, and if you are really lucky one of the resident Lesser Spotted Woodpeckers might reveal its presence with its distinctive call. They favour the wooded slope between the car park and the small stream to the south with the open glade to the south-east of the play area the best area. Treecreeper are also present but require patience and luck, and Bullfinch is scarce but resident. Firecrest have over-wintered in recent winters between the play area and the glade, and small numbers of Goldcrest should also be present. If arriving very early, Tawny Owl may be heard calling. Although found throughout the woods they are rarely seen.

 

After spending the first hour of the day here, head now towards the car park and onwards to the coastal sites. All of the following sites are tidal dependant to varying degrees, with high tide being preferable for all except the Gulls at Westcliff seafront which are best two hours either side of high tide. So to get the most out of your birdwatching in Southend, it would be desirable to spread your visit over two days. If this is not possible, there will still be plenty of birds to see, they just wont be as close.

 

The first coastal site to visit will be Two Tree Island, the home of internationally important numbers of Dark-bellied Brent Geese. Access is along the minor road that runs behind Leigh train station at TQ832858. Follow the road over the humpback bridge, which will take you over Benfleet Creek, and onto the island. There is a large, free car park on your left as soon as you cross the creek.

 

The island is divided in half by the access road. The western half has a circular cinder ash path that will take you out to the brackish lagoon at the western tip where you will also find two hides. Over high tide, good numbers of Ringed Plover, Redshank, Dunlin, and possibly Avocet and Snipe will be roosting on the lagoon. Kingfisher usually winter on the island and the lagoon offers the best chance of seeing one. Just to the north of the lagoon in Benfleet Creek a few Spotted Redshank and Greenshank winter most years. Whilst walking the cinder path, Skylark will be seen and heard and a flock of Corn Bunting are usually present between the car park and lagoon. The western half of the island is well known locally for hosting up to three Short-eared Owls each winter. They can be seen hunting in the daytime over the saltings in Benfleet Creek and the rough grassland around the model aircraft field. Keep a lookout for Stonechat this is the best area locally to find them with up to six birds present some years. Dartford Warbler has occasionally been reported on the island in recent years. If one is present it favours the company of Stonechat.

 

To explore the eastern half of the island, follow the obvious wide grassy track that starts just south of the car park at the kissing gate. The track leads to the eastern tip of the island where large numbers of Curlew, Black-tailed and Bar-tailed Godwit, Knot, Lapwing, Golden and Grey Plover roost over high tide on the adjacent saltmarsh. In recent years Little Egret have also established a high tide roost with up to ninety birds in the autumn, there should still be at least twenty present in December. The eastern tip is also the favoured feeding ground of the Dark-bellied Brent Goose with up to 6,000 present. If viewing conditions and time allow, check through the flock as Black Brant and Pale-bellied Brent Goose are now annual and have already both been reported this winter. The obvious stand of large trees has held a wintering Barn Owl in recent years. Retrace your steps back to the car park, listening for the squeal of Water Rail from the network of borrowdykes.

 

It is now time to drive towards Southend Pier along the seafront from Chalkwell but not before stopping at Westcliff seafront to see ‘Rossi’ the Ring-billed Gull. There are plenty of pay and display parking bays here. ‘Rossi’ is present this winter for his eighth winter and is most likely to be loafing on the sea with the Black-headed Gull flock immediately in front of the Rossi ice cream parlour. Other favoured places are on top of the lampposts and the groynes. Several Mediterranean Gulls will also be present and small parties of Sanderling and Turnstone will be picking their way around the foreshore at your feet.

 

Continue your drive towards the start of the Pier where you can pay to park in a roadside bay, or one of the many car parks in Southend town centre.

 

There is a charge of £3.00 if you want to ride the train towards the end of the 1.34 mile pier where most the birds will be found. The pier structure itself is home to Mediterranean Gulls, and occasional Kittiwake and Shag. Turnstone will be picking their way around the structure and Purple Sandpiper has been recorded infrequently. In the ‘lifeboat bay’ birds will often sit out the entire tidal cycle affording excellent views. In recent year Great Northern Diver, Red-necked Grebe, Slavonian Grebe, Guillemot and Razorbill have all spent several days in the ‘bay’. Regular scanning of the Thames on the seaward side will offer the possibility of further Divers, with all three species present together last winter, and day counts in excess of 100 Red-throated Divers in optimum conditions in early 2003. A brisk north east wind will see good numbers of usually scarce birds driven into the Thames estuary. In these conditions, you can expect to see good numbers of Gannet, Little Gull, Kittiwake, Guillemot and Razorbill, with Fulmar, Great Skua, and Eider also possible. The star bird being a Franklin’s Gull watched from the Pier in December 2000!

