Monday, January 2, 2023

Good Start 2023

Insightful readers will see that Another Bird Blog has been out of action again. 

This enforced sabbatical came about through the twin perils of Christmas & New Year coupled with the predicted back end of North America storms that landed on Britain’s doorstep. The result was birding and ringing on the back burner and two morning’s ringing throughout December. It’s a sorry picture but one that I hope to remedy and not repeat in 2023. 

New Year’s Day 2023 saw the thirteen strong family at home for the sometimes traditional Meat and Potato Pie with Mushy Peas, a dish that even picky kids might eat if bribed with a promise of cheesecake to follow. Washing the pots took more time than eating the food. 

New Year's Day

After the week’s marathon binge a morning in the January sunshine was called for so I struck out north out Rawcliffe/Pilling way on Monday January 2. The sun shone warm at 0900, so balmy that the BBC are already claiming that 2023 is the hottest year on record due to man-made climate change. 

Eyes peeled and cap pulled low I drove with care to avoid the prowling year listers with crazed looks in their eyes, out in force for Chase The Bird 2023. However their whereabouts are both easy to predict and to then avoid via a perusal of WhatsApp and the use of tried and tested alternative locations. Originality of thought or deed is not their collective strength. 

On the route to Rawcliffe came a super start to the year when I spotted a “shortie”, a Short-eared Owl, approaching from the left and heading my way. Electric windows are a great invention, and as ever the switched on camera lay on the passenger seat for a rapid fire. It’s been ages since I saw a shortie, a largely nocturnal and crepuscular (dusk and dawn) hunter, but still one of the most active British owls during daylight. 

Short-eared Owl
 
Exhilarated by this sighting I stopped at another farm I know well but didn’t anticipate the double whammy of another owl, this time a Little Owl, a species increasingly difficult to locate. Data shows that Little Owl numbers have shrunk by 65% over a 25-year period through a combination of the usual suspects; over development of their sought after farming landscape combined with shrinking populations of certain prey items like beetles, crickets and the humble earthworm.

Little Owl

My own thoughts are that part of the problem for Little Owls is that they mostly share habitat with introduced game birds like Pheasants and Red-legged Partridges, non-native birds released in vast numbers throughout the autumn and winter by the shooting industry. Historically this is especially true for this part of Lancashire where the loss of Little Owls began around the same time as the large increase in the numbers and locations of shoots, time-on-their-hands shooters and the release of many thousands of game birds into new locations.

Pheasants especially are known to hoover up huge areas of land of the same prey upon which Little Owls and other birds depend. 

Here’s some recommended further reading about a serious ecological problem, some might say "disaster" being allowed to take place in the British countryside. 


It was tempting to stick around and enjoy the owl, even though it did little but sit around watching and waiting for the next meal, a bit like the Christmas we just enjoyed.

I drove towards Pilling along the Lancaster Road where a large flood gave indication of recent rains. Distant across the field/lake were circa 250 Lapwings, 130 Black-headed Gulls and many thousands of Starlings. There was a shoot nearby with loud bangs that sent the flocks wheeling into the air a couple of times although they mostly all came back, if to a slightly different spot on the expanse of water. 
 
Lapwings

New Year Floods

Further along the main road I saw two Kestrels that may have been paired where neither of them were up for a photo and in any case the picture would have been into the light. Better luck next time from a mental note, a different time of the day, and a more accommodating moment. 

By now I was headed towards Cockerham and Braides Farm where Whooper Swans have hung around off and on since arriving from Iceland in September. Counts have been up to 400 when maxed out, more like 250 today. Golden Plovers, Lapwings and Curlews were dotted across the more distant fields with a rough count of 300, 250 and 250 respectively. 

Whooper Swans

Our ringing site is yet to receive a visit in earnest and there's no the prospect in sight by looking at the latest forecasts. When I visited to top up the supplementary food all was quiet with single figures of the regulars but a distinct lack of Linnets, the main focus of our project. 

