A very striking gull was on the end of the Spit late afternoon. Long parallel greenish / yellow bill, pear shaped head with a dark beady eye, it looks very Caspian like to me but sadly no open wing shots that are good enough to make a conclusive identification so it will have to remain a possible.
Friday, 30 May 2025
On to Welbeck
Welbeck Raptor Watchpoint was just five miles up the road from Budby Common so I decided to call in for a bit in the hope that I might be able to see a honey buzzard for which the site is well known. It didn't seem the perfect day for weather and none had been reported for about five days, so I thought it was a longshot but one worth taking since I was in the area, and especially since there was a big traffic jam reported on my route home. I figured that I'd rather spend two or three hours watching raptors than parked on the motorway.
In the past I've spent hours at raptor watchpoints with generally
disappointing results and it was a slow start today. However, after about 30
minutes a few buzzards started soaring and then a couple of red kites
appeared. Even better, a local birder then turned up and gave me the happy
news that even though honey buzzards hadn't been reported for five days, he
had seen one from here just yesterday!
Over the course of the next couple of hours we did pretty well, apart from the
kites and common buzzards we also saw hobby, sparrowhawk and kestrel. Finally
I was scanning over some pine trees in the mid-distance and spotted a large
raptor which looked vaguely common buzzard like but with a longish tail and
longer, slimmer wings. It was also very pale on the body and the underwing and
was clearly a honey buzzard. At that distance it had a very black and white
appearance with the dark carpal patches and the white body in particular standing out. We watched
it soaring around for a minute until a common buzzard attacked it and the
honey buzzard dropped down behind the trees and was gone.
Dusk and dawn on Budby Common, Sherwood Forest
An overnight stay in Mansfield allowed me to visit nearby Budby common at dusk
yesterday and again early this morning, both very different birding
experiences.
I love visiting heathlands such as this at dusk, because a whole array of birds are revealed that you might otherwise be unaware of and all your senses are sharpened as you hear noises and see things that seem quite eerie. As soon as I arrived a cuckoo called in the distance and a tree pipit performed it's last display of the day and then it was over to the birds of the night.
It was still quite light when a tawny owl hooted close by and a few minutes
later a squeak behind me signalled the first woodcock of the evening, roding
right overhead.
Time was when we used to sit outside with a pint at the Bottle and Glass at
Rainford and watch these birds roding overhead, but those days are now long
gone and my last record from there is from 2007. I'm not even sure that
woodcock breed there these days, I think the reason we stopped going was
because we no longer saw the birds.
This evening on Budby common I counted at least seven different birds.
Wednesday, 28 May 2025
Spoonbills, Martin Mere
Another great day at Martin Mere, the highlights for me being these two adult
spoonbills on the pond outside the United Utilities hide. I can't recall ever
seeing anything of note on this pond previously and it was great to see that
the hide is open again after being closed over last winter due to essential
repair work. This is a hide that can give good views of geese on Plover field
and is a big loss if it's not open.
Also from this hide, the longhorns are now on Plover field with their
accompanying cattle egrets, plus some nice views of marsh harriers.
Saturday, 24 May 2025
Awesome Martin Mere
Martin Mere is far and away the best nature reserve in North West England and
probably in the top 5 in the country. It's just an awesome place and an
example of how a modern day nature reserve should be run.
Martin Mere stands alone in a Premier League of one team. Most other nature
reserves in the North West are in the championship, a few in division one.
Pennington Flash is in the National league. That's the difference. There is
permanently habitat management happening at Martin Mere and surveys take place
every day, from avocet monitoring to NVC habitat surveys. The results are
there for all to see. The meadows that for centuries have been the abode
of waders, wildfowl and raptors are more impressive than ever and they are now
joined by one of the largest reedbeds in North West England, second only to
Leighton Moss in terms of scale I believe. Today I walked for 9km (6 miles)
without leaving the reserve and there was still more that I could have seen.
There is just masses of habitat.
However, it's not just the wild areas that are impressive. I arrived today at
10am to find queues at the entrance, virtually all families waiting to get in.
I regularly bring my granddaughter here for the day and we don't even go into
the wild areas, save perhaps the Discovery hide were we sometimes sit and have
our lunch. This hide has windows almost down to the ground with small
child sized chairs where toddlers can sit and see wild whooper swans, ruff,
black-tailed godwits and a whole host of wildfowl at point blank range. But
this is the only hide which is like this. All other hides are proper birder
hides.
