A brief mid-afternoon visit in sweltering heat produced a pair of avocets on the end of the spit today. It's amazing to think that these days avocets barely raise an eyebrow amongst birders, yet this is still only my third record of the species at the flash and they are the latest in an ever increasing list of impressive birds at the site this month. So far in June we've had serin (not seen by me), black-winged stilts, avocets, great white egret, black tern, red kite and Mediterranean Gulls. What next?
Thursday, 15 June 2023
Wednesday, 14 June 2023
Covering the cock-up
Yesterday morning I was walking along the main footpath just before Horrock's hide when a white egret flew over just above tree height. My initial reaction was "Oh there's the little egret that has been hanging around recently".
There's not a lot of sky visible here and I had about 2 seconds or less to react, raise my binoculars and have a look at the egret before it disappeared behind the trees. Just about the only thing I had time to notice was that the bird had an orangey / yellow bill and dark feet. Then it was gone. Probably because I had been expecting it to be the little egret I apparently misjudged the size and identified it as a cattle egret. It sounds ridiculous now, but that's the way it is.
Then this morning Bill and Barry had a great white egret on the spit....🤦🤷♂️
With the benefit of hindsight, from the picture I have in my mind of the orangey / yellow bill yesterday, it was clearly a great white egret and not a cattle egret. The bill was too long.
Oh well, onwards and upwards.
Also this morning a (grey) cuckoo flew from the south side and over Horrock's hide. It seems likely that cuckoos have actually bred at the flash this year and not just passed through. I can't say that todays bird was definitely a male, but it was obviously a different bird to that seen two days ago which was for sure a rufous female. There's been a male singing on and off for a week or two which doesn't seem to be in any great rush to leave and this could be it. Given that it's now mid-June and adult cuckoos usually leave the country early after egg laying, it seems possible that they are here to stay for the summer.
Monday, 12 June 2023
Rufous female cuckoo and a thunderstorm
I called in briefly at the flash this afternoon on my way to do the weekly
shop and saw first a rufous female cuckoo fly over Horrock's followed by a
little egret.
Mediterranean gulls, Pennington Flash
I decided to walk along the canal this morning from the Common Lane footbridge towards the by-pass. Lots of red-eyed damselflies on the lilypads and suddenly I became aware of a "cow, cow, cow" call from overhead and looking up I saw a couple of Mediterranean gulls hawking for insects above me with a few black-headed gulls. I took a couple of photos before they disappeared and one of the birds is clearly a second summer, almost identical to the adult with a full black hood, but also with a few black markings on the tips of the primaries. Later they were both on the spit with a common sandpiper. A barnacle goose flew along the canal with a couple of greylags and four common terns were on the flash.
Sunday, 11 June 2023
Black-winged stilts, Pennington Flash
Wow! What a morning! I had a late night last night due to visiting a
local nightjar and long-eared owl site so I decided that especially given the
time of year, I might as well have a lie in bed this morning, because as I said yesterday, there's
not much happening at this time of year....
I woke up at 7am, made a cup of tea, pottered around for a bit, had some
breakfast and then thought, "you know what, I may as well go for a quick look
at the flash, because you never know, today might be the day".... and it
was!
I couldn't stay long, it was just a quick look, and after half an hour I'd
packed up and was heading back to the car with just a redshank and a single
common tern to show for my efforts. I was almost at the car when suddenly I
saw two gangly black and white birds flying towards me very low over the
water, less than a metre above the water I'd say. I'm sure that they were going to land on the
car park foreshore but then at the last minute they saw me and turned and flew
along the shoreline towards the spit, at this point less than 10m from me. Boom, two black-winged stilts, no mistaking them!
I legged it back to Horrock's and sure enough they had landed about half way
down the spit. I just had time to fire off the photos in this post before they
flew again, away from me along the spit and then turned as if going into
Ramsdales and out of view for me. Despite searching for the next 45 minutes I
was unable to relocate them anywhere, but then I got a call from Ian who had
seen them from Horrock's near the gull island. Unfortunately by the time I got
back to Horrock's they had flown again and this time disappeared for good.
There's virtually no habitat for black-winged stilts at the flash, but I have
been half expecting them because there has been an influx this spring with a
few birds moving around the north west. They were always going to be more or
less in and out jobs though, there's nothing to keep them at Pennington
Flash.
So yeah, as I said yesterday, not much happening at this time of year.
Saturday, 10 June 2023
Cuckoo and demoiselles at the flash
Banded demoiselles are on the wing at the moment, at Pennington Flash I see
them either on Hey Brook or Westleigh Brook and perhaps they are also on
Pennington Brook but I don't usually go that way to find out.
It's that time of year when I don't usually expect to see much at the flash
and this kind of weather is especially grim. Hot sunny weekends with low water
levels means that the flash is heaving with people and dogs, some of whom
apparently can't read or don't care and just head off down the spit for
reasons best known to themselves, flushing everything in the nature reserve. On the
water we have yachts and organised open water swimmers and later on in the day
they'll be joined by inflatables and more casual swimmers, the latter all setting off
from the car park despite the signs saying don't do it and all apparently
unconcerned by toxic blue green algae in the water. Oh well fingers crossed folks.....
