Friday, July 8, 2011

Double Report

There’s not an awful lot to mention from this morning’s birding except returning waders stealing the limelight, as they often do in July, when they are usually more obvious and easier to seek out than skulking, moulting warblers hiding in thick, summery vegetation.

The morning started with a Barn Owl again at 0730, one of the Burned House Lane birds patrolling the fields next to the Z bends with the double white lines; so I daren’t stop, but instead glanced left then motored on to Pilling for my morning walk.

At Pilling Water I approached the wildfowler’s pools with care as birds are often tucked below the bank, unseen until a body is too close, and then as if to prove it, 11 bright-plumaged, fresh in from Iceland Black-tailed Godwits flew noisily off before I could drop any lower onto the open ground that surrounds the pools. The godwits caused 5 Oystercatchers and 3 Redshanks to fly off, but a single Little-ringed Plover stayed on the pool, together with a Common Sandpiper and a couple of Lapwings. We associate Little-ringed Plovers with the stony margins of water courses but on migration they aren’t that fussy.

Black-tailed Godwit

Little-ringed Plover

On the outer part of Broadfleet and the surrounding marsh I counted another 4 Common Sandpiper, 70+ Lapwing, 22 Redshank, 40+ Curlew and 2 Grey Heron. My passerine count was almost identical to recent days with 8 Goldfinch, 6 Greenfinch, 8 Pied Wagtail and 2 Meadow Pipit, with still the Linnet flock but their numbers now increased to a healthy looking 60+ birds.

Linnet

Meadow Pipit

I’ve been looking for a Wheatear for a week now without any success but finally found one today on the stones below the sea wall but it didn’t hang around the spot to take my meal worm, and instead carried on in the direction of Fluke Hall.

I just sat quietly on the stile minding my own business when three Carrion Crows pointed me in the direction of a Stoat, running towards me on the landward side of the sea wall. The crows harried the Stoat from above, calling and drawing attention to the little predator, but when it spotted me it turned tail then ran back to where it had come from, before eventually disappearing into the long grass. Stoats are fairly frequent along here, making a living from bunnies and other small animals, carrion and probably ground nesting birds. I’ve missed a few photo opportunities lately when the creatures have spotted me on their route ahead, and I hope one day soon to meet face to face again with the engaging little creature.

Stoat

In contrast to my lack of numbers birding, the latest totals from our Fylde Ringing Group is that we ringed another 265 birds in June, more in fact than in both January and February, but a lesser total than the migration months of March, April or May. More than half of June’s 265 birds were accounted for by 110 Tree Sparrow youngsters from nest boxes and 36 Swallow chicks. Pied Flycatchers came in third place with a total of 27 birds, a small number of adults but mainly nestlings. Now we are all looking forward to the birds of autumn time!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

A Tale Of Two Halves

Another shower-dodging, breezy morning saw me try my luck at Conder Green where I bumped into PW on the windswept viaduct. We chatted briefly whilst both looking west at the incoming clouds and bemoaning the summer, watched the local House Martins battling over the salt marsh, then went our separate ways with better luck we hoped.

On the pool and creek I counted 1 Grey Heron, 9 Common Sandpiper, 2 Spotted Redshank, 4 Greenshank, 2 Black-tailed Godwits, 55 Redshank, 12 Oystercatcher and 5 Curlew before I headed south to more familiar territory of Pilling. If only our locally occurring Greenshanks were as accommodating as the few I saw in Egypt.

Greenshank

Oystercatcher

At Lane Ends the sky to the west looked dark to say the least as I set off to Pilling Water thinking the rain had moved around and north out over the bay; no such luck as I got the tail end of a heavy shower and a good soaking in exchange for 1 Reed Warbler, 40 Linnets, 1 Greenfinch, 2 Kestrel, 5 Pied Wagtail, 3 Common Sandpipers, 1 Grey Heron, 28 Curlew, 18 Redshank and 80 Lapwings.

A Pilling Sky

I called it a morning, drying out at home then did a little garden ringing pm when the wind dropped and the showers died out. Goldfinches are back in numbers for the irresistible Niger feed and I also caught 3 Blackbirds – adult female and 2 juveniles, one of them in the stages of growing its blacker male tail feathers. Also 2 Wrens and a juvenile Robin – the fault bar mid-way through the tail tells a tale of changeable food availability of late.