Apart from the collection which is impressive enough, there is a large
playground near the entrance, a second playground with a new paddle and play
area, a canoe safari attraction, a good cafe and an education centre, plus
annual events to attract kids, such as rubber duck race, mud fest, downy duck
days and Santa's grotto. Coach loads of excited kids arrive throughout the
week from schools and groups such as brownies and cubs. At lunchtime I nipped
out to my car to get my sandwiches. When I came back to the entrance the queue
was still there and just as long. It's a popular place.
Yet at Martin Mere wildlife and conservation is always at the forefront. You
never forget that you are in a nature reserve where wildlife is the
priority. Even the new paddle and play area has miniature sluice gates
so that children can allow water to build up behind them and release it when
it gets too full. Education is massive at Martin Mere.
However, once you leave the main building and the collection area you are
completely immune to all of this. I wandered around the hides and wild areas
today for miles and just saw a handful of people, all kindred spirits, birders
or photographers. There are no families walking out to the Tomlinson hide, and
not many birders either. It's just you and the birds. At this hide, or the Ron
Barker hide or on the reedbed walk you wouldn't know that there were so many
people so close. You can't see or hear them, you can't even see the pens which
hold the collection.
Meanwhile, I was at Burton Mere Wetlands the other day, a flagship reserve of
the RSPB in North West England and found the new cafe closed, with a note
informing me that they can't get the staff to operate it. I wonder why that
is?
Wednesday, 21 May 2025
Experiencing quail from the Old Coach Road
Sometimes in amongst all of the regular mundane birding, I experience something which I
just know will stick with me forever and today I had one of those moments!
A quail was heard in a field adjacent to Dairy Farm Road on Saturday, but
there was no sign on Sunday or Monday. Yesterday morning I arrived at Dairy
Farm Road early morning and walked the full length of the road to the junction with the Old Coach Road but
heard nothing. However, I hadn't gone more than 200m along the Old Coach Road
when suddenly I was stopped in my tracks by the familiar "wet my lips" call.
It sounded a bit distant but as usual with quail I was happy enough to just
hear it, because you can count the number of quail I've seen in the UK on the
fingers of one........ finger! Yep, in over 50 years birding I've only ever
actually seen one quail in the UK, at Burton Marsh way back on 11th May 1986.
I have heard plenty though, including one at Dairy Farm Road in 2009, and my
excuse for not seeing them is that I don't expect to see them so I don't even
bother trying, I just listen and then move on.
This morning I had the opportunity to call in again and today instead of
walking south along the Old Coach Road, I stood near the metal gate at the
start of the track that continues straight on from the end of Dairy Farm Road.
Almost immediately I heard a quail calling from the field to my right, on the
north side of the track, and it seemed a lot closer than yesterday when it had been to the left, on the south side of the track. I just assumed
that it had moved, but apparently not, because a minute later a second bird
called from the left and then the bird on the right responded, but now it
seemed even closer, so close as to be almost next to where I was standing, almost as if it
were in the hedge.
Odd black-headed gull at Pennington Flash
This black-headed gull was off the car park at Pennington Flash today. I've circulated the photos to a few gull people and groups but it's raised very little interest and even less comment. In my opinion it's hood is very extensive for the species, reaching down the back of it's head while the bill is longer and heavier than I would expect and even a little drooped.
It probably is just a black-headed gull at the extreme end of the spectrum, while the heavy bill might make it a large male, but perhaps it might have some other genes. Black-headed gull x Mediterranean gull for example, perhaps a cross back.
Tuesday, 20 May 2025
Red Kite, Dairy Farm Road
This morning I arrived early at Dairy Farm Road hoping to at least hear a quail that was found on Saturday. No luck with that but I was compensated by a red kite flying north over the pine wood at the start of the road. There's been at least one bird present in the Rainford area for a few weeks now, but it's quite difficult to pin down.
Friday, 16 May 2025
Moor House and Upper Teesdale
It was a bit of a last minute decision to spend the night in Middleton in
Teesdale last night, which today allowed us to have one of our favourite walks
along the River Tees from Forest in Teesdale towards the waterfall at Cauldron
Snout.
