I have only ever seen one unusual bird of prey down here before - obviously, we get a good deal of buzzards and sparrowhawks, kestrels (but not as many of these as 10 years ago) and occasionally a red kite, which seem to be making their way south gradually, and barn owls, tawny and little owls though rarely during the day.
I saw the unusual bird about 12 years ago. It was June 16, I can be sure because it was the start of the coarse fishing season. I belonged to a club that had a small lake of about 3 acres a couple of miles from here. It's full of stocked carp. It's remote and difficult to get to - down unmade up tracks and then a farm track in a spiral downwards to the pond at the base. No one lives around there. I got up early and arrived about 6am. There were a couple of anglers at the other end of the lake. I'd caught a carp of around the 5-6lb mark when I heard a noise above me - a ripping sound - the best way I can describe it is like the canvass of a sail on a yacht when it catches the wind. I looked up, and there a huge black and white bird trying to take a pigeon. The sound was the air on its wings. It made the pigeon look small. The pigeon jinked and the bird of prey flew over me empty handed, wings set back in flight. An osprey. I assume it had spent some time at the lake in spring feeding. Ideal, due to the fact that there was a great source of food and no one would have gone anywhere near the lake because it's so inaccessible. I spoke to our local bird man and he said osprey's were seen in the area occasionally. He thought it would be on its way north. I think on that day, the osprey was too shy to fish with the anglers there, got hungry and tried for a pigeon instead!