Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Barn Owl on the day shift

Overnight rain stopped just after dawn, then just the odd light shower. A southerly wind in the morning shifting to SW in the afternoon 

Middleton Nature Reserve - Janet
A Barn Owl was hunting over the central marshes. It couldn't have hunted during the overnight rain.


Hopefully it has some little beaks to feed

Kestrel also hunting 

Herring Gull with nesting material

This young Coot on the main pond seemed very independent 

Roe Deer 1

Heysham skear - Malcolm 16:30 - 18:00
Sanderling 80 minimum.
I started as soon as the first rocks were being exposed again. Things were looking promising as a flock of c50 Sanderling were milling around just offshore. Four then landed on the innermost rocks.
Three of the four early arrivals 

The location of the above shot is circled. This is only 50m from the promenade 

Unfortunately a Peregrine passed over and all the Sanderling were gone. Later, somewhat further out, I managed to count 80 in three main groups, but there were likely more scattered around, by this time it was a large skear.
Initially they were in smallish groups

But they merged into larger groups, scurrying around like mice.

Sanderling and a Herring gull (1 of c150)

I do look forward to the Spring Sanderling passage, they are my favourite wader!

Knot 16
Knot, plus 2 Sanderling (they get everywhere!)

The Knot landed in the shallows and began probing for food. They were too tightly packed to be after the invertebrates. They were finding small mussels. 

The Knot on the left is swallowing a small mussel. This isn't one of the
new crop of seed mussels, which are still tiny

Bar-Tailed Godwit 1
Curlew 5
Ringed Plover 1 flying purposefully north  

Eider 5 (3 male)
Great Crested Grebe 1
Herring gulls, Eider and Great Crested Grebe



Monday, 18 May 2026

Another Cuckoo and Sanderlings oblige

Overnight rain turned to showers early morning, the last one 09:00. A light breeze initially from the south switched to west.

Cuckoo calling from the wood just inshore of Half Moon Bay car park - Phil Rosser

South shore - Malcolm 09:00 - 10:45
A walk from the saltmarsh to the harbour and back.
Osprey 1 (at least) - I could see one on the post at the end of No.2 outfall from the slipway at the end of the foreshore. A shower started then so I had to stash my optics. When the rain stopped I was just past Red Nab and there was no sign of the Osprey. I checked the harbour and was heading back when an Osprey appeared at 10:15, being followed by gulls. It must have come from the south or east.





The gulls get particularly nervous in the breeding season
As well as being harassed, the tide was getting a bit high for its favoured fishing area between the outfalls, so it settled on the rails of No.2 outfall briefly.

Almost managed to read its blue ring, but not quite!

It then returned to the post at the end of No.2 outfall and was still there as I was leaving the sea wall.
This shot shows No.2 outfall, the yellow arrow pointing to the Osprey 
on the post at the end

This gull has a Pipefish and is taking it away to work
out how/if to eat it. Blackpool Tower behind.

Carrion Crow still sat on the nest on one of the harbour platforms 

Linnet 1 at the saltmarsh 2 near the waterfall 
Rock Pipit 3 minimum. One on No.2 outfall, one each at the lighthouse and waterfall.
This is the lighthouse bird with a bill full of goodies for the kids

They don't normally fly down to the nest hole on the vertical wall when they know they are being watched. Perhaps this one knew that I couldn't actually see the hole from where I was.

This is the waterfall bird, with one of the dredgers behind
Eider pair flew SE
Curlew 5 together came from the north side and settled on the mud

Janet had a bit of a mammal themed walk.....

Weasel on Middleton Nature Reserve 

Common Whitethroat also on MNR. All the regular warblers heard
except Grasshopper 

Vole sp on the saltmarsh 


Heysham skear - Malcolm 15:45 - 17:00
These spring tides go out very quickly. I started as the first skear rocks were being exposed, and by the time I finished a huge expanse of skear was open.
Eider pair + 1 male
Red-breasted Merganser 1 male
Great Crested Grebe 2 + 1
Little Egret 2
Oystercatcher not counted 
Curlew 2 (it felt strange without the constant calling of Whimbrel that there has been of late)
Bar-Tailed Godwit 2
Bar-Tailed Godwit 

Knot 2 + 1
Solitary Knot, the other two had already flown off to the north

By this time there was a nice onshore breeze, just enough to colour the inshore margins, bringing shrimps and other invertebrates close to the shore. They were everywhere, and the quickly ebbing tide leaves them in the shallows. This was in a clear pool that was just draining. It's not a brown shrimp, but a shrimp of some description, it is about 2cm long. It is accompanied by its shadow, but another similar sized invertebrate makes a brief appearance too.

