Birds to See in Bedfordshire in September
111 species matching this filter.
September is a dynamic month for birdwatching in Bedfordshire, as summer visitors begin their southward migration and passage waders pass through the county's wetlands and gravel pits. With 111 species recorded during this month, birders can enjoy sightings of departing migrants such as Common Reed-warbler, Garden Warbler and House Martin, alongside passage species like Common Sandpiper and Greenshank. The county's varied habitats—from the chalk downlands of the Chilterns to the wetlands of the Marston Vale and the River Great Ouse—provide excellent opportunities for observing this seasonal transition.
Resident
(80)
Barnacle Goose
Branta leucopsisLC
A rare resident, present most months but scarce. Most records likely involve feral birds associating with Canada Goose flocks on lakes and gravel pits.
Jun–Apr

Blackbird
Turdus merulaLC
One of the county's most abundant residents, thriving in gardens, parks and hedgerows throughout the year.
Year-round

Blackcap
Sylvia atricapillaLC
A common resident found in woodland and gardens year-round; winter numbers are boosted by Continental migrants.
Year-round

Blue Tit
Cyanistes caeruleusLC
A common and familiar garden resident year-round, readily using nest boxes. One of the most frequently seen birds in the county.
Year-round

Bullfinch
Pyrrhula pyrrhulaLC
A rare but year-round resident of hedgerows, orchards and woodland scrub. Its soft piping call often betrays its presence before it is seen.
Year-round

Buzzard
Buteo buteoLC
A common resident often seen circling over farmland and woodland. Has increased markedly across Bedfordshire in recent decades.
Year-round

Canada Goose
Branta canadensisLC
A common and conspicuous resident breeding on lakes, rivers and gravel pits throughout the county. Large moulting flocks gather in late summer.
Year-round

Carrion Crow
Corvus coroneLC
A common and adaptable resident found across farmland, parks and urban areas throughout the county year-round.
Year-round

Cetti's Warbler
Cettia cettiLC
An uncommon but increasing resident of dense waterside vegetation, more often heard than seen at sites like Priory Country Park.
Year-round

Chaffinch
Fringilla coelebsLC
An abundant resident found year-round in woodlands, hedgerows and gardens across Bedfordshire. Males sing prominently from treetops in spring.
Year-round

Chiffchaff
Phylloscopus collybitaLC
A common resident heard singing its distinctive two-note call in woodlands and scrub. Some overwinter, boosted by continental arrivals.
Year-round

Coal Tit
Periparus aterLC
An uncommon resident favouring coniferous and mixed woodland. Less widespread here than in more heavily wooded counties.
Year-round

Common Gull
Larus canusLC
An uncommon but widespread visitor to playing fields, reservoirs and farmland, present most months but scarcer in summer.
Jul–May

Common Kingfisher
Alcedo atthisLC
A scarce but year-round resident along rivers and at gravel pits, offering a flash of electric blue along waterways.
Year-round

Common Pheasant
Phasianus colchicusLC
A common resident of farmland, woodland edges and hedgerows throughout the county, bolstered by regular releases for shooting.
Year-round

Common Raven
Corvus coraxLC
An uncommon but increasing resident, recolonising Bedfordshire after a long absence. Look for tumbling display flights over open country.
Year-round

Common Starling
Sturnus vulgarisLC
A common resident found in gardens, farmland and towns throughout the year. Winter roosts can attract large, swirling flocks at dusk, though numbers are declining.
Year-round

Coot
Fulica atraLC
A common resident of lakes, gravel pits and reservoirs, often gathering in large flocks at sites like Priory Country Park.
Year-round

Dunnock
Prunella modularisLC
A common and unobtrusive resident of hedgerows and garden shrubberies, often shuffling quietly along the ground.
Year-round

Egyptian Goose
Alopochen aegyptiacaLC
An uncommon but increasing resident, breeding around lakes and gravel pits. This established non-native species is spreading steadily across the county.
Year-round

