Great Snipe Lek — Valdaiskaya Russia
Each May, male great snipes gather on traditional lek sites in the wet meadows of northwestern Russia and the Baltic states to perform one of the most extraordinary nocturnal display rituals of any European bird — a rapid tail-fanning, wing-drooping courtship dance performed in complete darkness and accompanied by a bizarre mechanical bubbling and clicking song that sounds more like a malfunctioning clock than a bird. The great snipe lek at Kuusamo in Finland and Lielvārde in Latvia is one of the few places in Europe where this behaviour can be reliably observed, with up to twenty males gathering on a single wet meadow to display simultaneously from dusk until dawn in what is one of the birding world's most coveted nocturnal wildlife experiences. Finding a great snipe lek requires specialist local knowledge and a willingness to sit motionless in a wet meadow at midnight in early May — but the reward is an encounter with a species and a behaviour that most European birdwatchers never witness in a lifetime. The bird's cryptic brown plumage and its tendency to freeze when approached means the entire lek takes place in semi-darkness within metres of observers lying flat in the grass. The surrounding Estonian and Latvian river meadow landscapes are themselves extraordinary spring wildlife environments.
About this spectacle
In the wet meadows around Lielvārde, Latvia, each May night transforms into something few birdwatchers ever witness. As darkness falls, male great snipes emerge onto traditional lek sites — open, damp grassland — and begin a courtship ritual that defies easy description. Wings droop, tails fan wide to flash brilliant white outer feathers, and from each bird erupts a mechanical bubbling, clicking, and chattering that sounds more like a malfunctioning clock than any living creature. Up to twenty males may display simultaneously within a few metres of observers lying flat and motionless in the cold, wet grass. The experience is almost entirely auditory and tactile at first — you hear the birds before your eyes adjust to the murk. Gradually, shapes resolve in the near-darkness: crouching, shivering forms pulsing with energy. The meadow smells of spring mud and cold air. The clicking chorus continues from dusk until dawn. There is no spectacle quite like it in European birding — secretive, strange, and utterly absorbing.
When to go
Apr — Jun, peak May
Getting there
Nearest airport: RIX. Nearest city: Riga.
Booking options
Goyova doesn't process bookings directly. When you tap "Plan this trip" in the app, you'll see options from our partner providers — accommodation, tours, transport — with affiliate links where applicable. See our affiliate disclosure for details.