Woodchat Shrike
I did not see too much else along the embankment so went into the fields and quickly found four Corn Buntings in the long grass. A large warbler flew out and landed further in the weeds and on close inspection it turned out the be a Caspian Reed Warbler. I saw another four Caspian Reed Warblers as well as a single Clamorous Reed Warbler in the tall Phragmites reeds in one corner of the spray fields. Five Bluethroats were in the long grass along with six Siberian Stonechats and one variagata Caspian Stonechat showed very well in the tall scrub at the edge of the field. This is the first time I have seen this sub-species on the 'patch'. Two Meadow Pipits were feeding in the shorter grass underneath one of the spray heads and 22 Water Pipits were flushed from the field. At the edge of the fields were one Song Thrush, one Isabelline Wheatear in very worn plumage and seven Tawny Pipits. The Scrubby Desert area had three Desert Wheatears and the trees surrounding the percolation pond had 40+ Common Chiffchaffs, three Bluethroats and a Rufous-tailed Scrub Robin which is the first returning bird I have seen this year and was in the same place where they bred last year. The Western Great Egret was still present on the edge of the pond.