We have 0900 starts for now until the days lengthen but amazingly or not, our garden Dunnocks and Great Tits are already in song? How do they know?
Great Tit - CC-BY-SA-3.0
There was sunshine this morning so I kicked off at Linnet Square and dropped yet another bucket of seed at the catching spot where dummy poles mark the line of our whoosh net. Tracks and holes in the soil told me that our seed had been found by small mammals and deer.
Trouble is, the mild, wet weather and the Linnets themselves have conspired to make catching impossible since August. The past three winters have seen a number of counts around the 400/500 mark but this season’s average is around 130 only with and a total catch of just 28, way below our target. The count this morning was 150/160 very mobile Linnets and several Chaffinches, none of which stopped to use our seed while natural food seems still plentiful. The sowing mix the farmer uses is so good that the resultant seed seems to last right through the winter until the flock disperses in March.
Linnets
Linnet Square
There was the usual Kestrel, 2 Stock Dove and a single Little Egret.
When fifteen minutes later I stopped at Conder Green the effect of the continued mild weather was noted again by way of a female/first winter Marsh Harrier. A "Gold Top", circling over the back of the pool and behind the bund, pursued all the way by a complaining Magpie.
Marsh Harrier
It was roughly 20/25 years ago that Marsh Harriers were something of a rarity in this part of Fylde, central Lancashire. It was around that time that Marsh Harriers began to breed in the northernmost part of the county at Silverdale, since when the species has never looked back by increasing its spread and numbers into more southern parts of the county.
In recent years the harriers seem able to survive through the winter months by preying on the abundant wildfowl in their chosen wetlands. There have been sporadic attempts to breed on farmland here in Fylde but with very limited success.
The harrier was the highlight of the pool with little else to cheer except the continued and consistent presence of 140+ Teal in the tidal creeks. Otherwise it was 15 Redshank, 4 Curlew, 24 Wigeon and singles of Little Grebe, Little Egret and Grey Heron.
Little Egret
Grey Heron
Teal
There was a second Grey Heron at Glasson Dock along with 25 Tufted Duck but zero Goldeneye. The Goldeneyes tend to fly into Glasson Dock at the onset of ice and snow. Our wintry days with zero temperatures have so far been counted on one hand.
I looked for the harrier in the fields beyond the pool with no luck except for two quite separate gaggles of geese, 20 Greylags and 19 Pink-footed Geese. Never the twain shall meet.
Glasson Dock
Greylags
Pink-footed Geese
By 11am clouds rolled in and rain began to fall. I reluctantly headed home after an interesting few hours and a forecast for Tuesday of a decent day.
Andy thinks we should try for a catch of Linnets but I’m not so sure.
Nice, sharp pictures you took! As an outsider looking in I would say those are some great birds you are seeing but I guess we get used to our usual spots and the birds that are there.
ReplyDeleteanother great post Phil. I've enjoyed romping around UK with you. Whatever you choose to share in 2020 will bring a smile to my face. Happy New Year.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this virtual tour with you. We have not been very far so it was nice to get out and about :-) I was delighted this morning to see a goldfinch in our garden, the first in ages, and I feel if there is one around there must be more closeby. Last evening the Little Owls were very active on the neighbour's roof with lots of noise going. It was too dark though to see if there were more than two. I live in hopes.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year, Diane
Great shots here, as always, Phil.
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking up at https://image-in-ing.blogspot.com/2019/12/happy-chinese-new-year.html. Have a great year in 2020!
I love learning new terms when reading everyone's blogs. Dummy poles? Whoosh net? That's an added bonus to viewing such beautiful photos of birds. Wish I could be there to see them in person.
ReplyDeleteHappy healthy New Year to you and yours. And may the new year bring more joys in nature photography.
ReplyDeleteWorth a Thousand Words
Nice pics! Especially like the Greylags.
ReplyDeleteteals and geese look so cute....
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year
Great photos Phil. A non birder such as myself would probably say I am glad there is plentiful food for the birds this winter. The gardener in me says this mild weather is confusing all my spring flowering plants to come into bloom far too early. None of us know where we are with the changing seasons these days. May I wish you a happy and healthy 2020 and thank you for your kind and often witty comments on my blog.
ReplyDeleteAwesome shots!
ReplyDeleteHappy 2020!
Rain start and rain later for here. It's that time of year for us. Happy New Years. - Margy
ReplyDeleteLovely photographs of birds, but Glasson Dock looks a nice place :)
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan