Wednesday, 13 September 2017
The morning after the storm and an unexpected phalarope
Storm Aileen arrived overnight with west north westerly winds in excess of 70mph and at this time of year that can only mean one thing - Leach's petrels.
With high tide at the ungodly (and dark) hour of 4:45 and sunrise two hours later at 6:45, I decided that with a high tide visit obviously out of the question, the next best thing I could do today would be get to New Brighton on the north Wirral coast for dawn. At first light petrels which have sheltered in the Mersey overnight can often be seen leaving the river and I was pretty confident that I would see a few today. Moreover I also knew that there had been a couple of grey phalaropes hanging around Fort Perch Rock for a couple of days and having already seen over 35 petrels on Monday at Hilbre, it was the phalaropes which really drew me to New Brighton.
I arrived at New Brighton at 6:55 and almost immediately picked out a couple of obligatory Leach's petrels for the day list and decided to now concentrate on finding the phalaropes. What a merry dance they lead me! First of all one flew and landed in front of a friend allowing him to fire off some great photos before disappearing minutes before I reached the spot. Then I was standing in the sea watching shelter while two other birders described a phalarope in flight which I failed to get on to. Finally I spotted two birders on the beach photographing what turned out to be a phalarope, but again by the time I got there the bird had gone.
By this time it was nearly low tide, but the petrels just kept on coming, and now they were flying incredibly close, right along the tideline and sometimes across the beach. On one such flyby, I was concentrating so much on trying to get a photo of the petrel that I completely failed to notice that it was flying directly over a grey phalarope, and I only realised that the phalarope was there when I looked at the photo nearly two hours later! And I still hadn't seen a phalarope!
Just stunning views today of Leach's petrel, with several birds flying 3m or less from us, right along the tideline and occasionally weaving in and out of the admiring birders on the beach. One of the great birding experiences of my life!
The phantom phalarope! How could I have not noticed this in the field! Mr. Observant! When I took this photo I'd been looking for grey phalarope for nearly four hours and had all but given up any hope of seeing one and I completely failed to notice this bird until I looked at the photo two hours later.
Here comes another!
Try focusing on that!
At last somebody pointed out a grey phalarope and boy it was worth the wait. What a stunning bird! An adult with a yellow base to the bill.
This has to be one of the most attractive winter plumage grey phalaropes I've ever seen, and the amount of yellow at the base of the bill is very extensive, unusually so I would say.
The seawatching shelter at New Brighton.
New Brighton lighthouse and Fort Perch Rock.
An exhilarating day with huge skies, a great day to be on the coast.
Later this afternoon I called in at Frodsham with Ray for a look at a juvenile red-necked phalarope, my second phalarope species of the day and my third in five days following a Wilson's at Alston Wetlands on Saturday.
Monday, 11 September 2017
Watching petrels at Hilbre Island
To my mind there is no finer place than Hilbre Island on a day like today, with waves crashing over the island, strong winds, squally showers and petrels, lots of petrels. Well, it was a bit more than showers really, more like torrential rain at times and I was extremely grateful and lucky to be offered the shelter of the seawatching hide for the duration of my visit. A visit over high tide means that you have to stay on the island for at least five hours with no shelter which is not to be undertaken lightly in conditions like these.
Goodness knows what it must be like to experience a hurricane with 150mph winds, but today the wind speed peaked at about 48mph and I could hardly walk into it, and the noise was just tremendous. Even in the best of weather it's about a 45 minute walk from West Kirby to Hilbre Island, but today was a struggle and when I at last reached the island at about 11am I was exhausted, yet excited, and I settled down in the hide for what promised to be a decent sea watch if the smattering of sea birds seen in the proceding days was anything to go by. Petrels were on the move, and they were the main reason for my visit.
Within minutes I'd spotted my first petrel, clearly a Leach's gliding and pattering and gallantly battling it's way west into the teeth of the gale force wind. It had my admiration. I'd found it hard enough to walk into that wind, yet here was a bird barely the size of a starling flying headlong into it and making better progress than me.
In the five hours or so that I was watching, I counted at least 35 Leach's petrels, some close in shore, other's a long way out at sea, all heading west. There were obviously many more out there, and in fact they were still passing the hide even when I finally left at 5:15pm, two hours after high tide and six hours after I had arrived. A possible Wilson's petrel flew east halfway through the afternoon, with a flight quite unlike the Leach's petrels and a white rump which appeared to extend almost right around its body.
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| Manx shearwater |
Gannets were passing close inshore and a few Manx shearwaters took the mickey out of me by gliding past almost without a flap, straight into the gale. Then I noticed a more powerful looking bird coming straight towards the hide. It was obviously a large skua, but not a bonxie because it was a pale phase bird, and when it got close to the hide it veered to the west and there were the twisted spoons in the tail of a stunning barrel chested adult pomarine skua. A breathtaking moment! There were bonxies out there, and I saw at least four terrorising the gannets and other sea birds which included a steady procession of Sandwich terns and at least five, possibly 10 black terns.
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| Gannet |
Saturday, 9 September 2017
Dippers at Pennington Flash
Two dippers on a brook near Leigh college were my first at Pennington Flash. Looking at the pale fringes to the tertials, I think that these birds are juveniles.
