Showing posts sorted by relevance for query white-fronted. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query white-fronted. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, 17 December 2018

Observations of Australian birds and mammals by state and location


Here's a full list of the 320 bird species and 30 mammal species I've seen so far in Australia, grouped by state and location. The numbers in brackets are the maximum number of individuals I have seen at each location.

State
Location
Species seen with maximum numbers in brackets
NSW
Blue Mountains
Australian Magpie (10), Australian Raven (1), Australian Wood Duck (2), Bell Miner (20), Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike (1), Brown Thornbill (2), Common Myna (30), Crescent Honeyeater (1), Crimson Rosella (20), Eastern Spinebill (1), Fan-tailed Cuckoo (1), Galah (10), Golden Whistler (5), Grey Fantail (1), Lewin's Honeyeater (1), Magpie-lark (1), Masked Lapwing (1), Pacific Black Duck (2), Peregrine (1), Pied Currawong (10), Red Wattlebird (2), Red-whiskered Bulbul (10), Satin Bowerbird (2), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (50), Welcome Swallow (20), White-browed Scrubwren (5), White-throated Treecreeper (2)
NSW
Sydney
Australasian Gannet (2), Australasian Grebe (2), Australian Darter (2), Australian Magpie (6), Australian Pelican (8), Australian Raven (5), Australian White Ibis (50), Australian Wood Duck (30), Black Swan (6), Black-browed Albatross (1), Caspian Tern (1), Channel-billed Cuckoo (1), Chestnut Teal (2), Common Myna (50), Coot (50), Cormorant (2), Crested Pigeon (5), Crested Tern (2), Dusky Moorhen (5), Fairy Martin (5), Fluttering Shearwater (500), Grey Butcherbird (2), Hardhead (50), House Sparrow (1), Intermediate Egret (3), Kelp Gull (2), Laughing Kookaburra (2), Little Black Cormorant (2), Little Pied Cormorant (20), Little Raven (1), Magpie-lark (4), Masked Lapwing (3), Nankeen Kestrel (1), New Holland Honeyeater (5), Noisy Miner (50), Pacific Black Duck (4), Peregrine (1), Pied Cormorant (4), Pied Currawong (5), Purple Gallinule (50), Rainbow Lorikeet (30), Red Wattlebird (3), Short-tailed Shearwater (200), Silver Gull (50), Spotted Dove (5), Starling (50), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (8), Superb Fairy-wren (5), Wedge-tailed Shearwater (500), Welcome Swallow (50), White-browed Scrubwren (3), White-faced Heron (1), Willie Wagtail (2), Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo (5)

Mammals: Humpback whale, Indo-Pacific Bottlenose dolphin, New Zealand fur seal, grey-headed flying-fox

Key locations: Sydney botanic gardens, Centennial Park, Watson Bay, whale watching trip.

QLD
Atherton Tablelands
Australasian Figbird (30), Australian Brush-turkey (3), Australian Pelican (5), Black Kite (50), Black-faced Monarch (2), Brown Treecreeper (1), Coot (20), Dusky Honeyeater (2), Eastern Cattle Egret (50), Golden Whistler (5), Great Crested Grebe (50), Large-billed Gerygone (10), Laughing Kookaburra (3), Little Eagle (1), Magpie-lark (5), Mistletoebird (1), Olive-backed Sunbird (2), Pacific Black Duck (6), Pied Currawong (2), Purple Gallinule (2), Rainbow Lorikeet (50), Silvereye (1), Spangled Drongo (3), Spotted Harrier (1), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (10), Varied Triller (1), Whistling Kite (1)

Mammals: Duck-billed platypus, Eastern grey kangaroo

Key locations: Yungaburra

Friday, 1 November 2019

Observations of Australian birds and mammals by state and location


Here's a full list of the 353 bird species and 36 mammal species I've seen so far in Australia, grouped by state and location. The numbers in brackets are the maximum number of individuals I have seen at each location.