Goldfinch - adult

Goldfinch- juvenile

Blackbird - juvenile

Blackbird - juvenile male

Wren

Robin - juvenile

Robin- juvenile

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

A Lunchtime Lament

Lunchtime and it’s raining and windy now, bang on midday, just as the BBC’s forecast promised, unlike their hint they might use my Little Owl picture for the end shots of the North West weather last weekend. As I sat waiting for the programme and a miserable claim to fame they dropped the weather, in fact cut the whole local news on two evenings in favour of the grunts, groans and over-hype that is Wimbledon fortnight. So Eno, I may not send any more pictures, even my Linnets.

That’s mainly what I ended up doing this morning in the few hours of bright skies, taking more pictures of Linnets. They are wary, a difficult species to approach; perhaps an inbuilt aversion to man from the nineteenth century when wild Linnets were kept in caged captivity as a domestic songbird and the population as a whole plummeted? They seem to be making a bit of a comeback this year - let's hope so.

Linnets have short broad bills which can’t cope with very big seeds or those difficult to extract so they feed mainly on plants whose seeds are attached to the stem, such as dock, chickweed or the plant shown below which is I think redshank/lady’s thumb. Linnets also pick up seeds from the ground, at Pilling this includes the tide wrack and seeds deposited at the base of the marshy grasses.

Linnet

Linnet

Linnet

Linnet

Linnet

There were about 40 Linnets knocking about the tideline this morning, together with 14 Goldfinch and 5 Greenfinch, plus a gang of 10 to 12 Pied Wagtails and 2 Meadow Pipits again, just as a few days ago.

Goldfinch

Pied Wagtail

I arrived fairly early this morning, just as the sun rose high enough to send the Barn Owl hurrying off from Pilling Water and then home towards Damside with the safety of its dark barn. Also at Damside the Kestrels seem near to fledging, with much wing stretching and noisy calls. The wildfowler’s pools held 3 Teal and a Common Sandpiper, with a small quota of Redshank, Lapwing and Oystercatcher.

At Lane Ends I counted 2 Willow Warbler, 7 Tufted Duck, 4 Little Grebe and that ultra-rarity, a Song Thrush but I don’t suppose it's a sighting that will set the pagers buzzing?

Song Thrush

Monday, July 4, 2011

The Evening Job

I stayed home yesterday and did a little garden ringing, saving energy for the evening job. At 5pm Ian and I met up with members of North Lancashire Ringing Group for a session at their biggest Sand Martin colony on the River Lune, a location with approximately 600 nest holes in the river bank and where the group has captured over 1000 birds already this year.

The colony is on the other side of the river from the access point so entailed a walk across the river to the opposite bank where, after emptying flooded wellies, we set up shop. If I say that we caught 380 Sand Martins it might explain that the evening was too busy to take many photographs. From an initial breakdown from Richard Du Feu (thanks Richard) the 380 Sand Martins were made up of 293 new birds, 82 recaptures and 5 controls (birds ringed elsewhere). Two of the controls came from Icklesham, Sussex and Merseyside, the others are as yet unknown.

Already this year the group have captured a breeding Sand Martin with a Spanish, Madrid ring and the same bird was recaptured again last night.

Sand Martin

Madrid ring

Ian G and Ian H

Read more about Sand Martins and North Lancs Ringing Group here.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Morning Post

A calm clear night promised a morning of ringing without the nagging wind of recent weeks. But the temperature dropped so much overnight that when I switched on the wipers to clear the dew laden glass the blades were in a semi-frozen state and dragged slowly across the windscreen. Thirty minutes later at 0530 Ian and I had our nets up at Out Rawcliffe but with me still in a jacket and woolly hat, waiting for the sun to rise and warm the air.

Our catch was very similar to last week, with yet more adult Willow Warblers in stages of their full moult, a number of 3J Whitethroat and Goldfinch, but with the season now into July there was a further lack of juvenile Willow Warblers and no sign of any Sedge Warbler success.

We processed 24 birds, 15 new and 9 recaptures. New: 3 Whitethroat, 4 Goldfinch, 4 Willow Warbler, 2 Blackcap, 1 Great-spotted Woodpecker and 1 Great Tit. Recaptures: 3 Whitethroat, 3 Goldfinch, 2 Sedge Warbler and 1 Great Tit. So, a good range of species but lacking any substance to the overall total for our 2 x 5 hour effort.

Great-spotted Woodpecker

Blackcap

Goldfinch - adult

Goldfinch - juvenile

The birding morning was similarly quiet with 2 Grey Heron, 2 Buzzard, a female Sparrowhawk, 4 Skylark, 2 Corn Bunting, 1 Mistle Thrush, 18 Goldfinch and several Tree Sparrow, with a single overhead Raven heading east again. A nearby field held a flock of post-breeding Lapwings with a minimum of 130 birds. A slight oddity of the morning came in the form of 3 Siskin high overhead but heading south.