Saturday, 2 September 2017
Watching Petrels (and shearwaters) in the Minch
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| Sooty shearwater |
The Hebridean Whale and Dolphin watching boat left Gairloch at 5:15pm. We were on our way to the Burma Bank, an under water sand bank in the North Minch, between Stornoway and Ullapool. The scenary was breathtaking, worth the price of the trip alone, with spectacular views along almost the length of the Outer Hebrides, from the Uists in the south to Lewis in the north, whilst out to the east I could see the impressive peaks of Inverpolly, Ben more Coigach, Suilvan, Cul mor, Stac Pollaidh and many more. South was hardly less impressive, with tremendous views over Skye and Torridon.
Of course I was hoping to see a few whales and dolphins, but my main reason for being on the trip was the sea birds. Petrels are always the stars of the show for me, and up here both British species breed in large numbers, though in my experience you are much more likely to see storm petrel rather than Leach's in the Minch. Today we saw both, with up to 50 stormies and a single Leach's pattering and gliding across the water on a relatively calm day by Minch standards.
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| Sooty shearwater |
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| Sooty shearwater |
![]() |
| Arctic skua |
The Ullapool to Stornoway ferry making its way across the Burma Bank is a good cheap way of birding these seas, the only problem is of course, it does tend to just plough straight on regardless of the birds and cetaceans. Try asking the skipper to stop because you think you've just seen a sooty.....
The Minch is a good place for seeing cetaceans and they are regularly seen from the ferry, especially common dolphins, but I also managed to see a pod of about five Risso's dolphins logging not far from the boat. Logging is the term used to describe cetaceans which are asleep and not moving on the surface. Because they were still I could clearly see the scars on their bodies which are one of the diagnostic features of Risso's dolphins, caused by fights with other Risso's dolphins, but also their favoured prey item, squid. The only other place I've seen these dolphins is Strumble Head in Pembrokeshire. Minke whales are also often seen at this time of year, but not on this journey.
Friday, 1 September 2017
Invertebrates, August 2017
August turned out to be my month for dragonflies, I managed to find several impressive species both in the UK and Cyprus. However it was not a dragonfly, but two quite different and fearsome creatures which stole the show this month.
Tarantula hawk sp., possibly Hemipepsis mauritan, at the Asprokremmos dam, Cyprus. Tarantula hawks are said to have the second most painful sting in the insect world behind the bullet ant. Some tarantula hawks can grow up to 5cm long, but this one was around 3cm.
And here's its prey, the European tarantula Lycosa Tarantula. Quite common in Cyprus, this particular individual was running along the edge of our swimming pool. If the tarantula hawk wins the battle, it kills the spider by stinging it and then lays it's eggs in its victim.
Violet dropwing Trithemis annulata, a new species for me, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Broad scarlet Crocothemis erythraea, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Lesser emperor Anax parthenope, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Southern skimmer Orthetrum brunneum, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Epaulate skimmer Orthetrum chrysostigma, Nata village, Cyprus.
Slender skimmer Orthetrum sabina Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Red-veined darter Sympetrum fonscolombii, Nata village, Cyprus.
Male black darter Sympetrum danae, Highfield moss, Lowton. This is one of the few local sites for this species. Colliers (Bold) moss in St Helens used to have a few but I believe that the species preferred habitat has now been lost at that site.
Female black darter, Highfield moss, Lowton.
Emerald damselfly Lestes sponsa, Highfield moss, Lowton.
Common hawker Aeshna juncea Highfield moss.
Humming bird hawkmoth, Troodos, Cyprus.
Oriental hornet Vespa orientalis, Nata, Cyprus.
Hoverfly sp., Paphos Lighthouse.
Tarantula hawk sp., possibly Hemipepsis mauritan, at the Asprokremmos dam, Cyprus. Tarantula hawks are said to have the second most painful sting in the insect world behind the bullet ant. Some tarantula hawks can grow up to 5cm long, but this one was around 3cm.
And here's its prey, the European tarantula Lycosa Tarantula. Quite common in Cyprus, this particular individual was running along the edge of our swimming pool. If the tarantula hawk wins the battle, it kills the spider by stinging it and then lays it's eggs in its victim.
Violet dropwing Trithemis annulata, a new species for me, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Broad scarlet Crocothemis erythraea, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Lesser emperor Anax parthenope, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Southern skimmer Orthetrum brunneum, Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Epaulate skimmer Orthetrum chrysostigma, Nata village, Cyprus.
Slender skimmer Orthetrum sabina Zakaki Marshes, Cyprus.
Red-veined darter Sympetrum fonscolombii, Nata village, Cyprus.
Male black darter Sympetrum danae, Highfield moss, Lowton. This is one of the few local sites for this species. Colliers (Bold) moss in St Helens used to have a few but I believe that the species preferred habitat has now been lost at that site.
Female black darter, Highfield moss, Lowton.
Emerald damselfly Lestes sponsa, Highfield moss, Lowton.
Common hawker Aeshna juncea Highfield moss.
Humming bird hawkmoth, Troodos, Cyprus.
Oriental hornet Vespa orientalis, Nata, Cyprus.
Hoverfly sp., Paphos Lighthouse.
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