Eurasian Collared Dove
Streptopelia decaoctoLC
A common resident of gardens, farms and suburban areas, its monotonous cooing heard year-round across the county.
Year-round

Eurasian Jay
Garrulus glandariusLC
An uncommon but year-round resident of broadleaved woodland, often betrayed by its harsh screeching alarm call.
Year-round

Eurasian Nuthatch
Sitta europaeaLC
An uncommon resident of mature deciduous woodland, often heard giving its loud call in parks and established gardens.
Year-round

Eurasian Siskin
Spinus spinusLC
An uncommon resident most often seen in winter and early spring, visiting alder trees along rivers and garden nyjer feeders.
Jul–Apr

Eurasian Skylark
Alauda arvensisLC
A common resident of open arable fields and grasslands, singing high in flight. Numbers have declined with agricultural intensification.
Year-round

Eurasian Wigeon
Mareca penelopeLC
An uncommon visitor mainly outside summer, favouring flooded meadows and reservoir margins. Numbers peak in winter when birds arrive from breeding grounds further north.
Aug–May

Eurasian Wren
Troglodytes troglodytesLC
A common and widespread resident, delivering its powerful song from hedgerows, gardens and woodland undergrowth year-round.
Year-round

European Goldfinch
Carduelis carduelisLC
A common and colourful resident, readily visiting garden feeders. Flocks gather on teasel and thistle heads in autumn.
Year-round

European Green Woodpecker
Picus viridisLC
A common resident of parkland, orchards and woodland edges, often heard giving its loud laughing call in flight.
Year-round

European Herring Gull
Larus argentatusLC
An uncommon year-round resident, frequenting landfill sites, reservoirs and urban areas, though less numerous than inland farther west.
Year-round

European Robin
Erithacus rubeculaLC
A common and familiar resident of gardens, hedgerows and woodland throughout the county. Sings year-round and is one of Bedfordshire's most recognisable birds.
Year-round

Gadwall
Mareca streperaLC
An uncommon year-round resident on lakes and gravel pits. Has increased as a breeding bird in Bedfordshire, favouring well-vegetated shallow waters.
Year-round

Goldcrest
Regulus regulusLC
An uncommon resident of coniferous and mixed woodland; Britain's smallest bird, easily overlooked despite its high-pitched call.
Year-round

Great Black-backed Gull
Larus marinusLC
A rare visitor to Bedfordshire's reservoirs and gravel pits, most often seen in winter months. Absent in June, this bulky gull is scarce inland.
Jul–May

Great Cormorant
Phalacrocorax carboLC
Common year-round at gravel pits, reservoirs and rivers. Numbers increase in winter at roost sites across the county.
Year-round

Great Crested Grebe
Podiceps cristatusLC
A common resident breeding on larger lakes and gravel pits, with elegant courtship displays visible from early spring.
Year-round

Great Spotted Woodpecker
Dendrocopos majorLC
A common resident of woodland, parks and mature gardens, with loud drumming heard from late winter onwards.
Year-round

Great Tit
Parus majorLC
A bold and familiar garden visitor year-round, readily using nest boxes in woods, hedgerows and parks across the county.
Year-round

Great White Egret
Ardea albaLC
An increasingly regular but still rare visitor to wetlands and gravel pits, seen in most months of the year.
Jul–May

Green Sandpiper
Tringa ochropusLC
An uncommon but near year-round presence at watercress beds, streams and gravel pit margins across the county.
Jun–Apr

Greenfinch
Chloris chlorisLC
A common resident of gardens, hedgerows and farmland, though numbers have declined due to trichomonosis disease in recent years.
Year-round

Grey Heron
Ardea cinereaLC
A common resident found along rivers, lakes, and gravel pits throughout the year. Heronries are established at several sites across the county.
Year-round

Grey Partridge
Perdix perdixLC
A declining resident of arable farmland, now rare across Bedfordshire despite year-round presence on remaining suitable fields.
Year-round

