For many years I've been aware of the eider population around Walney Island, but nothing could have prepared me for the scenes on nearby Foulney Island today. I first came across a flock of about 2000 eider on the east side of the island and thought that was pretty impressive, but then found an even larger flock of around 5000 on the west side! Photos just don't do them justice because it's impossible to get the whole flock in the picture, but I took a short video which you can view here. Certainly I've never seen a flock this big before.
Year: 102 (Eider)
Ringed plover and dunlin.
Sanderling, ringed plover and dunlin.
Sanderling.
Sanderling, ringed plover, turnstone and dunlin.
Grey plover and ringed plover.
Dark-bellied brent geese, plus a few dunlin and redshanks. The geese have no need to move onto winter wheat fields in this area because there are only about 50 of them in the harbour, which will make very little impression on their favoutite food, eel grass.
And here it is, eel grass Zostera marina. The beach is covered in it.
Friday, 8 January 2016
Thursday, 7 January 2016
On the Ribble
I found a nice water pipit on the Ribble today, along with a few whooper swans, 1000 wigeon, 1000 lapwing and 30 golden plover, plus lots of other ducks and waders.
Year: 100 (Water pipit, whooper swan, golden plover)
Part of the wigeon flock.
Year: 100 (Water pipit, whooper swan, golden plover)
Part of the wigeon flock.
Wednesday, 6 January 2016
Tetney Marshes
Today on the marsh, a ringtail (probably juvenile) hen harrier was worrying the waders and was briefly mobbed by a short-eared owl. No sign of yesterdays black brant, but brent goose numbers were down to about 500 today. The adult pale-bellied brent was still in the flock, and I also picked out two juvenile pale-bellied birds.
Back in November I visited this coastline and commented then on the fairly recent habit of brent geese feeding on winter wheat when supplies of their favoured food, eel grass, have been exhausted. At the time I had seen just nine birds on fields adjacent to Tetney Marshes and the majority of the brents where still feeding on the saltmarsh. Not so today or yesterday, with the whole flock now on the winter wheat.
While I was walking along the sea wall, a juvenile little gull flew from the fields, right past me and away over the marsh. On the shore I picked up a few more year ticks, including grey plover, sanderling, bar-tailed godwit and knot.
Year: 97 (hen harrier, short-eared owl, little gull etc.)
Spot the pale-bellied brent!
Back in November I visited this coastline and commented then on the fairly recent habit of brent geese feeding on winter wheat when supplies of their favoured food, eel grass, have been exhausted. At the time I had seen just nine birds on fields adjacent to Tetney Marshes and the majority of the brents where still feeding on the saltmarsh. Not so today or yesterday, with the whole flock now on the winter wheat.
While I was walking along the sea wall, a juvenile little gull flew from the fields, right past me and away over the marsh. On the shore I picked up a few more year ticks, including grey plover, sanderling, bar-tailed godwit and knot.
Year: 97 (hen harrier, short-eared owl, little gull etc.)
Spot the pale-bellied brent!
Tuesday, 5 January 2016
Black Brant, Tetney Marshes
I called in Tetney marshes today in North Lincolnshire. There was an impressive flock of around 800 dark-bellied brent geese feeding on winter wheat on fields on the inland side of the coastal footpath. I managed to pick out at least one pale-bellied bird, and eventually a black brant. The latter was reported on Birdguides a few days ago, and assuming that todays bird was the same, it didn't stand out as much as I expected. Its white necklace was perfect, large, white and triangular, and joining under the chin, and almost meeting at the back, but its flanks weren't quite as white as I expected. I did a bit of research and it appears that there have been a number of black brant x dark-bellied hybrids reported in Norfolk in recent years which look quite similar to this bird, so perhaps it's a hybrid, though I don't know what the variation is in black brant, and looking at some photos from North America, they're not all as white as we sometimes think here in the UK.
Earlier I had called in at Cleethorpes and found a flock of snow bunting which have been reported on the beach there recently.
