During my time in Oxfordshire, I spent many of my evenings exploring the county’s rich mosaic of habitats, and was rewarded with an impressive variety of wildlife encounters.
Just a few miles from my hotel lay Cothill Fen, the largest area of alkaline fen in central England and a designated Special Area of Conservation (SAC). Together with the neighbouring reserves of Dry Sandford Pit, Parsonage Moor and Lashford Lane, this complex forms a nationally important suite of wildlife sites. The fen supports a wealth of highly specialised species that depend on this rare habitat and are consequently scarce elsewhere. In total, more than 100 rare or notable species have been recorded here.
As the accompanying photographs illustrate, there is no shortage of wildlife to observe in this corner of Oxfordshire, and future visits will undoubtedly produce further highlights.
I rounded off the week with a visit to Chimney Meadows, situated along the Thames Path. My target here was a female Red-footed Falcon, and I was fortunate to find the bird present shortly after arriving. It spent time hawking over the meadows in the company of five Hobbies, creating a thrilling spectacle. Remarkably, this individual represented only the sixth recorded sighting of the Red-footed Falcon in Oxfordshire.
























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