State
Location
Species seen with maximum numbers in brackets
NSW
Blue Mountains
Australian Magpie (10), Australian Raven (1), Australian Wood Duck (2), Bell Miner (20), Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike (1), Brown Thornbill (2), Common Myna (30), Crescent Honeyeater (1), Crimson Rosella (20), Eastern Spinebill (1), Fan-tailed Cuckoo (1), Galah (10), Golden Whistler (5), Grey Fantail (1), Lewin's Honeyeater (1), Magpie-lark (1), Masked Lapwing (1), Pacific Black Duck (2), Peregrine (1), Pied Currawong (10), Red Wattlebird (10), Red-whiskered Bulbul (10), Satin Bowerbird (2), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (50), Welcome Swallow (20), White-browed Scrubwren (10), White-throated Treecreeper (2)
NSW
Sydney
Australasian Gannet (2), Australasian Grebe (2), Australian Darter (2), Australian Magpie (6), Australian Pelican (8), Australian Raven (5), Australian White Ibis (300), Australian Wood Duck (30), Black Swan (20), Black-browed Albatross (1), Caspian Tern (1), Channel-billed Cuckoo (1), Chestnut Teal (10), Common Myna (50), Coot (200), Cormorant (2), Crested Pigeon (10), Crested Tern (2), Dusky Moorhen (30), Fairy Martin (15), Fluttering Shearwater (500), Grey Butcherbird (2), Hardhead (100), House Sparrow (1), Intermediate Egret (3), Kelp Gull (2), Laughing Kookaburra (2), Little Black Cormorant (15), Little Pied Cormorant (20), Little Raven (1), Magpie-lark (10), Masked Lapwing (20), Nankeen Kestrel (1), New Holland Honeyeater (10), Noisy Miner (50), Pacific Black Duck (4), Peregrine (1), Pied Cormorant (4), Pied Currawong (5), Purple Gallinule (50), Rainbow Lorikeet (30), Red Wattlebird (3), Short-tailed Shearwater (200), Silver Gull (1000), Spotted Dove (5), Starling (50), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (20), Superb Fairy-wren (10), Wedge-tailed Shearwater (500), Welcome Swallow (50), White-browed Scrubwren (3), White-faced Heron (1), Willie Wagtail (2), Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo (5)

Mammals: Humpback whale, Indo-Pacific Bottlenose dolphin, New Zealand fur seal, grey-headed flying-fox

Key locations: Sydney botanic gardens, Centennial Park, Watson Bay, whale watching trip.
QLD
Atherton Tablelands
Australasian Figbird (30), Australian Brush-turkey (3), Australian Pelican (5), Black Kite (50), Black-faced Monarch (2), Brown Treecreeper (1), Coot (20), Dusky Honeyeater (2), Eastern Cattle Egret (50), Golden Whistler (5), Great Crested Grebe (50), Large-billed Gerygone (10), Laughing Kookaburra (3), Little Eagle (1), Magpie-lark (5), Mistletoebird (1), Olive-backed Sunbird (2), Pacific Black Duck (6), Pied Currawong (2), Purple Gallinule (2), Rainbow Lorikeet (50), Silvereye (1), Spangled Drongo (3), Spotted Harrier (1), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (10), Varied Triller (1), Whistling Kite (1)

Mammals: Duck-billed platypus, Eastern grey kangaroo

Key locations: Yungaburra
QLD
Avondale
Black Kite (20), Brown Honeyeater (2), Double-barred Finch (3), Eastern Great Egret (1), Hardhead (1), Laughing Kookaburra (15), Little Black Cormorant (30), Scarlet Honeyeater (2)

Thursday, 13 February 2020

Observations of Australian birds and mammals by state and location




Here's a full list of the 375 bird species and 41 mammal species I've seen so far in Australia, grouped by state and location. The numbers in brackets are the maximum number of individuals I have seen at each location.