Year: 88
Earlier I had called in at Cleethorpes and found a flock of snow bunting which have been reported on the beach there recently.
Year: 88
Sunday, 3 January 2016
Pallas's Warbler Paradox
A bit like yellow-browed warblers, I always struggle with Pallas's warblers. I never get good views of them. Perhaps I just don't have the patience or perhaps they just don't comply with my favoured method of birding. I like to keep moving, I'm impatiant to know what's around the next corner. A wide open estuary with thousands of birds to look through is what I like. I can identify, count and catagorise them and then move on to the next group of birds.
Pallas's warblers are tiny birds which move through dense undergrowth, hedges and trees, and never seem to stay still. You can spot one and then lose it almost immediately and not see it again for an hour. You can stand in the same spot for hours on end and only see a handful of goldcrests and maybe a 5 second view of the rear end of a Pallas's warbler as it disappears again.
It's not that I don't like Pallas's warblers, far from it. Actually I think that they are great little birds and really charismatic, being barely the size of a goldcrest and yet having travelled all the way from north-east Asia to be with us, reverse migration in action, they should really be in south-east Asia for the winter. They're attractive little birds, olive green above with whitish underparts, a distinct yellow eyestripe, yellow crown stripe and most impressively a bright yellow rump which they often show off when they habitually hover in search of flies.
True to form, today we stood in often pouring rain for maybe five hours, staring at a hedge and seeing mainly goldcrests. We were at Heswall on Wirral looking for a Pallas's warbler which had been found yesterday afternoon. Our plans to go to Hilbre Island, West Kirby marine lake, Burton Marsh and finally Burton Mere Wetlands lay in disarray. Probably for the best actually, given the weather!
The choices were, stand further back and view through a chain linked fence or stand next to a gate at half the distance and view down a hedge lined lane. If selecting the former option you tended to get more views of the bird, but a telescope was required and you were looking through the fence which always obstructed your view. The latter option was much closer, but the bird didn't show as often and wasn't on view for as long. However if the bird did show, it was often at point blank range and the view was generally unobstructed.
We chose to wait by the gate, having seen it distantly with binoculars through the fence when we first arrived. It was associating with perhaps 10 goldcrests, 5 chiffchaffs, a male blackcap and several long-tailed tits, and the flock was doing some kind of circuit which saw it come past us about every half hour or so. Sometimes the flock would go past and we wouldn't see the Pallas's warbler and we'd have to wait patiently for the next lap and hope, and still the rain poured down. We dare not move for fear of missing the bird and like dead man's shoes, if you did move there were 10 birders behind you ready to take your place and then you'd lost your prime position. Back of the queue was then your lot, peering over shoulders and even less chance of seeing the bird on its next lap.
Over the course of the day, I did get some pleasing views of the bird. A couple of times I saw a small bird with a yellow rump flying away down the lane which was nice, and on at least four occasions I had it 3m away or less and in full view, albeit for just a couple of seconds each time. A smart little bird, this was my second in the north-west, following one in Hightown Dunes in December 2006. I loved it!
By the time we left it was too dark and dismal, and the weather was just too bad to contemplate going anywhere else, but we did call in at West Kirby marine lake and saw the great northern diver again for the year list, plus a couple of red-breasted mergansers.
Year: 82 (Pallas's warbler et al)
Drake red-breasted merganser in the rain!
He's had enough. I don't blame him!
Pallas's warblers are tiny birds which move through dense undergrowth, hedges and trees, and never seem to stay still. You can spot one and then lose it almost immediately and not see it again for an hour. You can stand in the same spot for hours on end and only see a handful of goldcrests and maybe a 5 second view of the rear end of a Pallas's warbler as it disappears again.
It's not that I don't like Pallas's warblers, far from it. Actually I think that they are great little birds and really charismatic, being barely the size of a goldcrest and yet having travelled all the way from north-east Asia to be with us, reverse migration in action, they should really be in south-east Asia for the winter. They're attractive little birds, olive green above with whitish underparts, a distinct yellow eyestripe, yellow crown stripe and most impressively a bright yellow rump which they often show off when they habitually hover in search of flies.