Unfortunately I couldn't find any spring gentian, I guess the unusually dry
and warm spring has caused them to flower a little earlier this year, but
still a decent showing of birds-eye primrose and plenty of other flowers to keep us entertained. I heard that the gentians are still flowering at higher altitude on Cronkly Scar and Widdybank Fell, but we didn't go that high today.
Best bird of the day was a male black grouse which we flushed from the side of
the footpath. Plenty of other birds including a variety of waders plus dipper, grey wagtail and willow warblers.
Sunday, 11 May 2025
Sunset and sunrise on the Great Orme
I stayed overnight in Llandudno last night and took the opportunity to see both the sunset and sunrise on the Great Orme, both wonderful experiences though dawn was somewhat quieter with virtually no people around, whereas there were quite a few people watching the sunset.
Just the usual birds, the only migrant was a nice male wheatear on both days, probably of the Greenland race, though I did also see a flock or 20 woodpigeons fly in off the sea and continue south. Choughs and ravens were quite numerous and it's good to see the majority of choughs without the multi coloured bling that most carried a few years ago.
I spent most of my time in the morning watching the sea birds which were quite impressive with two rafts of easily 800 kittiwakes on the sea and at one moment hundreds of guillemots and a few less razorbills flew off the ledges in one big group and out to sea. Several black guillemots were close to the cliffs and a similar number of gannets were further out. The Great Orme is always an awesome experience.
Saturday, 10 May 2025
Pensychnant biodiversity weekend
Pensychnant is a beautiful place on the Sychnant Pass just outside Conwy,
excellent for pied flycatchers and redstarts plus other species such as
flyover choughs and red kites. It runs many events and training courses, and a
few years ago I attended a bryophyte workshop here.
This weekend there was a biodiversity fair which I attended on both days. Lots
of stalls and events and things to do, as well as excellent company and tea
and cake.
Monday, 5 May 2025
A bank holiday afternoon visit to the flash
Bank holiday or Sunday afternoon is never a pleasant experience at the Flash with far too many people about for my liking. At times I feel like I'm an actor in a freak show, the strange guy in the funny hat who mysteriously frequents the hides and peers through a telescope. Little children stare at me in wonder, youths snigger in their childish way and older folk seem to think I'm the guide in the hide, harassing me with question after question about what I've seen before inevitably the conversation turns to asking me to identify a bird they've seen in their garden based on an impossible description.
Sometimes it has to be done though, particularly at spring migration time, so 3pm found me at Horrock's hide looking down the spit. Despite everything it was a pretty decent visit, with arctic tern, two common sandpipers and a 2cy common gull on the spit, the tufted duck with the nasal saddle CH1 on the water, and best of all a cuckoo called from the south side and 50 swifts swirled around overhead, unseen by everybody present except the madman in the hide.
Sunday, 4 May 2025
Martin Mere
Another visit to Martin Mere today where the Temminck's stint and wood
sandpiper were both still present, in fact there were now two wood sands on
Woodend marsh and they both showed very well from the Tomlinson hide.
Other highlights included my first cuckoo of the year, singing from poplar
trees adjacent to the reedbed.
Friday, 2 May 2025
Temminck's stint, Martin Mere
I was delighted to find a Temminck's stint on Woodend Marsh at Martin Mere today, my 7th at the mere and all have been in May. Also today a wood sandpiper, yellow wagtail and arctic tern plus 50 avocets and six common terns in amongst the usual species.
Arctic tern was a new species at the site for me, which along with grasshopper warbler last week, brings the total number of species I've seen at Martin Mere to 189.
Thursday, 1 May 2025
Stone-curlew, Kelsall, Cheshire
A stone-curlew was found in a ploughed field just outside the village of
Kelsall in Cheshire this morning. It was still present into the afternoon so
we decided to pay it a visit, hopefully safe in the knowledge that it was
unlikely to move on until tonight, barring being flushed.
Sure enough when we arrived it was on view and sitting in the middle of the
field, in more or less exactly the same position that it had been in all day.
Fortunately however, shortly after our arrival it decided to go for a walk and started feeding at
which time it's "thick-knees" were very obvious. A really nice bird, and one
of the best views I have ever had of the species in the UK, despite the
annoying heat haze.
This was my third stone-curlew in the north west following birds at Leasowe
(2009) and Little Woolden Moss (2015).
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