The Blakeney Conservation Duck Pond is situated in the village of Blakeney on the North Norfolk coast, which I visited today and wanted to note down my thoughts and the species list.
Some history and background first: the duck pond was created and is still managed by the Blakeney and District Wildfowlers Association; it was opened initially in 1977 to celebrate the Queen's Silver Jubilee. Unfortunately, in December 2013 the site was destroyed and the ducks killed after a powerful tidal surge. The enclosure was repaired and restocked with ducks by October 2014, after the sea wall was repaired. This is the same enclosure as can be seen today.
The entire collection is housed in a single enclosure, with a large pond stretching from one end to the other. The enclosure is slightly sunk and is viewed from either a path along the side of the road, which looks along the long side of the enclosure or from the sea wall, which looks down the enclosure from one end. The entire enclosure is surrounded with a tall chicken wire fence topped with electric fence strands. Although most of the enclosure is quite open, there is enough marginal vegetation for the birds to hide away if they so wish. One thing I quite enjoyed was that the enclosure backed onto natural reedbed habitat, so while I was watching the ducks in the enclosure there were also wild bearded reedlings and redshanks calling nearby.
As for the species list, there were all the species on the three signage sheets by the enclosure. Those with an asterisk next to their name are the species that I did not see on my visit:
Northern pintail
Tufted duck
Common shelduck
Common pochard
Mandarin duck
Ferruginous duck
Barnacle goose
White-faced whistling duck
African comb duck
Blue-winged teal
Bahama pintail
Carolina wood duck
Chestnut teal
Chilean pintail
Chiloe wigeon
European teal
Cinnamon teal
European wigeon
Fulvous whistling duck
Hawaiian goose
Hooded merganser
Rosy-billed pochard
Maned goose
Marbled teal
Northern shoveler
Puna teal
Red-breasted goose
Red-crested pochard
Ross's goose
Ringed teal
Smew *
European eider *
Lesser white-fronted goose
Cape teal
Ruddy shelduck *
Laysan teal *
Common goldeneye
Emperor goose
The main species visible here are mallards, but they are not signed and seem to be a 'fly-in, fly-out' species at the collection. Even so, there seem to at least be pairs of almost all the birds here.
The website for the duck pond is included below:
http://www.blakeneyduckpond.org.uk/
Some history and background first: the duck pond was created and is still managed by the Blakeney and District Wildfowlers Association; it was opened initially in 1977 to celebrate the Queen's Silver Jubilee. Unfortunately, in December 2013 the site was destroyed and the ducks killed after a powerful tidal surge. The enclosure was repaired and restocked with ducks by October 2014, after the sea wall was repaired. This is the same enclosure as can be seen today.
The entire collection is housed in a single enclosure, with a large pond stretching from one end to the other. The enclosure is slightly sunk and is viewed from either a path along the side of the road, which looks along the long side of the enclosure or from the sea wall, which looks down the enclosure from one end. The entire enclosure is surrounded with a tall chicken wire fence topped with electric fence strands. Although most of the enclosure is quite open, there is enough marginal vegetation for the birds to hide away if they so wish. One thing I quite enjoyed was that the enclosure backed onto natural reedbed habitat, so while I was watching the ducks in the enclosure there were also wild bearded reedlings and redshanks calling nearby.
As for the species list, there were all the species on the three signage sheets by the enclosure. Those with an asterisk next to their name are the species that I did not see on my visit:
Northern pintail
Tufted duck
Common shelduck
Common pochard
Mandarin duck
Ferruginous duck
Barnacle goose
White-faced whistling duck
African comb duck
Blue-winged teal
Bahama pintail
Carolina wood duck
Chestnut teal
Chilean pintail
Chiloe wigeon
European teal
Cinnamon teal
European wigeon
Fulvous whistling duck
Hawaiian goose
Hooded merganser
Rosy-billed pochard
Maned goose
Marbled teal
Northern shoveler
Puna teal
Red-breasted goose
Red-crested pochard
Ross's goose
Ringed teal
Smew *
European eider *
Lesser white-fronted goose
Cape teal
Ruddy shelduck *
Laysan teal *
Common goldeneye
Emperor goose
The main species visible here are mallards, but they are not signed and seem to be a 'fly-in, fly-out' species at the collection. Even so, there seem to at least be pairs of almost all the birds here.
The website for the duck pond is included below:
http://www.blakeneyduckpond.org.uk/