True to form, today we stood in often pouring rain for maybe five hours, staring at a hedge and seeing mainly goldcrests. We were at Heswall on Wirral looking for a Pallas's warbler which had been found yesterday afternoon. Our plans to go to Hilbre Island, West Kirby marine lake, Burton Marsh and finally Burton Mere Wetlands lay in disarray. Probably for the best actually, given the weather!
The choices were, stand further back and view through a chain linked fence or stand next to a gate at half the distance and view down a hedge lined lane. If selecting the former option you tended to get more views of the bird, but a telescope was required and you were looking through the fence which always obstructed your view. The latter option was much closer, but the bird didn't show as often and wasn't on view for as long. However if the bird did show, it was often at point blank range and the view was generally unobstructed.
We chose to wait by the gate, having seen it distantly with binoculars through the fence when we first arrived. It was associating with perhaps 10 goldcrests, 5 chiffchaffs, a male blackcap and several long-tailed tits, and the flock was doing some kind of circuit which saw it come past us about every half hour or so. Sometimes the flock would go past and we wouldn't see the Pallas's warbler and we'd have to wait patiently for the next lap and hope, and still the rain poured down. We dare not move for fear of missing the bird and like dead man's shoes, if you did move there were 10 birders behind you ready to take your place and then you'd lost your prime position. Back of the queue was then your lot, peering over shoulders and even less chance of seeing the bird on its next lap.
Over the course of the day, I did get some pleasing views of the bird. A couple of times I saw a small bird with a yellow rump flying away down the lane which was nice, and on at least four occasions I had it 3m away or less and in full view, albeit for just a couple of seconds each time. A smart little bird, this was my second in the north-west, following one in Hightown Dunes in December 2006. I loved it!
By the time we left it was too dark and dismal, and the weather was just too bad to contemplate going anywhere else, but we did call in at West Kirby marine lake and saw the great northern diver again for the year list, plus a couple of red-breasted mergansers.
Year: 82 (Pallas's warbler et al)
Drake red-breasted merganser in the rain!
He's had enough. I don't blame him!
Saturday, 2 January 2016
Pennington Flash
This evening I called in for a look through the gull roost. I positioned myself in the south-east corner because large numbers of birds were congregating there, and I was able to pick out the adult yellow-legged gull which has been seen roosting for about the previous 10 days, and also an adult Mediterranean gull with an almost complete black hood.
A quick walk around the flash this morning produced another 10 species for the year list, including water rail.
Year: 76 (Yellow-legged gull, Mediterranean gull, water rail + a few others)
Yet more rain today, but even so water levels are at least 1.5m lower than this time last week! Below are a few photos from the day after the great flood, when the spit was nowhere to be seen and Teal hide was inaccessible!
A quick walk around the flash this morning produced another 10 species for the year list, including water rail.
Year: 76 (Yellow-legged gull, Mediterranean gull, water rail + a few others)
Yet more rain today, but even so water levels are at least 1.5m lower than this time last week! Below are a few photos from the day after the great flood, when the spit was nowhere to be seen and Teal hide was inaccessible!
Friday, 1 January 2016
It begins.....
Day 1 done and dusted, 63 species recorded on the Conwy coast. It could have been more, we missed firecrest, hooded crow and water pipit at Conwy RSPB and surf scoter at Colwyn Bay, plus lots of common birds still to see (e.g. pheasant, lesser black back gull, common gull, various woodland species, kestrel, buzzard etc.). Highlights were a cracking male black redstart on Little Orme, twite at Penrhyn Bay and female scaup at Eirias Park, Colwyn Bay. We also saw three peregrines in the air together on the Little Orme where there were already fulmar prospecting for nesting sites.
Year: 63 (Everything!)
Female scaup.
Twite
Male black redstart.
Conwy RSPB
Year: 63 (Everything!)
Female scaup.
Twite
Male black redstart.
Conwy RSPB
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