 

Having spent an hour or two on the Pier, make your way back to the relative warmth and comfort of your car. Continue east along the seafront in the direction of Shoebury but firstly pull over a few hundred metres east of the Sea Life Adventure Centre and walk up onto the sandy shore near the derelict loading jetty. For the last two winters a Purple Sandpiper has roosted between the loading jetty and the foreshore 400 metres to the east. Small mixed flocks of Dunlin, Sanderling and Ringed Plover will be roosting on the beach or the loading pier and if present, the Purple Sandpiper will be with them. A flock of Snow Buntings have also made this stretch of beach their home for the last two years. They are much more mobile and could be anywhere between the loading pier and Uncle Tom’s Cabin beside Shoebury Coastguards two miles to the east, which itself hosted a Ring-billed Gull in 1999/2000.

 

The final destination for the day will be the MOD land known as Wakering Stairs, accessed from New Road in Great Wakering. This land is usually open to the public at weekends, bank holidays, and summer evenings only. Barn Owl often hunt the fields along the access road between the MOD checkpoint and the seawall. Free car parking is available at the end of the road where it meets the seawall. The saltmarsh to your right holds another high tide wader roost with Oystercatcher, Bar-tailed Godwit, Knot, Dunlin, Redshank, Grey Plover, Turnstone and Ringed Plover all likely to be present in large numbers. During influx years the saltmarsh here has also hosted small parties of Shorelark although these are far from annual. A walk along the seawall heading north east will bring you to Haven Point after about fifteen minutes. Rock Pipit will accompany you on your way and Snow Bunting is scarce but annual. If the tide is still in Red-throated Diver, Eider, Common Scoter, and Guillemot are all possible. Upon reaching Haven Point a telescope trained on the MOD islands opposite will provide excellent opportunities for raptors in the late afternoon. Note, due to the sensitivity of this MOD land, all photography is strictly prohibited. The harrier roost on the islands should hold Marsh Harrier as well as Hen Harrier. Barn Owls and Short-eared Owls hunt daily on the island opposite and Merlin and Peregrine can be encountered anywhere between the car park and the distant islands. On the landward side, things are likely to be quiet at this time of year with Stonechat probable although there have been reports of Dartford Warbler.

 

As you make your way back to the car in the failing light with rosy cheeks the ghostly flight of the Barn Owl and the evocative call of skeins of Dark-bellied Brent Geese flying overhead to roost should bring your day to a magical end.

 

 

 

Visitor Information

 

 

Sites and Access

 

See the text for details. Most sites have free and open access except Southend Pier which is open 08:00-18:00 during winter weekends and 08:00-16:00 during the week in winter, and Wakering Stairs. Local bus routes service all sites. Check www.arrivabus.co.uk for details.

 

 

Reads

 

(Birdwatch to make suggestions)

 

 

Bird News

 

For the most accurate and up to date FREE local news, see the local RSPB website at www.southendrspb.co.uk/sightings or SOG website at www.sognet.org.uk Both sites share news and are updated daily. Please E-mail your sightings to Graham Mee of the RSPB at: sightings@southendrspb.co.uk

 

 

Maps

 

OS Maps: Landranger 178 (www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk)

 

 

Contacts

 

County Recorder: Howard Vaughan – E-mail: howardebs@blueyonder.co.uk

 

South east Essex RSPB: Graham Mee – E-mail: grahamm@southendrspb.co.uk

 

Southend Ornithological Group: Paul Baker – E-mail: baker22@btinternet.com

 

 

 

 

Birding Nearby

 

Wat Tyler Country Park at Pitsea TQ737868 offers comfortable birding from a good hide overlooking extensive reedbed, grazing marsh and ‘scrape’. The rivers Roach and Crouch offer the intrepid birder, wilderness, solitude and typical estuarine birds. Access points at South Fambridge, Paglesham, and Barling.

 

 

Accommodation

 

There are many hotels and B&B’s in Southend including:

 

Camelia Hotel – 01702 587917  www.cameliahotel.com

Premier Travel Inn – 0870 9906370 www.premiertravelinn.com

 

 

Food and drink

 

As you would expect there are hundreds of eating establishments in and around Southend catering for all tastes.

 

Excellent fresh seafood and shellfish can be purchased from the vendors at Old Town Leigh Cockle sheds just east of Leigh train station.