🔍 Overview A quiet, elusive resident of mature Sussex woodlands. Easily confused with the Willow Tit, though rarer locally. 🪶 Key Identification Features Size: Small (11.5 cm) Plumage: Pale underparts, brown back Cap: Shiny black cap and bib Distinctive Mark: No pale wing panel Voice: Clear “pitchou” call 🗺️ Habitat & Distribution Favors ancient woodlands...
Location: Cissbury to Chanctonbury
Meadow Pipit
🔍 Overview A slender, streaky bird of open habitats. Common across Sussex heathlands, downs, and coastal marshes. 🪶 Key Identification Features Size: Small (15 cm) Plumage: Streaky brown above, pale with heavy breast streaking below Legs: Pale pink, often seen bobbing Flight: Flutters upwards, then parachutes down 🗺️ Habitat & Distribution Breeds in open moorland,...
Marsh Harrier
🔍 Overview A large, graceful raptor of reedbeds and marshes. Recolonised Sussex in recent years after a long absence. Scarce breeder since 2004. 🪶 Key Identification Features Long wings held in a shallow “V” Male: Pale head and underwings Female/Juvenile: Dark with golden crown 🗺️ Habitat & Distribution Seen at Chantry, Cissbury, and Upper Adur...
Long-eared Owl
🔍 Overview A secretive and nocturnal owl, best located by winter roosts. Uncommon but present year-round in Sussex. 🪶 Key Identification Features Slim owl with long ear tufts Orange eyes and streaky plumage Often mistaken for a tree branch when roosting 🗺️ Habitat & Distribution Breeds in conifer plantations and roosts communally in dense scrub....
Long-tailed Tit
🔍 Overview A delightful and highly social garden and woodland bird. Easily recognisable by its fluffy body and very long tail. 🪶 Key Identification Features Size: Small (14 cm including tail) Plumage: Pale pink sides, black and white above Distinctive Marks: Very long tail, small round body Bill: Tiny and stubby Flight: Quick and undulating...
Magpie
🔍 Overview A familiar black-and-white bird in Sussex gardens and fields, with a reputation for intelligence and bold behaviour. 🪶 Key Identification Features Size: Medium-large (44–46 cm) Plumage: Black and white with iridescent green and blue wing and tail sheen Bill: Large and strong Tail: Long and wedge-shaped Flight: Steady, fluttery with long glides 🗺️...
Little Owl
🔍 Overview A charming, stocky owl introduced to Britain in the 19th century. Now widespread in Sussex farmland and parkland. 🪶 Key Identification Features Small, rounded body Yellow eyes with expressive white eyebrows Short tail, direct flight 🗺️ Habitat & Distribution Favors open countryside with trees, barns, or old orchards. Seen in Upper Adur Valley,...
Lesser Whitethroat
📍 Local Expert Tip “The Lesser Whitethroat locally, is far less common than Common Whitethroat and much more elusive. Best found by learning its song and then patiently waiting for a view. Mill Hill generally has 2 – 3 pairs and the Downs Link path heading north from the A27 is another reliable location.” 🔍 Overview...
Linnet
🔍 Overview Common but decreasing resident and partial migrant. A finch of open countryside and coastal scrub, Linnets are declining in parts of Sussex but remain in farmland and heathlands. 🪶 Key Identification Features Size: Small (13–14 cm) Male Plumage: Grey head, red breast and forehead in breeding season Female/Non-breeding: Plain brown Bill: Slim...
Kestrel
🔍 Overview A familiar falcon, the Kestrel hovers vigilantly over Sussex fields and roadsides, searching for small prey. 🪶 Key Identification Features Size: Medium raptor (34–38 cm)Plumage: Reddish-brown back, grey head (male)Distinctive Marks: Hovering behaviourBill: HookedTail: Long, fannedFlight: Stays stationary in wind 🗺️ Habitat & Distribution Open farmland, roadside verges, heathland — look near Cissbury Ring...









