Corvid Roost, Buckenham

Having spent the day volunteering at RSPB Strumpshaw Fen in the Norfolk Broads yesterday we decided to treat ourselves to witnessing the corvid roost at nearby Buckenham, famous from the Mark Cocker book ‘Crow Country’ and recently visited by Simon King for Autumn Watch.

We arrived at Buckenham Station (this really is the definition of a rural station) at about 3:00 PM, and walked a short way back up the hill to stand under the evergreen oak, all was quiet and the only corvids to be seen were 2 rooks feeding in the field, not a very promising start but we contented ourselves with watching these 2 birds as they only stopped their feeding to mob a loan buzzard that drifted through until it sat alone on a fence post (probably wanted to watch the spectacle unfold). Despite scanning the skies there was little further corvid activity for the next half hour.

At about 3:30 with fading light we thought things were about to start, a group of about 200 rooks and jackdaws flew in and landed in a nearby tree, we then waited for the spectacle we had been promised and for some time were treated to very little, the rooks and crows sat where they were and no others came to join them. We passed the time watching a flock of Lapwing, a handful of Fieldfares and a single Barn Owl drifted by.

We continued to scan the skies despite the failing light and after about 15 minutes, we started to notice small black dots appearing literally out of nothing, several thousand corvids started to pass overhead, some of them joining our small group and assembling along the telephone wires arguing over the best place to sit, then these themselves joined the growing number flying overhead, soon we were witnessing the spectacle we had been promised as the sky above Buckenham Carr and the church was full of black dust and constant noise.

A single rook or jackdaw can easily be overlooked as pretty ordinary, but when you see so many thousands of these birds in such a small area it really is one of natures greatest spectacles, and we recommend it to anybody in the Norfolk Broads over winter.

"Feed the birds, tuppence a bag" Mary Poppins