Grey Wagtail
Motacilla cinereaLC
An uncommon resident found along streams, rivers and waterways throughout the year. Its bright yellow underparts and bobbing tail are distinctive at the waterside.
Year-round

Greylag Goose
Anser anserLC
A common resident found year-round on lakes, gravel pits and farmland. Feral populations are well established across Bedfordshire's wetlands.
Year-round

House Sparrow
Passer domesticusLC
A common year-round resident closely associated with houses and urban areas. Numbers have declined significantly, but it remains widespread across Bedfordshire's towns.
Year-round

Jackdaw
Corvus monedulaLC
A common and sociable resident nesting in church towers, old trees and buildings. Often seen in noisy flocks with rooks.
Year-round

Kestrel
Falco tinnunculusLC
A common resident hovering over roadside verges, farmland, and grassland year-round. One of the county's most familiar raptors.
Year-round

Lesser Black-backed Gull
Larus fuscusLC
Common year-round, frequenting landfill sites, reservoirs, and farmland. Numbers have increased significantly as an inland breeding species.
Year-round

Linnet
Linaria cannabinaLC
An uncommon resident favouring open farmland, heathland edges and weedy fields. Winter flocks gather on stubble and set-aside.
Year-round

Little Egret
Egretta garzettaLC
An uncommon but increasing resident, now seen year-round along rivers, gravel pits and wetlands. A relatively recent colonist reflecting its national spread.
Year-round

Little Grebe
Tachybaptus ruficollisLC
An uncommon but year-round resident on ponds, lakes, and slow-moving rivers. Often heard before seen, with its distinctive trilling call.
Year-round

Long-tailed Tit
Aegithalos caudatusLC
A common and charming resident of hedgerows and woodland edges. Roving family parties are a familiar sight in autumn and winter.
Year-round

Magpie
Pica picaLC
A common and conspicuous resident of gardens, hedgerows and farmland, seen throughout the county all year.
Year-round

Mallard
Anas platyrhynchosLC
A common and familiar resident on virtually every waterbody in the county, from park ponds and rivers to gravel pits and flooded fields.
Year-round

Marsh Tit
Poecile palustrisLC
A rare and declining resident of mature deciduous woodland. Best looked for at sites like Marston Thrift and Maulden Wood.
Jun–Apr

Meadow Pipit
Anthus pratensisLC
An uncommon resident of rough grassland and farmland, with numbers supplemented by passage birds in autumn and winter.
Year-round

Mistle Thrush
Turdus viscivorusLC
An uncommon resident often heard singing boldly from tall trees in late winter. Favours parkland, orchards and woodland edges across Bedfordshire.
Year-round

Moorhen
Gallinula chloropusLC
A common resident found on virtually any pond, lake, or waterway. Breeds readily across the county's parks and wetland margins.
Year-round

Mute Swan
Cygnus olorLC
A common and elegant resident gracing rivers, lakes and park ponds year-round. Breeds readily across Bedfordshire, often on the River Great Ouse and its tributaries.
Year-round

Northern Lapwing
Vanellus vanellusNT
A common year-round resident on farmland and wet grassland. Breeding numbers are declining, but winter flocks can be impressive.
Year-round

Northern Shoveler
Spatula clypeataLC
An uncommon resident found year-round on shallow lakes and gravel pits. Numbers increase in winter when continental birds supplement the small local population.
Year-round

Peregrine Falcon
Falco peregrinusLC
A rare but increasingly seen resident, favouring tall structures for nesting. Recorded in most months, with a gap in midsummer.
Aug–Jun

Pochard
Aythya ferinaVU
An uncommon year-round resident, though nationally declining. Favours deeper lakes and gravel pits, with numbers boosted by wintering continental birds.
Year-round

Red Kite
Milvus milvusLC
Now a common sight soaring over the county's farmland and woodland edges. Part of the successful reintroduction spreading from the Chilterns.
Year-round

Red-legged Partridge
Alectoris rufaNT
An uncommon but year-round resident of arable fields and chalky downland, often seen in small coveys along field margins.
Year-round

