Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Short And Sweet

At last I was out to the old patch for a couple of hours where it really felt like the two weeks and more since my last visit, not just the elapsed time but the fact that while I was away the weather changed from autumn to winter; and now on December 1st the shortest day beckons. Fortunately the Fylde coast still has no real snow, just a smattering this afternoon to remind us that it is almost everywhere in the UK except around here where the sun shone brightly for me, if only for an hour or two.

Luckily I remembered the way down Wheel Lane, past a watching Kestrel to the stubble field, where the “Beware Flooded Road” sign should now read “Beware Ice” but it didn’t. I think the Whooper Swans have been around the whole time I was away and their numbers didn’t disappoint today at about 125 somewhat distant birds where their constant social activities keep the shallow water from freezing completely. I stepped out of the car to get a better look across the field and flushed a single Snipe from a sunny, thawing spot in the grass, but apart from the swans and a few dozen Pink-footed Geese, the entire fields seemed devoid of much else.

Kestrel

Whooper Swan

At Damside I stopped to clock the regular Little Owl near the sewage works where I also counted over 350 Curlew and 40 Lapwing, the Curlew using the longer grassed field, but the Lapwings split equally between that and the sheep grazed field opposite.

Lapwing

Lane Ends was quiet with both pools almost completely frozen, with just enough open water to allow the mixed ethnicity Mallards breathing space. Smaller birds were few and far between, with just 5 Robin, 4 Blackbird, 8 Moorhen and a single Pied Wagtail entered in my notebook. From the car park I counted 3 Little Egret out on the marsh and a male Sparrowhawk leaving the trees behind me before it continued along the sea wall. The sun still shone out so I continued up to Pilling Water where many hundreds of wildfowl fed in the partly frozen channel and others murmured along the grazed marsh. There were so many, packed so tight, some very distant, and with my reluctance to scare them off, my count is more a guesstimate; 500 Wigeon, 600 Teal and 300 Mallard, but if anyone cares to do a recount from the partial view below the figures may be different.

Wildfowl

Wigeon

Wigeon

Also up here, 2 Meadow Pipit, 2 Grey Heron flying inland, another Little Egret, plus 4 Snipe in the partially frozen ditches.

Snow clouds rolled in from the darker south and east as light flurries of the white stuff broke out, and at 1430 the light began to fade. Oh for the Cyprus light and sun! But instead I rode to Gulf Lane hoping for a winter afternoon Barn Owl or maybe a second frosty day Little Owl. Not quite, but I did get winter thrushes, 40 or so Fieldfares and 2 Pied Wagtails. Soon it was over, the weak snow persisted enough to keep the sky dark and by 1530 gulls and geese headed for their roosts, as did I.

Fieldfare

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

A Pile Of Old Stuff

Still no birding for me as I try to acclimatise to zero temperatures whilst clearing 10 days of ice off the car, catching up with children and grandchildren, not to mention 80 e-mails or attacking the mountain of post behind the front door, 50% of which I immediately junked; this despite being on a mailing preference list. Oh well, I suppose it keeps the postman in a job plus the paper recyclers, the leaflet writers, designers, printers and packagers, envelope manufacturers and the local authority waste collection crews.

So as Sue gets on with 2 weeks’ worth of washing I’ll be just as productive and post a few pictures and tales from Cyprus until I hit the local patch tomorrow.

Almost everyone who visits Cyprus tours the glorious Roman remains situated on the Pafos headland. It’s a must. The preserved mosaics alone are stunning, but if piles of old stones don’t turn you on, the birding is pretty interesting even in November but out of the busy migration of spring and autumn. The ruins provide lots of perches for birds, with nooks and crannies where insects abound and where between the sloppy Roman pointing and the fallen stonework, plants take root and sparse vegetation flourishes in the dry climate.

The predominant species here were larks, finches, White Wagtails, Stonechats, equal numbers of Black Redstarts and House Sparrows, plus Hooded Crows with smaller numbers of Sardinian Warblers, Blackcaps and Collared Doves; and of course Blue Rock Thrushes, a species designed just for here.

