
Little Egret (Egretta garzetta) photographed in Venice…
Dear Readers, I was sitting in my garden, gazing at the sky absent-mindedly when I saw a white bird flying overhead.
‘Little egret’, I said to my husband. And I got to thinking about how amazing that would have been when I was growing up, and how commonly these birds are seen now – the species was considered to be a national rarity when 3 popped up at Staines Reservoir in 1985. They didn’t breed until 1996. These days, you can see them all over the south of England and Ireland – about a thousand pairs breed each year, usually alongside grey herons, and there are an estimated 12,000 in the UK during the winter.
How can you identify a Little Egret? They are white with a black bill and the most attractive yellow feet, which have a decidedly ‘jazz hands’ feel about them. And what a fantastic photo the one below is, from Peter Hassett at Milton Keynes Natural History Society

Photograph by Peter Hassett, taken at Harrold Odell Country Park, 2019
Last year, there was a lot of excitement over at Walthamstow Wetlands when a Great White Egret arrived. This is a larger bird (about the size of a grey heron) with a yellow beak and no jazz hands! It is currently a much rarer visitor, but just as climate change seems to have encouraged the Little Egret northwards, so might it make life easier here for its larger cousin. Currently about 10 pairs breed in the UK every year, with a larger number visiting in the winter (72 in 2019).

Great White Egret (Ardea alba) (right) and Little Egret (left) Photo by P.L. Tandon at https://www.flickr.com/photos/13070711@N03/47060352071
And finally, here’s the bird that’s currently the rarest of all, though for how long only time will tell. The Cattle Egret (Bubulcus ibis) will be familiar to anyone who has spent time watching the herds of zebra or buffalo in southern Africa. Cattle Egrets first bred in the UK in 2008, but breeding wasn’t confirmed again until 2017. Since then, there have been about 20 known breeding pairs, but the birds can pop up anywhere in the UK during the winter. With their orange bills and copper-coloured ‘Mohicans’, and their habit of hanging out with cattle rather than lurking in the water, these birds should be fairly easy to identify, at least if you have a clear view. Outside the breeding season, the copper ‘flush’ is less noticeable, but note the short neck and thick bill with a black tip.

Cattle Egret in breeding plumage (Photo by By su neko – Cattle Egret, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3797259)
So, although we are losing birds (as evidenced by my Red List series), it’s sometimes good to remind ourselves that other birds are finding our conditions to their liking. Newish wetland reserves, like those at Woodberry and Walthamstow, are attracting an interesting range of water birds. It will be interesting to see who turns up in the future – there are currently occasional Glossy Ibis, an established population of Spoonbill in North Norfolk, and, very rarely, Purple Heron. It’s well worth popping out to a lake or reservoir, preferably with binoculars in hand, to see what’s about. You might be surprised! And if you’ve noticed anything unusual, do share!

Purple Heron (Ardea purpurea) Photo by By Shantanu Kuveskar – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=94996249
















