Reed Bunting
Emberiza schoeniclusLC
An uncommon resident of reedbeds, wetland margins and damp farmland. Males are recognisable by their black head and white collar in breeding plumage.
Year-round

Rock Dove
Columba liviaLC
Feral populations inhabit towns such as Bedford and Luton year-round, frequenting buildings and urban squares.
Year-round

Rook
Corvus frugilegusLC
A common year-round resident, often seen in noisy rookeries in farmland trees across the county's arable landscape.
Year-round

Song Thrush
Turdus philomelosLC
A common resident whose melodious song is a feature of gardens and woodland from late winter onwards. Numbers have declined.
Year-round

Sparrowhawk
Accipiter nisusLC
An uncommon but widespread resident, hunting songbirds in gardens, woodland edges and hedgerows throughout the year.
Year-round

Stock Dove
Columba oenasLC
A common resident favouring mature parkland and farmland with old trees, nesting in holes across the county throughout the year.
Year-round

Tawny Owl
Strix alucoLC
A rare but resident owl of mature woodland and parkland, more often heard than seen with its familiar hooting call.
Jun–Apr

Treecreeper
Certhia familiarisLC
An uncommon resident of mature woodland, spiralling up tree trunks in search of insects. Present year-round in parks and wooded areas across the county.
Year-round

Tufted Duck
Aythya fuligulaLC
A common resident diving duck found year-round on lakes, reservoirs and gravel pits. Numbers swell in winter with an influx of continental birds.
Year-round

Western Marsh-harrier
Circus aeruginosusLC
A rare but increasingly regular resident, quartering reedbeds and wetlands. Part of a national range expansion.
Sep–Jul

Wheatear
Oenanthe oenantheLC
A rare visitor to open farmland and chalk downland, mainly seen on spring and autumn passage across the county.
Mar–Sep

Woodpigeon
Columba palumbusLC
An abundant resident found in virtually every habitat from town centres to farmland. Numbers swell in autumn with continental immigrants joining local birds.
Year-round

Yellow-legged Gull
Larus michahellisLC
A rare gull found mainly in late summer and autumn at reservoirs and tips, with peak numbers in August.
Jun–Jan

Yellowhammer
Emberiza citrinellaLC
An uncommon but year-round resident of arable farmland and hedgerows, declining across the county like much of lowland England.
Year-round
Breeding
(18)
Barn Swallow
Hirundo rusticaLC
A common summer visitor from April to October, nesting in farm buildings and foraging over fields and waterways.
Apr–Oct

Common Reed-warbler
Acrocephalus scirpaceusLC
An uncommon summer breeder found in reedbeds from April to September. The Marston Vale wetlands provide key habitat.
Apr–Sep

Common Sandpiper
Actitis hypoleucosLC
An uncommon visitor to reservoir edges and gravel pits, mainly on passage from April to October. Bobs distinctively along shorelines.
Apr–Oct

Common Swift
Apus apusLC
A common summer breeder screaming over towns and villages from late April to September, nesting under eaves and in roof spaces.
Apr–Sep

Common Tern
Sterna hirundoLC
An uncommon breeding visitor to gravel pits and reservoirs from April to September. Nests on islands and rafts at key wetland sites.
Apr–Sep

Garden Warbler
Sylvia borinLC
An uncommon summer breeder arriving in late April, favouring dense scrub and woodland understorey. Heard far more often than seen.
Apr–Sep

Hobby
Falco subbuteoLC
An uncommon summer breeder, arriving in April and hunting dragonflies over wetlands and gravel pits until autumn.
Apr–Oct

House Martin
Delichon urbicumLC
An uncommon summer visitor nesting under eaves in towns and villages. Numbers have declined significantly in recent decades.
Apr–Oct

Lesser Whitethroat
Curruca currucaLC
An uncommon summer breeder of tall hedgerows and scrubby thickets, arriving in April. Its rattling song is distinctive but brief.
Apr–Sep