Blue Rock Thrush

Black Redstart

A Pile Of Old Stones

Collared Dove

Linnet

House Sparrow

Stonechat

I sat at the top of the amphitheatre ruin and wondered whether Birdius Caesar was familiar with the birds I now watched? Bored with watching lions kill Christians every weekend, sick of the running gladiator battles and the endless chariot races, did he slink out of the back row then set off over the headland to watch the Crested Larks and Skylarks or seek out the Blue Rock Thrushes? And did he secretly admire the kites, Kestrels and Hooded Crows that mopped up after the carnage in the arena; and homesick for Italy, did he yearn for the spring migration that would bring Swallows, Hoopoes and even more raptors heading for Europe?

Crested Lark

Skylark

Hooded Crow

Kestrel

Lizards were all around, and I’ll wait for DM to point me in the right direction with names, but they are certainly hard to photograph, scuttling off back into the dark shadows at the hint of a toga, a sandaled foot or a waiting Kestrel.

"I'm Just Hanging Out"

Hey Good Lookin’

After a hard morning’s slog over the red hot tourist trail there’s nothing better than a cold beer, but as every good birder knows, you don’t go anywhere without bins and camera. And taking a few pictures while propped up in the sun isn’t too taxing especially when a Black Red stops by to share your sunbed.

Black Redstart

Pafos, Cyprus

I hope to get out tomorrow but the overnight forecast is snow falling on top of already treacherous ungritted roads so I think I should play that one by ear.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Back To Normal?

Regular readers of Another Bird Blog will have noticed the lack of new posts recently. That’s because Sue and I have been on holiday, in sunny Cyprus; so sunny in fact that for two weeks we didn’t see a single cloud, the daytime temperature climbed to a steady 27 C and I wore a T-shirt and shorts for 14 days – not the same ones every day I hasten to add. Whilst it wasn’t a birding holiday there are bird pictures to post in the next few days and weeks until I get back to normal with local birding and adjusting to the zero or below temperatures we returned to.

In Cyprus we stayed at the XX Hotel as recommended by good friends Alan and Jane, who appreciate a fine hotel when they find one. Knowing of a special hotel is a bit like finding a scarce bird - you don’t mind sharing the details with a few like-minded friends but don’t necessarily wish to post information on the World Wide Web and have every Tom, Dick and Harry come along and spoil it. But for those who really want to know, send me an email and I'll think about it.

So until tomorrow and the next time here are a few pictures to be going on with - birds, blue sky and lizards. And apologies to my blogging friends, I will catch up with you all soon.

Pafos, Cyprus

Crested Lark

Gekko?

White Wagtail

Agama Lizard

Black Redstart

Just When You Thought It Safe To Go In The Water


See You Soon.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Made It

Two days of rain and gales aren't the best motivation for birding, photography or ringing, so the bins haven’t had an outing for 2 days. I couldn’t even have a swim yesterday when the pool was closed because a risk assessment said the glass roof over the water was a hazard in the gales that battered the promenade building. So I crossed the road to Roger's for a haircut, and for anyone that's been there and done that, they will know it's infinitely more dangerous than a bit of flying glass.

Sat at home without blog material I waited until today when the wind lessened and I decided to go out birding with the camera for a few hours.

Knott End is something of a joke to folk around the Fylde, a bit of a one horse village where time stands still, a place where old codgers retire to their semi-detached bungalows and wait for the Grim Reaper to call by. But here’s where you can still buy nails by weight, bread from a baker, meat from a butcher, or if you like, just sit on a bench and watch the world go by. And as I’ve said before, KE can cut the mustard for a bit of leisurely, undemanding birding. It wasn’t the brightest of mornings as I watched the Oystercatchers walking the beach and a couple of Little Egrets feeding in the shallows amongst the Redshanks and Black-headed Gulls. Strangely I could find only a single Twite today, one that sported both metal and coloured rings, and now I understand why photographers aren’t fans of birds wearing rings.

Oystercatcher

Little Egret


Redshank

Twite

Wheel Lane beckoned where I negotiated the flooded road, parked up in the gateway and looked across the flooded stubble. There was a terrific selection of somewhat distant but also numerous birds this morning: 220 Golden Plover, 520 Lapwing, 80 Redshank, 30 Dunlin,6 Snipe, 2 Black-tailed Godwit, 6 Curlew, a single Ruff and 15 Skylark. Most of the Whooper Swans were out on the marsh with a small gang of 33 on the stubble as yet others flew over heading inland.

