Adult Mediterranean gull on rocks just off the car park at Pennington Flash
this afternoon, also 63 pochard, 22 goldeneye and a single great white egret.
I think I've managed to read the gulls ring from various other photos that I
have, and I've submitted it to the BTO. I'll post the results here when I get
them.
Saturday, 31 January 2026
Friday, 30 January 2026
A 65 species day at Martin Mere
Another great visit to Martin Mere today where I managed to record 65 species,
including ring-necked duck, glossy ibis, 2 merlin, 6 marsh harriers, 3 great
white egrets, 5 cattle egrets, 2 little egrets, 50 black-tailed godwits, 20
ruff, 7 redpolls, 63 pochard, 4 chiffchaffs including 1 tristis, 7 oystercatchers, treecreeper and
barn owl. Also 4 species of mammal, roe deer, stoat at the Rees hide, bank
vole and grey squirrel.
Wednesday, 28 January 2026
Velvet scoter and the scoter flock at Ainsdale
It seemed like perfect conditions for looking through the scoter flock at
Ainsdale this morning, with bright sunshine and light winds. The only problem was
that high tide was 06:09 with low tide 12:52. Surely that would mean that the birds would be further out? Perhaps not though, because I remember last year when there was a black scoter off
Hoylake, the recommended viewing time there was actually low tide because
the scoter flock didn't really come much closer in at high tide, they more or less
stayed in the same position. I assume that the reason for this is that they stayed over the mussel beds where they feed, and in fact this food source might actually be more accessible at low tide. So if you were
prepared to walk a mile offshore you could get a lot closer to the birds at
low tide. It's the same flock and the same beach really, just that the River
Mersey is in between, so presumably the same rules apply? Anyway I decided
to give it a go.
I arrived at Ainsdale at 09:30 and walked out to the edge of the sea and
scanned the flock. There were probably about 500 common scoter spread across
the sea at reasonably close range, i.e. < 0.5km (1/3 mile). Then there were
probably another 500 up to 1km out at sea. Finally there were uncounted
hundreds (thousands?) that were just dots in the distance, even on 60x
magnification. They were so far out that I pondered for a moment if they were the same birds that I could see distantly from Colwyn Bay last weekend! And the answer is yes, they probably are part of the same impressive flock, which stretches across the whole of Liverpool Bay.
Fortunately I managed to find a drake velvet scoter with one of the closer
flocks. It was close enough to see the white mark behind it's eye and I
could see the bill shape and pattern pretty well. Other birds seen today
included 6 red-breasted mergansers, 10 great crested grebes and at least 3
red-throated divers.
I stayed until 12:00 following the tide out but unfortunately there was no
sign of the recent surf scoter.
Redpolls, Martin Mere
I was pleased to see a flock of six redpolls outside the Janet Kear hide this
afternoon, and that turned to delight and amazement when I got home to
discover that they were actually new birds for the reserve for me! There's
lots of habitat at Martin Mere so I'm sure that I must just have been
unobservant in the past, but that brings my Martin Mere total to 196 species. Perhaps I'll make it to 200 this year!
Saturday, 24 January 2026
Common scoter off Fisherman's pier, Old Colwyn
The common scoter flock off the North Wales coast is one of the greatest
wildlife spectacles in the UK, yet probably most non-birders, and perhaps even a fair
few casual birders, don't even know of it's existence.
Tens of thousands of birds can be present and they are constantly active,
often chasing each other around both on the water and in the air. Sometimes hundreds of birds can take to the air at the same time and fly a short
distance before dropping down, only for smaller groups to fly up again almost immediately. Rarer
species such as surf and velvet scoter are occasionally with them and in 2005 I saw a drake black scoter off Llanfairfechan.
The reason why they are so little known outside the mainstream birding
community is that they are usually so distant and viewing is often very
difficult. These flocks can be miles offshore, with only the very edges of the
flocks visible even through a 60x magnification telescope. To add to the difficulties, the birds are often
diving or disappearing behind the swell, and the wind shakes the scope making
60x almost unusable except in perfect weather conditions. Most of the time you need to drop down to a slightly more manageable
30x, but at that magnification most of the birds are little more than black dots.