Both invertebrates from the above clip circled here

Conditions felt right for Sanderling. And I managed to find one 

Then more began arriving in groups from 2 to 20. They came from further
north, presumably where they had been feeding 
At least 55 Sanderling in total.
They moved quickly along the skear edges. I suspect that when after such relatively large and slow moving prey, it counts to get to new feeding areas first. I've joined a couple of clips together here to give a sense of the activity.


A variety of stages of moult to breeding plumage

Watch the bird bottom right here. It ejects a pellet towards the end of the clip.


Sanderling ejecting a pellet

Sunday, 17 May 2026

Cuckoo provides a bit of entertainment

A heavy shower at 07:00 then dry and largely sunny. A light west wind.

Stone Jetty
Nick Godden

6.40-7.55am, sadly I couldn’t stay for the incoming tide

Eider 45
Great crested grebe 2
Arctic skua 1 dark morph
Common tern 2
Sandwich tern 1
Cuckoo male landed on end of Jetty, mobbed by rock pipits then flew off to south
Swallow 12 N


Heysham South Harbour Wall (6.45 – 8.45 am) - Pete Crooks
Osprey – seemingly regular individual with right leg blue darvic ring eating a fish on the marker post at the end of Heysham Stage Two outfall from 7.00 to 8.00 am
11 Gannet – very distant offshore
9 Auk sp. – all distant in flight
4 Common Scoter – flew into the Bay
2 Great Crested Grebe – flew into the Bay
5 Sandwich Tern
14 Sanderling – single group flew out of the Bay

The above two reports are extracts from the complete reports posted on LDBWS website.

https://lancasterbirdwatching.org.uk/sightings/


Delayed Seawatch Heysham pre webs 1105-1148 - Pete (M)
Kittiwake - flock 12 in
Gannet - one out v distant
Common Scoter - 15,5 in
Guillemot - 1 out 
R/G (Razorbill or Guillemot)- 3 out 
Nothing of note on WeBS

The cuckoo that had landed on stone jetty before flying south was presumably the same heard/seen by Alan Physic and David Kaye on Heysham head later


Heysham skear - Malcolm 07:45 - 08:45
Eider 3 (pair plus a male)
Great Crested Grebe 1
Little Egret 11
Eider, Herring Gull and Little Egret


The onshore wind was ideal for catching shrimps close inshore, this Little Egret catches what looks to be a shrimp in this clip.

Oystercatchers not counted 
Curlew 1 
Whimbrel 4
Ringed Plover 5
Ringed Plover
I had hoped that there would be Sanderlings around, they do like feeding on shrimps here when conditions allow, although they tend to favour feeding on the ebb. Possibly Pete's birds had been here earlier.

Imperial Rd - Malcolm
Just a 15 minute stop off on my way home.
Singing warblers 
Sedge 3
Chiffchaff 1
Cetti's 1

Foliage is now obscuring the Raven's nest, but a single call was heard
from the copse

Long-Tailed Tit just a single foraging bird
Swallow 1 and House Martin 1 feeding
Jackdaws combing the horse paddock

Buzzard 1
Buzzard being buzzed by a Carrion Crow

Magpies also present making up 4 corvid species here, 5 with the Rookery just along the bypass 
Female Broad-bodied Chaser

Middleton Nature Reserve - Janet
A couple of 2cy Mute Swans flying over the main pond

Carrion Crow

Loads of fresh Damselfly


Green-Veined White

Saturday, 16 May 2026

Ducklings faring better under the new hierarchy!

A dry morning with sunny spells. Light rain began early afternoon and didn't really stop. A light NW to west breeze.

Sea/dredger watch - Pete 0715-0815 lots of dredger fumes but no birds in the NW wind: 
2 Gannet out
4 Sandwich Tern in
2,8 Common Scoter in

North shore - Malcolm 08:30 - 09:30
I just walked the waterline out from the play area as the tide came in.
Eider 1 male
Great Crested grebe pair
Great crested grebe were fishing as well as bonding

Little Egret 4 all left to the south

Little Egret

Sandwich Tern at least 1
Sandwich Tern heading north, later it or another was resting on a rock

Swallow 1 north
Sand Martin 2 together north
1000+ Oystercatcher 
4 Bar-Tailed Godwit - 2 and 2 both left to the south


Bar-Tailed Godwit with Oystercatchers

Curlew 5 south together
Curlew

Whimbrel 2 + 1 south
Whimbrel 

Middleton Nature Reserve - Janet
Grasshopper warbler 2 reeling
Linnet

There are a few Mallard duckling broods on the main pond at different stages. Now the aggressive male Mute Swan is no longer about they have done well. Also some ducklings on the no swimming pond.



This Roebuck was on the southern section of the reserve