Little Ringed Plover
Charadrius dubiusLC
An uncommon summer breeder at gravel pits and bare ground near water, present from March to September.
Mar–Sep

Ringed Plover
Charadrius hiaticulaLC
A rare breeder at gravel pits and reservoir margins from spring to early autumn. Nesting habitat is limited in the county.
Feb–Sep

Sand Martin
Riparia ripariaLC
An uncommon summer breeder nesting colonially in sandy riverbanks and quarry faces. Arrives from March and departs by September.
Mar–Sep

Sedge Warbler
Acrocephalus schoenobaenusLC
An uncommon summer breeder arriving in April, favouring reedbeds and waterside scrub at sites like Priory Country Park.
Apr–Sep

Spotted Flycatcher
Muscicapa striataLC
An uncommon and declining summer visitor from May to September, favouring woodland edges and mature gardens for nesting.
May–Sep

Whitethroat
Curruca communisLC
A common summer visitor breeding in hedgerows and scrubby field margins from April to September across the county.
Apr–Sep

Willow Warbler
Phylloscopus trochilusLC
An uncommon breeding visitor from April to September, declining in the county and now scarcer than its cousin the Chiffchaff.
Apr–Sep

Wood Sandpiper
Tringa glareolaLC
A rare visitor to shallow pools and flooded gravel pits from spring to autumn. One of the scarcer waders recorded in the county.
Apr–Sep

Yellow Wagtail
Motacilla flavaLC
An uncommon and declining summer visitor breeding in damp meadows and arable fields from April to September.
Apr–Sep
Non-breeding
(5)
Common Snipe
Gallinago gallinagoLC
An uncommon non-breeding visitor to wet meadows and marshes, present from autumn through to spring at suitable wetland sites.
Aug–Apr

Golden Plover
Pluvialis apricariaLC
A rare non-breeding visitor to open farmland, occasionally forming flocks on ploughed fields during autumn and winter months.
Sep–Apr

Northern Pintail
Anas acutaLC
A rare non-breeding visitor from autumn through to spring, favouring flooded fields and reservoir margins. An elegant duck always worth searching for.
Sep–Mar

Redwing
Turdus iliacusNT
A common winter visitor from Scandinavia, arriving from September and lingering into April. Feeds on berries in hedgerows and often detected by its thin "tseep" flight call.
Sep–Apr

Stonechat
Saxicola torquatusLC
An uncommon non-breeding visitor favouring rough grassland and scrubby margins. Present from autumn through to early spring, often perching prominently on bushes.
Sep–Mar
Passage
(8)
Black Tern
Chlidonias nigerLC
A rare autumn passage migrant, occasionally seen hawking over reservoirs and gravel pits in September.
Sep

Common Redstart
Phoenicurus phoenicurusLC
A rare passage migrant glimpsed briefly in April and again in August–September, typically in scrubby or wooded habitats.
Apr–Sep

Garganey
Spatula querquedulaLC
A rare passage migrant recorded in late summer and autumn. This scarce duck favours shallow wetlands and is one of Bedfordshire's most sought-after visitors.
Aug–Oct

Greenshank
Tringa nebulariaLC
A rare passage migrant through Bedfordshire's wetlands, most likely at gravel pits during spring and autumn migration.
Apr–Sep

Red-backed Shrike
Lanius collurioLC
A rare autumn passage migrant recorded in September and October. Any sighting in Bedfordshire is a prized find for local birders.
Sep–Oct

Ruff
Philomachus pugnaxLC
A rare autumn passage migrant seen at muddy reservoir margins and gravel pits from August to October.
Aug–Oct

Spotted Redshank
Tringa erythropusLC
A rare autumn passage wader, recorded in September at wetland sites. A notable find at any of the county's reservoirs or pits.
Sep

Whinchat
Saxicola rubetraLC
A rare autumn passage migrant from August to October, favouring rough grassland and scrubby field edges.
Aug–Oct