A small number of birds do come a lot closer inshore but it's only a tiny
fraction of what's out there and in my experience the rarer scoter are never
with them. Until today (see next post).....
Surf scoter off Fisherman's pier, Old Colwyn
Forty-three years ago I saw my first ever North American surf scoter off
Llanfairfechan on the North Wales coast. It was in a flock of about 5000
common scoter and it was a dot, the flock was probably about 1 mile offshore.
Since then I've seen maybe 20 other surf scoter off this coast but the views
have not improved greatly, they're always a long way out, usually disappearing
in the swell as I try to steady my telescope in the buffeting wind. I've
always dreamt of seeing one close in. Today it happened.
I arrived at the promenade at Colwyn Bay to find a fellow birder gesturing to
me that I should hurry up and get over to him. I lifted my binoculars and the
first bird I saw was a drake surf scoter about 100m offshore, the closest
bird. I could hardly believe my eyes, I watched it for about 20 minutes until finally it flew a little further out but was still a decent view by surf scoter standards.
A little later I was again scanning through the scoter flock and relocated the surf scoter with a second male, but much more distant.
The photos in this post are video grabs and certainly don't do the bird
justice. If you watch the video further down you'll see what an amazing bird
it is. Wow!
I never thought I'd see the white eye ring of a surf scoter. This is a sighting
of my dreams!
Friday, 23 January 2026
Glossy Ibis, Martin Mere
The glossy ibis was back at Martin Mere today and the ring-necked duck was AWOL, but apart from that it it was just the usuals.
Wednesday, 21 January 2026
Back to the roost
This awesome adult yellow-legged gull roosted at Pennington Flash this
evening. I love how clean cut it looks, and look at the size of it compared to
the lesser black-back. All of the photos in this post are phonescoped apart
from the next one. It was sunset on a very dull day.
This photo was taken on my camera and clearly shows the mantle colour.
Remember, this is a video grab of a bird which was 100m away at sunset on a
dull day in January, with a wind speed of about 25mph. However, you can
clearly see that the bird has yellow legs! And this is obvious in other parts
of the video too, but there's only so many crap photos that even I can post!
Just take my word for it that it had yellow legs!
Tuesday, 20 January 2026
American Wigeon, Higher Penworthham
A 1st winter drake American wigeon has been on the River Ribble at Higher Penwortham, Preston for a few days. I failed to see it on my first visit on Saturday when it was flushed by a boat just a few minutes before I arrived, but today I was more or less straight onto it, and even more amazingly the sun came out for half and hour while I watched it on an otherwise dull day. It's the lefthand bird in these photos.
Ring-necked duck still, Martin Mere
After seeing the American wigeon on the Ribble this morning, I called in at Martin Mere for a few hours where most of the usuals were still present including the drake ring-necked duck.
Friday, 16 January 2026
Wednesday, 14 January 2026
Bufflehead, Foryd Bay
There's been a drake bufflehead frequenting the North Wales coast since the
beginning of December and finally today I managed to catch up with it.
Bufflehead is a North American species and this is, I think, the first record
for Wales.
It was originally found at Point of Ayr near Rhyl while we were in Cyprus but
only stayed a day before disappearing for a week and finally being relocated
at Foryd Bay just before Christmas. It's a new UK species for me but I've been
putting off going until now because I knew that I had a job coming up on
Anglesey yesterday so I gambled and decided to stay over in Caernarfon last
night in the hope of seeing the bird.
At first I thought that my cunning plan was going to fail because it hadn't
been reported since Saturday and the places it was frequenting at the end of
last week required a high tide in order for it to be there and unfortunately
both high tides during my visit were in the hours of darkness (18:06 last
night and 06:48 today - you couldn't make it up!).
However, after a couple of hours searching and with the tide receding before
my eyes, moving the available open water further and further away, I was at
the point where I'd all but given up, when suddenly and with much relief, I
spotted the bufflehead on the river on the east side of the bay north of
the hide, at a distance of about 800m (half a mile).