Tuesday, 6 June 2023
Cheddar Pink in Cheddar Gorge
Today I finally achieved one of my life long ambitions and saw Cheddar Pink growing in it's classic location, Cheddar Gorge in Somerset. In the UK this plant occurs only in Somerset with Cheddar Gorge far and away the main site, but it does also occur elsewhere in Europe I believe, especially in the Alps. Just like all pinks, it has a wonderful scent. From what I have read, whilst still common here, it has declined considerably since it was first discovered in the early part of the 18th century, in part due to scrub encroachment and people picking the flowers.
I first learned of the plant and the gorge from my dad when I was a lad,
though he never visited the place and so didn't see the plant in the wild, yet
seeing it today feels like a link to the past and I can feel the connection
with my dad again. It's taken me so long to see it because like my dad, my
main interest when it comes to botany is alpine plants, so my natural
inclination is to head north to Cumbria, Teesdale, Yorkshire and Scotland or
west into Wales. Somerset is a county that I have only visited on a handful of
occasions and in those instances usually to one of the counties wonderful bird
reserves and not necessarily at the right time of year for the pink and
certainly not with likeminded travelling companions who would be prepared to
climb to the top of the gorge and spend half a day botanising. However, just
at the moment I am working in Somerset and with my surveys finishing at 11am
latest everyday, I have plenty of free time and ample opportunity to call
in.
There are lots of other great plants here as well, including Cheddar
hawkweed Hieracium stenolepiforme, an even rarer plant that occurs nowhere else in the world. I
believe that the last survey found that it had declined with just 50+ plants
left. The plant in the photo above was growing on the cliff near Sows Hole
down at the bottom of the gorge. Hawkweeds are notoriously difficult, but in
this instance the identification has been confirmed by
the Somerset Rare Plant Group (opens in a new window). Key features are the the toothed leaves,
obvious particularly on the back leaves in the photo, the lack of leaves on
the stem and the simple hairs on the bracts. Plus the location of course,
with Sows Hole one of the known locations of the species within the gorge.
Sunday, 4 June 2023
CH1 still hanging around
It took me six years to see tufted duck CH1 at Pennington Flash but just at
the moment I can't seem to escape her. Originally ringed in France in 2017 and
first seen at the flash six weeks later, she's been back and to between France
and the flash ever since. At the moment I see her on almost every visit and it
doesn't seem like she's got any plans to go to France this summer.
Also today, a single ringed plover on the spit, most likely a new bird as the two from yesterday morning were not seen in the afternoon.
Saturday, 3 June 2023
Passage continues at the flash
A week ago it seemed that migration had all but stopped at the flash, but the past few days have proven that it's still on-going, with a mass influx of black terns and a few waders such as greenshank, turnstone, dunlin and today a couple of ringed plovers. When I first arrived this morning at 05:45 there was just the one, but then it flew up very high and I thought it was leaving until suddenly mid-flight it was joined by a second bird and the two dropped down again onto the spit. I've no idea where the second bird came from, but looking at the photos it would appear that they are male and female. Perhaps new love was found in a chance encounter high above the flash!
Also today, a single black tern was still present, and a feature of the past few days has been the masses of swift over the boat club, with at least 500 birds today.
Friday, 2 June 2023
Red kite, black terns and a turnstone at the flash
I find it slightly ironic that as this morning progressed and I reported black
terns and turnstone at Pennington Flash, a real flash mega went completely
unreported by the bird services. I was at the boat club and heard a commotion
overhead and looking up saw a magnificent red kite quite low down. It slowly
circled higher and higher and eventually drifted off north.
This was my second red kite at the flash, the first was almost six years ago
to the day in 2017, yet I don't know of any other birders who have seen the
species here.
Thursday, 1 June 2023
Marsh Warbler, Chapel Six Marshes
Marsh warbler is one of those birds, Savi's is another, that I've really not seen that many of. It's hard to know why really, but I guess that I saw the species quite early in my birding life and since then I've just not bothered with them. Living in north west England I'm very unlikely to come across one in the course of general birding and I'm never inclined to twitch them because they can often be very elusive.
However today I'm in Lincoln in between two dusk breeding bird surveys so had ample opportunity during the day to call in at nearby Chapel Six Marshes to see a singing marsh warbler that was found early morning. I'm so glad that I did make the effort because this was a very special bird. It was singing on top of a bush as close as 3m from the path and at one point was creeping in the reeds less than a metre from me!
It has absolutely everything, the song, the orange gape, the lemony coloured underparts, shortish bill, rounded head, pale legs, I even had a good look at the tertials and primaries, though I'm not really sure what I'm looking for here! Well I do know, but such detail is never clear cut to me.
Anyway, quite aside from the identification features, it was a cracking little bird and a pleasure to watch and listen to.
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