Saturday, June 26, 2010

Various

We're off to Canterbury for the weekend. I haven't got time to comment, but here are a few images from the last few days.






Last night I joined several other members of the Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire Bat Groups to survey an area straddling the county. The main objective was to count the bats emerging from a Brown Long-eared Bat maternity roost that has recently been discovered. They emerged intermittently, but our final count of 54 bats surprised and excited everyone! The presence of a lot of Barbastelle activity was another unexpected surprise. On the way, I found a hybrid Polecat corpse on the side of the road...driving home just before midnight I encountered a Red Fox in exactly the same place, presumably investigating the corpse too, or else eating it!

4 comments:

  1. Hi Steve

    Very interesting to read about your polecat. Can I ask where you saw it? I came across one at the weekend too and since we're not a million miles away from each other it may be the same one. If you don't want to make it public then you're welcome to drop me a line at badgerwatchingman@gmail.com.

    I don't know if mine was a hybrid or a 'pure' polecat - I don't have a lot of experience with them - so I'm keen to find out more.

    Thanks and all the best

    BWM

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  2. Hi there - great to hear from you!

    It wasn't a million miles away from your area - on the road from Steppingley towards Woburn. Driving from Steppingley it was on the left-hand side of the road a little way before the M1 at about TL004347.

    Richard's the real expert with these, but I reckoned this was a hybrid-type when looking at the amount of white on the face above and beyond the normal amount. I wish I'd have taken a photo, though, to compare at home with corpses I've found in the past.

    It's going to be a real challenge to see a live one of these this year, though I reckon I've found a brilliant spot to stake out today - a little bridge under a major road with loads of mammal tracks in the mud...a project for when we get back from our Nice holiday next week!!

    Hope you're well,

    Steve.

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  3. Aha! That's where my polecat was - my polecat was also your polecat! It seems that the poor beast couldn't even rest in peace without being examined by successive naturalists.

    I contacted Richard about it (I took some pictures) and his verdict was definitely polecat. Apparently the Bedfordshire polecat strain is quite pure.

    What is better news is that I was driving past the same spot on Sunday morning when another polecat ran across the road. I'd never seen a polecat before and then I see two in two days (albeit one of them deceased and one a fleeting sighting).

    I'd rather not tempt fate, but it seems as if there is a reasonable chance of getting a proper sighting in our local patch. Let's hope so!

    All the best

    BWM

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  4. Brilliant...I'll readjust my sighting to just 'Polecat'! I did find a Polecat near Bedford a little while ago that Richard confirmed as 'hybrid'....in passing it on I also presented him with a lot of ticks! I have friends in Houghton Conquest who lost one of their white ferrets...it was found and returned after a week or two and, a month or two later, gave birth to several Polecat hybrids! :-)
    It was alongside Kingshoe Wood that we saw the Roe Deer - the general area is brilliant for mammals as you're finding out!
    Best wishes,
    Steve.

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