Here's the first photo I took from the hide with the bird 800m away and with the receding tide revealing more mud by the minute. Cleary it's the bufflehead, but not a very satisfactory view, so after watching it for a few minutes I began to wonder what my options were for
getting closer. I'd not been to Foryd Bay for years and didn't really know the
area, but I looked at a map and noticed that the river came closer to the shore a little further north. It was just possible that the bird might move that way as the tide retreated so I decided to give it a go. I jumped in the car and headed north for about 1.5km.
Parking is a problem here but eventually I found somewhere and a quick scan of
the river revealed the bird almost immediately with a few goldeneye and a drake scaup about 250m
away to the south. Jackpot! A short walk from here would get me even closer. Yet even now there was another twist as within a couple of minutes of
parking here, an abnormal load escort vehicle pulled up and asked me if I
could move another 400m away in order to make room for an approaching
articulated lorry transporting a static caravan which was due past in 15
minutes. Doh! You really couldn't make it up!
I had no option but to oblige, but once the lorry had gone past I drove back
to my parking spot, checked that the bufflehead was still there and then
walked around a rocky bay to an even closer vantage point, where I was now
about 150m from the bird .
What a tremendous experience to watch this wonderful duck swimming in amongst
displaying goldeneye in the company of a drake scaup. Not as close as I
believe it was earlier in its stay when it frequented a saltmarsh pool close
to the track at the south west corner of the bay, but this was a very
evocative and a thrilling sight and exactly the way I wanted to see the bird.
Edit 23/01/2026: When I saw the bufflehead on 14/01/2026 it hadn't been seen for 4 days previously. At the time of writing it's not been reported again since my sighting. So in the past 13 days mine is the only sighting of the bird! Amazing.
Friday, 9 January 2026
Siberian chiffchaff, Glazebury WWTW
I called in at Glazebury WWTW this morning hoping to catch up with the
Siberian chiffchaff that was reported yesterday. There were several
chiffchaffs on the beds and occasionally flying up into the trees, including
the bird in the photo which I'm pretty certain is Siberian chiffchaff.
Call is the most important identification feature and without hearing it, it's virtually impossible to be sure, however this bird is very brown on it's upperparts and buffy below, without any obvious olive on the crown or mantle. Crucially, it has a buff supercilium and rusty looking ear-coverts, as well as very black looking legs. I checked all of these features out in the field as well as in the photos when I got home.
I tried a bit of playback and the bird responded immediately, flying up into the tree near where I was standing, but unfortunately it refused to call itself. After spending about 20 minutes with this bird and satisfying myself that I wasn't likely to get any better photos, I moved about 10m further along the fence and viewed another bed. After another 10 minutes I heard a Siberian chiffchaff calling from the area where I had watched the bird in the photo, but unfortunately I couldn't be sure that it was the same bird so although I'm happy enough that there was a Sibe present, I can't say for sure that it's bird in the photos....if you see what I mean.
Tuesday, 6 January 2026
The icey flash
Pennington Flash has 95% ice cover at the moment but still holds 1st win drake scaup, 200 tufted ducks, 25 goldeneye, 35 pochard, 10 goosander, 150 teal, 80 shoveler and a great white egret, plus lots of the usuals.
Saturday, 3 January 2026
Another amazing day at Martin Mere
Another amazing day at Martin Mere, highlights a 1st winter pale-bellied brent
goose (my first on the reserve for 30 years), adult Russian white-fronted
goose and a barnacle goose with a good sized flock of pink-footed geese on
Plover field. Also ringtail hen harrier, short-eared owl, barn owl,
glossy ibis and drake ring-necked duck all showing well, plus 3 great white
egrets, 20+ cattle egrets, 2 little egrets, 6 chiffchaffs which included a
possible Siberian chiffchaff and all of the usual wildfowl and waders. 10.2km
(6.5 miles) walked around the reserve today, much of it with Graham Clarkson.
Hard to think of a better site in North West England, or a better way to spend my day.
Pale-bellied brent goose with pink-footed geese.
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