State
Species seen with maximum numbers in brackets
NSW
Blue Mountains
Australian Magpie (10), Australian Raven (1), Australian Wood Duck (2), Bell Miner (20), Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike (1), Brown Thornbill (2), Common Myna (30), Crescent Honeyeater (1), Crimson Rosella (20), Eastern Spinebill (1), Fan-tailed Cuckoo (1), Galah (10), Golden Whistler (5), Grey Fantail (1), Lewin's Honeyeater (1), Magpie-lark (1), Masked Lapwing (1), Pacific Black Duck (2), Peregrine (1), Pied Currawong (10), Red Wattlebird (10), Red-whiskered Bulbul (10), Satin Bowerbird (2), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (50), Welcome Swallow (20), White-browed Scrubwren (10), White-throated Treecreeper (2)
NSW
Sydney
Australasian Gannet (2), Australasian Grebe (2), Australasian Swamphen (50), Australian Darter (2), Australian Magpie (6), Australian Pelican (8), Australian Raven (5), Australian White Ibis (300), Australian Wood Duck (30), Black Swan (20), Black-browed Albatross (1), Caspian Tern (1), Channel-billed Cuckoo (1), Chestnut Teal (10), Common Myna (50), Coot (200), Cormorant (2), Crested Pigeon (10), Crested Tern (2), Dusky Moorhen (30), Fairy Martin (15), Fluttering Shearwater (500), Grey Butcherbird (2), Hardhead (100), House Sparrow (1), Intermediate Egret (3), Kelp Gull (2), Laughing Kookaburra (2), Little Black Cormorant (15), Little Pied Cormorant (20), Little Raven (1), Magpie-lark (10), Masked Lapwing (20), Nankeen Kestrel (1), New Holland Honeyeater (10), Noisy Miner (50), Pacific Black Duck (4), Peregrine (1), Pied Cormorant (4), Pied Currawong (5), Rainbow Lorikeet (30), Red Wattlebird (3), Short-tailed Shearwater (200), Silver Gull (1000), Spotted Dove (5), Starling (50), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (20), Superb Fairy-wren (10), Wedge-tailed Shearwater (500), Welcome Swallow (50), White-browed Scrubwren (3), White-faced Heron (1), Willie Wagtail (2), Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo (5)

Mammals: Humpback whale, Indo-Pacific Bottlenose dolphin, New Zealand fur seal, grey-headed flying-fox

Key locations: Sydney botanic gardens, Centennial Park, Watson Bay, whale watching trip.


QLD
Atherton Tablelands
Australasian Figbird (30), Australasian Swamphen (2), Australian Brush-turkey (3), Australian Pelican (5), Black Kite (50), Black-faced Monarch (2), Brown Treecreeper (1), Coot (20), Dusky Honeyeater (2), Eastern Cattle Egret (50), Golden Whistler (5), Great Crested Grebe (50), Large-billed Gerygone (10), Laughing Kookaburra (3), Little Eagle (1), Magpie-lark (5), Mistletoebird (1), Olive-backed Sunbird (2), Pacific Black Duck (6), Pied Currawong (2), Rainbow Lorikeet (50), Silvereye (1), Spangled Drongo (3), Spotted Harrier (1), Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (10), Varied Triller (1), Whistling Kite (1)

Mammals: Duck-billed platypus, Eastern grey kangaroo

Key locations: Yungaburra


Wednesday, 5 March 2025

Lesser white-fronted goose, Upper Thurnham



It's been a poor winter for geese in north west England in my opinion, with below average numbers of unusual species in amongst the flocks of pink-footed geese. However, in recent days pink-foot numbers have built up on the Fylde as birds from Norfolk begin to return to the area before heading north in the next week or so, and with them has come a wonderful adult lesser white-fronted goose. 

This is one of my favourite species of any bird, not just geese. They are the reason why Peter Scott set up the Wildfowl Trust (now Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust) following a visit to Slimbridge in 1945. He was using a war time pill box as a hide overlooking an area of marsh known as the Dumbles when he found two lesser white-fronted geese with a flock of 2000 Russian white-fronts. He decided almost there and then that this was the place for him to live and to be the headquarters of a new conservation organisation that he had been planning to setup. I recommend his book "The Eye of the Wind" which gives a very evocative description of this period.

Having read this book in my youth, I always wanted to see lesser white-fronts at Slimbridge, but sadly even though I visited a few times in the early 1980s when the species was still almost annual, I failed to see any. I've always considered Slimbridge the classic place to see the species and Russian white-fronts the classic carrier species.


It took until 1991 for me to see my first lesser white-front, with pink-footed geese at Martin Mere, but by that time we were already calling them "of unknown origin". 

The species has undergone steep declines in recent decades largely due to hunting in their eastern European and Asian wintering grounds. In an effort to save the species, conservationists in Sweden set up a release scheme which aims to change the migration pattern of the species by directing them towards Western Europe in winter rather than the east.

This is theoretically possible because unlike passerines, geese and swans learn to migrate from their parents by travelling to their wintering grounds in family flocks and the hope was that the Swedish birds would learn to travel west every autumn. 

I've haven't really followed the progress of this release scheme and don't know much about it or how successful it's been, but the theory sounds good. However, what it has left us with is three possibilities when it comes to the origin of this lesser white-front at Upper Thurnham. 