Black-tailed Godwit

Whooper Swan, Golden Plover, Lapwing

There were waders on the wet fields at Damside too, more Lapwing, Golden Plover and Redshank, but because they were just the other side of Broadfleet where I had just counted, I didn’t add more to the totals. Chaffinch and Blackbird alarm calls from the nearby trees alerted me to the presence of a Kestrel at the top of a telegraph pole, but as the Kestrel flew off the alarms continued. Almost out of my view a Little Owl sat motionless on a branch and rather than disturb it, I let it be and drove off towards Lane Ends as the Chaffinch continued to scold the owl.

Lane Ends produced a few bits and pieces, 18 to 20 Chaffinch attracted in by the abundance of seed left by local animal lovers, 1 Treecreeper, 2 Goldcrest, 6 Blackbird and at least 10 Long-tailed Tits.

Long-tailed Tit

Not much on the pools either, 1 Cormorant on the big pool and 1 Goldeneye on the hidden pool, with 3 Little Egret and 1 Grey Heron out on the marsh.

Cormorant

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Small Is Beautiful

Will and I had a good morning’s ringing, and after four hours of what is essentially work, we longed for a sit down, a wash and brush up, and some grub,but not necessarily in that order. But as we drove off the farm I couldn’t resist another ten minutes action when a Little Owl posed in a roadside tree and almost asked me to take a few photographs.

Little Owl

Little Owl

We’d grabbed a window of weather again, with a cold, frosty, but clear morning start and enjoyed a very successful session after a somewhat slow start. We bagged 44 new birds again, with one recapture, a Goldfinch from a week ago but small finches in general dominating our catch: 16 Goldfinch, 10 Chaffinch, 5 Lesser Redpoll, 4 Siskin, 1 Blue Tit, 2 Great Tit, 1 Song Thrush, 2 Reed Bunting, 1 Fieldfare and 2 Redwing.

Redwing

As normal we arrived early in order to catch thrushes, with nets up in the dark for overnight travellers or local roosting birds, but numbers of thrushes were fairly low this morning with approximately 60 Redwing and 180 Fieldfare seen in the course of the whole morning. This was a low number compared to recent efforts for thrushes, however we weren’t too bothered when as compensation we caught several Lesser Redpoll and Siskin plus good numbers of Goldfinch. There is something quite special about handling the Carduelis group of small, handsome and delicate finches.

Siskin

Siskin

Lesser Redpoll

Lesser Redpoll

Goldfinch

Like thrushes, Reed Buntings were down in comparison with recent days and weeks, and our catch of two birds was the smallest since the spring months, with a maximum of 25 birds about this morning. Reed Buntings can be notoriously difficult to age and sex, especially using ageing criteria of tail wear, because as a bird that feeds on the ground or in low cover, all or part of the tail feathers can wear or be lost quickly. However today we caught an adult female with a rare, text book tail, rounded almost to the point of being squared off.

Reed Bunting – Adult female

Reed Bunting – Adult tail

Although we caught 10 Chaffinch, their numbers moving through were also down to about 60 in total.

Other happenings this morning: 3 Roe Deer, 2 Sparrowhawks (male and female) hunting the plantation, 32 Snipe, 85 Skylark on the stubble field, 1 Kestrel.

Monday, November 8, 2010

In At The Deep End

It wasn’t exactly twitching because Monday is collecting Olivia from school, so a detour to Fleetwood Marine Lake to look for the Great Northern Diver of yesterday wasn’t out of the way. That’s my excuse and I’m sticking to it.

The driving rain of the morning continued as I made my way down to the western end of the lake. The water was choppy and the bird wary of powered boats that kept shooting across to the island and back from the Nautical College headquarters. The light and the rain were so bad I switched to ISO 1600 and got a few bad shots.

Great Northern Diver

Great Northern Diver

The photograph below, courtesy of US Fish and Wildlife Service, shows what a Great Northern Diver look like in the summer in North America where the bird is known as Common Loon.

Common Loon

Also on the lake were 11 Red-breasted Merganser, 3 Goldeneye and 2 Cormorant, with 40 Redshank and 70 Turnstone around the area of the model boat pools. I had left my car at the car park where Turnstones hang out for food that locals throw to the Mute Swans and gulls, and as the rain poured down I took a few shots from the car.

Goldeneye

Turnstone

Turnstone

Turnstone

Starling

The weather forecast for this week is absolutely awful, rain and wind, then more wind and rain, with just a slim chance of a birding window on Wednesday – here’s hoping.
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