All we can do is hope that the forecasters get it wrong! Keep looking in folks.


8 comments:

Yvonne said...

Sorry about the Little Owl's problems of finding food, courtesy of human interference. That seems to be a reoccuring theme in many places these days. Your photos of the owls are beautifully crisp. So lovely to look at. I love the field of swans also. Until the weather cooperates, one must have patience which is difficult at times. I hope the Linnets begin visiting soon.

Yvonne said...

Forgot to mention, I do wish you and your family a Happy New Year. May you reap all of the best life has to offer.

eileeninmd said...

Hello Phil,
Happy New Year! Awesome sightings and photos. It is sad to hear the Little Owl numbers are shrinking. I love both the owls and would love to see the Lapwings. Nice sighting of the Whooper Swans. Happy New Year, I wish you all the best in 2023. Take care, enjoy your day and the week ahead.

Jenn Jilks said...

That was an eventful trip!
(ツ) from Jenn Jilks , ON, Canada!

Wally Jones said...

Dinner looks scrumptious! And there's cheesecake, too?

Oh, nice birds.

But seriously, at least you were able to ring in the New Year properly by getting out on Monday although likely suffering the dreaded effects of "meat and potato pie hangover". We are also cheered by the fact you resisted the urge to reduce the number Britain's twitcher population by driving carefully.

A two-owl day would certainly have made my day special! Flooded areas potentially offer a windfall of food for many species of birds as you discovered. Lovely Lapwings!

We all hope our "climate specialist reporters" get it wrong but their record so far is so outstanding that we can set our clocks by when they say it will next rain. There is no hope. We are all destined to --- wait a minute. Our tee-vee weather presenter said it would be raining this morning. It's sunny and no wind. I gotta go birding. See ya later.


Gini and I once again wish you and all thirteen family members a wonderful New Year! And we certainly hope there will be leftovers.

Lowcarb team member said...

A thirteen strong family gathering for New Year enjoying that pie sounds good, followed by cheese-cake, extra yummy.

Lovely to see the owls, especially the short-eared owl in flight.

Down South we've had a wet start to the new Year ... lets see what happens next!

My good wishes.

All the best Jan

Rostrose said...

Dear Phil,
you have posted some good bird photos again. Your shortie photo is particularly great - spontaneous and caught in flight! And then there is the brilliant close-up of the little owl <3

You wrote to me that you almost visited Costa Rica, but then changed your mind. Where did you go instead? By the way, in CR (Tortuguero National Park) we met a nice bird watcher from England and his wife, they both seemed to feel very comfortable there. (They originally planned a trip to Namibia, but then decided to go to CR...)
I wish you and your loved ones good luck and health in the new year! 🥂🍀😌 And of course lots of enjoyable bird sightings!
All the best, Traude
https://rostrose.blogspot.com/2023/01/costa-rica-1-kapitel-einleitung.html

Mary Howell Cromer said...

Well Phil, it was certainly good to come and visit your blog when you are introducing Christmas meat and potato pie along with mushy peas. I am not sure what mushy pears are, but I love creamed peas and so would imagine that I would enjoy your style as well. I must say also that your vision and photo of the shortie made my heart so happy. If you get a chance I have posted for the first time in 6 months. If you scroll down just atop where comments are it says "see more", as in continued I presume. I have never seen a blog post split like that before, even when I once shared 100 images. This one has 75 ;) Many of my best shares are of the Short-eared owls from last season. I absolutely love them, and could hardly wait their return this season. The landowners however are in great favor of goose and duck hunters and I know get payment from them. The landowners purposefully this year for first time in 5 years mowed the hay fields as short and cropped as a golf course, so the shorties had no place to hunker down. The Northern Harriers came, but only briefly for the same reason. I go down the one mile lane once so full of life and tears come. They have ruined it in the past for the plains birds and their nesting grounds, but they have really done it this time. UGH. Happy New Year and tell the family hi for me from cold, rainy Kentucky~

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