Swedish birds tend to overwinter in the Netherlands but this winter there have been higher numbers than usual wintering in the UK, including seven ringed birds at Flamborough Head and at least nine in Norfolk. Officially these birds are not "tickable", probably because they're not yet considered to be a self sustaining population. Today's bird could be from this population. 

Tuesday, 10 February 2026

White-front spectacular in North Lancs.


With ever increasing flocks of Russian white-fronted geese being reported at various locations in North Lancs over the past few days there was only ever going to be one place for me to go today. 

I headed first for Bradshaw lane on Pilling Moss where yesterday 500+ white-fronts had been reported in a single field. Parking is difficult down here and viewing almost impossible, but miraculously I managed to find a spot for one car and then walked down a track for 100m which gave me an open view of the field where the goose flock was, albeit at a distance of about 500m (1/3 mile). The wind was blowing on a dull day with occasional showers and viewing was difficult at that range, but even so I managed to count at least 300 white-fronts and a few barnacles in amongst the pink-footed geese. 

The largest flock of Russian white-fronts I have ever seen is 3000+ at Slimbridge back in 1983, but since then I've never managed more than 150 even at Slimbridge, so to get 300+ in North Lancs where the species is historically quite scarce was a thrill to say the least. Prior to this year my highest count anywhere in Lancashire was 23 at Marshside in 1993, but in a typical year I'm lucky to see more than two or three in the county. 300+ is just mind blowing and an experience not to be missed. It may never happen again in my lifetime.


Nearby just south of Stronkey I counted 67 white-fronts with 1500 pink-footed geese, before I moved on to Cockersands Abbey, which is where most of the photos in this post were taken with the exception of the last two. 


There were no geese at all in the field where we had seen so many on Sunday, but on that walk two days ago we had also come across 38 white-fronts just east of Crook farm. Since I could hear the murmur of geese on the ground in that direction, I decided to check out the area again.

Tuesday, 5 November 2024

Greenland white-fronted geese, Little Woolden Moss


Ten adult Greenland white-fronted geese turned up in a stubble field just north of Little Woolden Moss on Sunday having previously been seen to fly over Woolston Eyes the day before. I couldn't get there until today, but fortunately they waited for me and were still present this morning. 


According to Birds of the Western Palearctic, there was a world population of 20,000 Greenland white-fronted geese in the 1980s which rose to 35,600 in the late 1990s thanks to hunting restrictions (British Birds 99 May 2006 242–261). Since then numbers have declined markedly and Wexford Wildfowl Reserve in Ireland gives the world population size as 18,027 in 2022, a 10.7% drop on the previous year.

These days up to 6,000 winter at Wexford Slobs, down from about 10,000 a few years ago. In November 2015 I visited the slobs specifically to see these birds. The Inner Hebridean island of Islay also has a wintering population of around the same size as Wexford which I also visited in 1997.

Thursday, 3 December 2020

Greenland white-fronted goose, Holcroft Moss

Greenland white-front with pink-footed geese 
Photo © John Tymon.

Yesterday John Tymon found a magnificent Greenland white-fronted goose just south of Culcheth on Holcroft Moss. Unlike the first COVID lockdown when I was out every day and the weather was great, this time around I've found it very difficult to motivate myself, what with the bad weather and short days and I've managed to resist a whole host of rarities from Siberian thrush to rufous scrub-robin. However nothing gets the Davies pulse racing like a goose just before Christmas and sure enough I was out today looking for this bird. Armed with information from John I headed for Holcroft Lane and found a flock of about 450 pink-footed geese near Frank's farm. Unfortunately though, most of the flock was in a dip in the field and invisible to me. After about half an hour though I managed to pick out the white-front but almost immediately a farm vehicle drove down a track and flushed the lot!

Actually it wasn't too bad, they flew off east, way over towards Little Woolden Moss before returning to land in roughly the same area, but not before flying through Greater Manchester airspace and becoming a new addition to my GM list (if I kept one!). While they were flying, a female pintail flew up and briefly joined them before dropping down again.

My database tells me that I saw 10 Russian white-fronted geese at Pennington Flash on 27th November 1993, however I have absolutely no recollection of them. The county report for 1993 says they roosted from 21st November to 1st December, with one Pink-Footed Goose and fed somewhere nearby.
     

