White Coppice.... Swallow c15: Swift 2: Pied Wagtail: Willow Warbler: Mistle Thrush 3: Kestrel 4:
Dean Black Brook... Pair of Stonechat with 2 juveniles: Reed Bunting 4: Grey Wagtail 3:
Willow Warbler: Lesser Redpoll 4: Goldfinch: Wren: lots of Meadow Pipit, several carrying food:
Moors around Round Loaf.. Buzzard 3: Raven 2: several Skylark.
White Coppice to Round Loaf
Discussion of sightings in and around the Chorley area.
Moderator: Neil Southworth
-
- Peregrine
- Posts: 1067
- Joined: Sun Sep 06, 2015 3:25 pm
Jump to
- The Society
- ↳ News
- ↳ Field Trips
- ↳ Meetings
- ↳ Website News
- Natural History
- ↳ Recent Sightings
- ↳ Species recorded this year
- ↳ Archive
- ↳ Winter Visitors - First Dates
- ↳ Summer Visitors - First Dates
- ↳ Butterfly Species and other insects - First Dates
- ↳ Flowering Plants - First Dates
- ↳ Amphibians
- ↳ Out of Area Sightings
- ↳ Brockholes Nature Reserve
- ↳ General Topics
- ↳ Willow Tit Survey 2019/20
- Archives
- ↳ 2013 news items
- ↳ 2006 Submissions
- ↳ 2006 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2007 Submissions
- ↳ 2007 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2007 Summer Visitors - First Dates Submissions
- ↳ 2007 Butterfly First Date Submissions
- ↳ 2007 Flowering Plants First Date Submissions
- ↳ 2007 Winter Vistors- First dates
- ↳ 2008 Submissions
- ↳ 2008 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2008 Summer Visitors First Dates
- ↳ 2008 Butterfly First Date Submissions
- ↳ 2008 Winter Vistors- First dates
- ↳ 2009 Submissions
- ↳ 2009 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2009 Summer Visitors First Dates
- ↳ 2010 Submissions
- ↳ 2010 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2010 Flora Records First Dtaes 2009 &2010
- ↳ 2010 Summer Visitor First Dates
- ↳ 2011 Submissions
- ↳ 2011 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2011 Flora Submissions
- ↳ 2011 Summer Visitor First Dates
- ↳ 2012 Submissions
- ↳ 2012 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2012 Flora Submissions
- ↳ 2012 Summer Visitor First Dates
- ↳ 2013 Submissions
- ↳ 2013 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ 2014 Recent Sightings Submissions
- ↳ Talbot Mill Development