Lapwing

My trips to the moss wouldn’t be complete without sighting of a Little Owl. Sometimes they are not in the expected spots and it may take a little extra looking to locate one, like today when I passed likely looking but vacant corners then spotted a familiar round blobby shape on a distant telegraph pole.

Little Owl

Friday, July 1, 2011

Numbers Up

There were mixed but definite signs of autumn today at Pilling with an influx of post breeding Curlew, a gang of Pied Wagtails both young and old, and a build-up of the Linnet flock.

Naturally enough I’d done Lane Ends first to note 18/20 Blackbirds, 2 Blackcap, 2 Reed Warbler, 1 Willow Warbler, 1 Jay and the hidden but vocal Little Grebes.

The high tide was due at midday, but at 28ft it lacks any height to push many waders from the shores of Preesall and Knott End and then up to Lane Ends. But the job can often be left to the microlight aircraft, and today two of the annoying, clattering machines disturbed the entire Curlew flock from the sands and up to Pilling Water/Lane Ends but helped me to a count for of 365 - very high for 1st July. There wasn’t much else in the way of wader or wildfowl except 1 Common Sandpiper, 35 Oystercatcher, 22 Redshank and 85 Lapwing and 70 Shelduck, the latter a slight increase on recent counts due to inland breeding birds moving to the coast.

Curlew

As the tide came into Pilling Water it concentrated, previously scattered Pied Wagtails into a gang of 19 birds, 5 or 6 adults and the remainder birds of the year. The finches were more difficult to count as they alternately mixed together then broke up into their separate species groups, but I eventually came to figures of 40+Linnet, 18 Goldfinch and 8 Greenfinch. After a number of sightings of Wheatear this week I hoped for my own this morning, taking a spring trap and meal worms, but when I sat down into the Wheatear rocks with the camera I had to settle for a few pictures of Linnets instead.

Pied Wagtail

Pied Wagtail

Linnet - male

Linnet - juvenile

The Fluke Hall stretch of coast was uneventful, with 7 Skylark, 5 Grey Heron, 2 Stock Dove and a smattering of more Redshank, Oystercatcher and Lapwing.

The weekend weather forecast looks ok and maybe we’ll get in a spot of ringing.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Lookout Post

I’ve posted a few owl pictures recently which prompted a blog reader to ask about daylight owls. Not all our UK species are strictly nocturnal; in fact all of them hunt at mainly dawn or twilight, but also occasionally in full daylight, especially at this time of year when they all have young owlets to feed. As the UK is in the Northern hemisphere the summer daylight hours can be long e.g. at the moment it is light from 0330 to 2200 hours, which restricts owls' night time hunting, therefore it is not unusual to see owls in the early morning when they can hunt without disturbance before us humans are up and about.

Having said all of the above a Little Owl on the fence post at Hambleton today confounded my theories by being still up and about at 1130am when owls should be at a daytime roost and Homo sapiens are ready for a morning coffee. The owl wasn’t roosting at all and became very animated as it not only watched that I didn’t get too close, but searched for food on the ground below, eye-balled a passing pedestrian and took time out to look for overhead dangers from the local Buzzards, Kestrels or Sparrowhawks.

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

Little Owl

I also checked the Swallows at Hambleton today where I knew one nest to be ready for ringing the chicks; from that nest I added another five youngsters to the year’s total but proceedings have come to a virtual halt now as I wait for the second broods. When I looked in the “black shed”, the adult female was sat tight so I lifted her off, checked for the five eggs, and as she was without a ring, fitted her with one then took a portrait shot before placing her quickly but gently back. She stayed put as I closed the shed door.

Swallow

Many species are tolerant of being lifted off a nest and it’s all a question of knowing when and how to do it and being aware of species that cannot be safely lifted from a nest. When I eventually ring the youngsters from the black shed there will be a record of the complete family apart from the male: when and where the young were born together with data about the female parent plus information on the stages and final outcome of the nest from egg laying to fledging.

Yet another brood of young Swallows now close to fledging sat unflinching in the shed door as I took their photographs because they are well used to people in and out on a daily basis. But my Swallows are now so far behind with their first and any second nests that a third brood is highly unlikely for any pair, so we really need some decent weather through July and August to consolidate the limited success so far.

Swallow
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