Tuesday, 7 March 2017

Goodbye winter, thanks for the memories



Has there ever been a winter as good for birding as the winter of 2016/17? I'm not sure that I can remember one. With winter now fast slipping away and signs of spring all around us, it seems a good oportunity to reflect on what has been an exceptional few months for birding.

Of course, a good winter for birding does not necessarily mean a good winter for birds or for weather. I suppose it depends on how you define a good winter. Personally I'd like to see a lot more frost with bright blue sparkly skies, and a bit more winter like weather generally between December and February. Mild, dull, rainy and windy days such as we seem to get a lot of these days are not really my cup of tea and are actually quite alarming in the overall scheme of things. 

Then there's the birds themselves. Some species may benefit from a mild winter, especially birds such as Cetti's and Dartford warblers whose populations can suffer badly in harsh, cold winters. On the otherhand insectiverous birds may suffer in the spring if a mild winter encourages flowers and invertebrates to emerge earlier in the year and thus too early for the hatching of young chicks which depend on them for food. Mild winters may also encourage pests and diseases to affect invertebrate populations in a negative way during the winter, which again will affect the productivity of nesting birds in the spring. And finally, is it really good news if we have influxes of certain species into the north-west? Does it mean that there is something wrong in their more traditional wintering grounds either here in the UK or in Europe? I don't know, I can't answer these questions. So perhaps I'd better re-phrase the first sentance above:

"Has there ever been a winter which seemed as good for birding as the winter of 2016/17?".........

The meteorlogical winter starts on the first day of December and ends on the last day of February. In most winters during that period I can usually expect to pick up one, perhaps two new UK ticks. In 2016/17 I saw five new birds. Not only that, in the case of two of the five (black-throated thrush and pine bunting) I managed to see two different individuals. I guess that the appearance of these birds, along with that of the dusky thrush in Derbyshire, was a result of the exceptional autumn we had for Siberian vagrants in 2016.

Fig. 1: Dusky thrush in Derbyshire. Found whilst I was in Cyprus at the beginning of December, it was identified, twitched, accepted by British Birds Rarities Committee (BBRC), gone and fortunately refound before I got back.

Fig. 2: Black-throated thrush St. Asaph, North Wales.

Another welcome addition to my UK list during the winter was the Pacific diver in Northumberland. Not exactly local, but it saved me the long drive to Cornwall for the annually returning bird near Penzance. Amazingly even though it obliged by presenting itself to us at point blank range at Druridge County Park, it wasn't even the winner of the best diver of the winter award. That honour went to an awesome white-billed diver cruising down the river near Woodhall Spa, Lincolnshire. Not a lifer for me but a strong contender for the bird of the winter award.

Fig. 3: Pacific diver Northumberland.

Fig. 4: White-billed diver Lincolnshire.

I can't remember a winter as good for geese in the north-west. North Lancashire put on a particularly good show, with several scarce or rare species joining the many thousands of pink-feet around Pilling and Eagland Hill. In a single day it was possible to see around 10,000 pink-footed geese, adult red-breasted goose, up to 30 European white-fronts, several each of tundra and taiga bean, a few barnacle geese, pale-bellied brent goose, greylags, blue phase lesser snow goose, Greenland white-fronted goose and Todd's Canada goose. Nearby around 200 whooper and 30 Bewick's swans and a wintering black redstart were a bonus.

Fig. 5: Red-breasted goose with up to 25 European white-fronts north Lancashire.

Fig. 6: Red-breasted goose.

This was a pattern repeated in many places across the country, with lots of small scattered flocks of European white-fronts and both species of bean goose. One such flock in Essex contained potentially the first genuinely wild lesser white-fronted goose seen in the UK for many a year. An exceptional year for geese! What I can't say is if these scattered flocks represented additional birds to those in the regular wintering flocks, or if they were just the same birds, more thinly spread across the UK. A good winter for birding is not necesserily a good winter for birds.

Fig. 7: Taiga bean goose north Lancashire.

Fig. 8: Juvenile glaucous gull Lyme and Wood Pit tip, Haydock.

White-winged gulls were also around in higher than usual numbers. Locally Pennington Flash had a juvenile glaucous gull on several occasions in the roost and possibly up to three Iceland gulls, with an adult on at least three occasions and a juvenile present on most evenings for a couple of months. The same birds, or others, were seen regularly for a week or so at Lyme and Wood Pit tip at Haydock and in the Newton-le-Willows area, whilst slightly further afield at Gowy Meadows near Chester, at least three glaucous and two Iceland gulls were regularly present. Other local roosts also had visits from both species, with Kumlien's gull also reported from sites in the north-west on a couple of occasions. Nationally the east coast in particular had good numbers of white-wingers, with several birds seen at some sites.

Fig. 9: Adult Iceland gull Vista Road, Newton-le-Willows.

Fig. 10: Juvenile glaucous gull Vista Road, Newton-le-Willows

Other gulls were also around in good numbers, with at least three 2nd winter, a 3rd winter and a couple of adult yellow-legged gulls at Pennington Flash. Mediterranean gulls were present over the winter at the Flash, peaking at four birds, with one in almost complete summer plumage from January and occasionally seen coming to bread.

Fig. 11: 2nd winter Yellow-legged gull, Pennington Flash. This bird spent a single day at the Flash. Note the yellow and black bill.

Fig. 12: This 2nd winter yellow-legged gull with a completely black bill virtually overwintered at the Flash in 2016/17, present on many days from just before Christmas to at least March, it could sometimes be seen coming to bread on the car park.

The north-west also shared in the waxwing invasion of 2016/17. At its peak there were many flocks of 50 or more birds seen throughout the region, with particularly good numbers in North Wales, and locally the VW garage in Warrington was the place to go.

Fig. 13: Waxwing St Asaph.

Egrets have of course been getting commoner for years, but the winter of 2016/17 saw a real explosion of birds. The long predicted yet so far painfully slow colonisation of the UK by cattle egrets now seems a real possibility, with many flocks of four or five birds at several sites across the UK, including up to 10 birds in the north-west alone. Surely breeding will take place somewhere in 2017? Meanwhile great white egrets have also greatly increased dramatically, with double figure counts on the Dee estuary, which also had a spectacular 12 marsh harriers roosting. I managed 12 great white egrets in the same scope view on one occasion from Burton Point. Little egrets are now so common that they are counted in the hundreds at some north-west roosts, including Burton Mere Wetlands and Southport marine lake. Even so 2016/17 seemed a better than average year, with an unprecedented three, possibly four birds present on occasion at Pennington Flash, where previously just one was a good record.

Fig. 14: The cattle egret flock at Burton Mere Wetlands trying to outcompete  a similar sized flock at Southport.

Fig. 15: Unprecidented numbers of great white egrets were on Burton Marsh.

Other highlights for me over the winter included a cracking desert wheatear at Lytham St. Annes, a stunning hooded merganser in Scotland, a slightly dodgy blue rock thrush in Gloucestershire and a wonderful pallid harrier in East Yorkshire, plus the usual early year goodies such as hawfinches, leking black grouse, firecrest and many, many more. So yes, I think it's fair to say that the winter of 2016/17 was a good one for birding!


Fig. 16: Caspian gull Shaw, Oldham also seen at Audenshaw Reservoir.

Fig. 17: Blue rock thrush Stow-on-the-Wold.

Fig. 18: Drake hooded merganser, Clyde. This bird was seen displaying to goldeneye and teal.

Fig. 19: Lesser snow goose with greylags in north Lancashire.

Fig. 20: European white-fronted geese with pink-footed geese in north Lancashire

Fig. 21: Desert wheatear Lytham St Annes. A typical end of year bird, this one was exceptionally obliging.

Fig. 22: Juvenile pallid harrier in Lincolnshire, also seen in East Yorkshire in January. The most beautiful of the harrier species at this age in my opnion.

Fig. 23: This 1st winter long-tailed duck spent the whole of the winter on Pennington Flash, and was one of several in the north-west.

Fig. 24: Up to five scaup spent the whole of the winter at Pennington Flash, almost unprecidented in recent times, and this was an event repeated at many reservoirs and lakes across the region.

Saturday, 16 February 2013

European White-fronted Goose Old Coach Road

You know it's been a good day when you can't decide if Waxwings on your doorstep are the highlight! This afternoon I decided to get the bike out for the first time this year, and headed off down the bypass. I bumped into Damian in Dairy Farm Road, who told me that there was a large flock of Pink-footed Geese in the fields where Dairy Farm Road joins the Old Coach Road. He was right, I would estimate easily 3000 birds. The sun was against me so I tried to outflank them by going down the farm track / public footpath to the right of the field and they didn't seem particularly worried, and most just carried on feeding. Eventually I got into a good position and scanned through them.

I always find scanning through a settled flock of Pink-feet to be quite a relaxing experience, their soft chunnering is quite reassuring and calming. Then one looked straight at me and it had a white forehead. Surely a White-front? However some Pink-feet can show quite a lot of white and I wanted to see more to be sure. I needn't have worried, after a minute or two it walked into full view and I could clearly see black barring on its belly, and the sharp contrast of the black on pale brown made this a European White-front rather than the darker Greenland White-front. Excellent, only my second ever European White-front in St Helens.

Year 134


European White-fronted Goose with Pink-footed Geese.


The flock coming in to land, Old Coach Road. Green Lane, Catchdale Moss.

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Dolydd Hafren MWT, Powys

European White-fronted Goose 2 ads
Goosander 7 (m & 6ff)
Little Egret 1
Chiffchaff 1 singing
Teal 10

Year 168 (European White-fronted Goose)


European White-fronted Geese. The bird in the foreground is a very pale bird, with a very well marked face.


This was the first time I have been to this conveniently placed Wildlife Trust reserve, which is just off the road from Welshpool to Newtown, and sits on the banks of the River Severn.


This is the time of year for flowering trees and willow species are as lovely as any.

Thursday, 5 February 2026

Russian white-fronted geese, Martin Mere


Martin Mere joined in with the influx of Russian white-fronted geese today, with four flying around the mere for 10 minutes. It appeared that they were going to land on Plover Field but finally they headed off south, a family party of two adults and two juveniles by the looks of it. 

I thought the day couldn't get any better, but then I managed to relocate a knot that was reported yesterday, only my third sighting ever on the reserve. Other birds today included 32 oystercatchers, 29 ruff, 50 black-tailed godwits, ring-necked duck, three species of egret, plus the usual wildfowl and raptors. Not a bad day. 

Saturday, 23 January 2016

Horsebere Flood Alleviation Pool and some other stuff

Today we headed south west, into Gloucestershire to look for the penduline tits which have recently been at Horsebere Flood Alleviation Pool on the east side of the city. We found the place easily enough, straight down the M6 / M5 to junction 11 then onto the A40 / A417 for a couple of miles and park in the layby opposite the Premier Inn. Even better, the birds were showing well when we arrived, a bit of a relief because they have been prone to disappearing for a couple of hours at a time. I say showing well, good decent views through the scopes and not bad through the bins, but not good enough for photography for me, and nowhere near as close as the birds we saw last year in Devon. After watching them for about 20 minutes, they flew high and away over the Premier Inn.

This was our cue to leave because we had other places to get to, including our next stop, Slimbridge WWT just 16 miles to the south. Wildfowl numbers had picked up since our last visit in November, and there were now 150 European white-fronted geese and 140 Bewick's swans (though we only saw about 68). Also here, five Greenland white-fronted geese, six common cranes, peregrine, female scaup, 600 golden plover  and thousands of wigeon, teal and lapwings. A very impressive spectacle. The Greenland white-fronted geese were with their European counterparts and weren't quite so easy to pick out as I expected. They were clearly darker birds with a more powerful orange bill compared to the pink billed Europeans, and when the flock took off they looked larger birds, but not a lot in it to my eyes.

Having seen these birds so well and so quickly, we decided to head back to Gloucester for another look at the penduline tits, and I was glad we did. Once again we were lucky because the birds had been missing for nearly two hours since we left them, but by the time we arrived back they had also returned. This time they were a little closer but spent most of their time out of view and right down at the base of the bulrushes, only occasionally popping into view. A real pain in the backside! However, eventually one did climb a little higher and I got excellent scope views before both birds flew into a hawthorn bush near the layby. They were a bit more distant here but stayed on full view for a couple of minutes allowing us to get a good look at them. Still not great for photography though.

We could have hung around longer and probably could have got some good photos eventually, but we wanted to try for the overwintering hoopoe in Staffordshire at Hinksford. Our luck held again and we  dropped right onto the bird showing at less than 10m, albeit largely obscured by long grasses. Eventually though it flew and landed for a few minutes on the fence at fairly close range, before flying again further away. An excellent end to the day.

Year: 139 (Penduline tit, hoopoe etc.)



Penduline tits.


Horsebere Flood Alleviation Pool.


Bewick's swan.



Scaup.


Common cranes.



Hoopoe.



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