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


Friday, 15 May 2026

Velvet Scoter joins the mix

A dry and relatively bright day with a north to NW wind

Seawatch report Pete 0605-0750: 
arrived before sandbanks covered and immediate action including Arctic skua and 3 gannets flying over the sand. 

Shag - 2cy flew past the harbour mouth heading in 0748

Gannet - 3,1,2,1 in

Kittiwake - 11 in 

Arctic skua - LM in rapidly 0607, DM more leisurely 0700 

Sandwich Tern - 35 in, c60 feeding in distant channel 

Common Tern - 3,2 in 

Common Scoter - c15

Velvet Scoter - Drake flew in initially quite high on its own then dropped to near sea level then lost it against Lou’s yellow brow trees at Rampside and it may have landed on sea

Swallow - most this spring with 116 in

House Martin - 2 in


Also 9 Arctic tern flew up lune estuary later in morning, seen from Cockersands

Middleton Nature Reserve - Janet

This Willow Warbler has darker than typical legs

Male Blackcap

Common Bluetail damselfly


Wheatear on the foreshore 

Little Egrets on Red Nab

Shelduck on one of the freshwater runoffs at Red Nab

Holly Blue in the Nature Park 

Heysham skear Malcolm 13:30 - 14:15
Just a quick look as the skear was being exposed.
Eider 2 males
Drake Eider

Sandwich Tern 2 feeding
Whimbrel 6. These two were after crabs
 

This one has a small crab.....

........but not for long!


Thursday, 14 May 2026

So much for "light" showers!

It managed to stay dry and quite sunny this morning, but there were some wicked showers in the afternoon. Rain, hail and sleet accompanied by thunder and lightning. So much for the forecast of "light showers"! The wind was variable from NE to NW and all points between, quite strong during the squalls.

Seawatch report Pete 0623-0823.  
Started off ok (earlier start advised?) then degenerated into a marine mammal fest with the only interest in the last hour a grey seal and two porpoise!
Arctic skua - DM in 0643
Kittiwake - 6 in
Sandwich Tern - 62 out just a handful in
Little Tern - one out with small group of Sandwich tern feeding intermittently 
Common Tern - 2 out 
Arctic Tern - flock 11 surprisingly heading out
Pink footed goose - c205 north
Common scoter - c75
Gannet - 1,1,9 in

Middleton Nature Reserve - Janet
Male Shoveler and Heron

Possibly a different Heron

Little Grebe

Sedge Warbler 


They seem to be singing all over the reserve at the moment.


This nice Eyed Hawkmoth was in Kevin's trap this morning.
there are very few moths around at the moment because of the Arctic air mass

Also from Kevin - I went to the harbour today and didn't see much, but
I did return before a line of heavy rail, hail and thunder reached me.

Kevin took the above shot at 13:30. At that time I was heading out to the skear with the above storm directly ahead  of me (Malcolm). I hoped it would move south but it headed straight for me, the heavy hail made everything dark all around and there was no sign of a quick end, so I turned back. Shame really as something "unpopular" was forced to land on the skear, and despite the horrendous conditions all the Oystercatchers and Gulls took to the air. I scanned as best I could, but failed to see what it was. Some days it just doesn't happen.
I did manage one sighting today though. This fox visited my garden this evening. It is lapping up the few sunflower hearts I had thrown out when I replenished the feeders. It clearly knows that I am watching.





Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Desperately seeking Skuas

Very heavy showers on and off all day. A fresh NW wind

Seawatch report Pete - on and off 0620-0830 plus 15 mins Stone Jetty on abortive skua chase - tricky with a lot of rain and no scope shelter - best viewing point had a stanchion 1/2 way across the field of view! 
Failure with target species in this weather (Fulmar) but could have missed a lot of stuff 

Gannet - 27 in 12 out 

Kittiwake - 2 out, 15,6 in

Arctic Skua - 2 dark morph in landed as rain overtook them! 

Pomarine Skua - one Light morph in then lost behind stanchion - either deep troughed or landed on sea 

Guillemot - 2 floating in 

Sandwich Tern - 9 out early on then 6 in further out


South shore - Malcolm 
I somehow managed a walk along the sea wall and almost back in sunshine.
Linnet 2 around the saltmarsh plus 2 near the waterfall 
Wheatear 2 along the foreshore
Shelduck 4 on Red Nab
Whimbrel 2 and Curlew 3 flew south from Red Nab
Curlew and Whimbrel 

Little Egret 2 on Red Nab
Osprey 1 had been resting on the post at the end of No.2 outfall but headed south, chased/followed by gulls, before I could get close.
Osprey heading south

Rock Pipit 2 near the lighthouse, both collecting food.
Rock Pipit with what looks like a large Sea Slater. They normally start with
small portions when first feeding the chicks.

Both Carrion Crows on the nest in the harbour, the male left and the 
female settled down in the nest again

Linnet 2 and male Blackbird 1 on the perimeter wire above the scrub between the lighthouse and waterfall.
Another squall was on its way, so I only checked the sea for 15 minutes from the lighthouse 10:00 - 10:15:
Gannet 1 adult out
Gannet passing the wooden jetty

Sandwich Tern 2 in together 
Common Tern 1 in
The new "wind assisted" SenaLine ferry presumably extracted a significant 
amount of energy from today's wind

Middleton Nature Reserve main pond - Janet 
Male Shoveler, hopefully the female is somewhere close by


House Martin 

Heysham skear - Malcolm 16:15 - 17:15
Even less than yesterday, no Terns seen
Eider pair flew north
Little Egret 2
Bar-Tailed Godwit 33

Bar-Tailed Godwit circling the skear

Whimbrel 1
Whimbrel 

This Angle Shades rested on my garden gate all day




Tuesday, 12 May 2026

The sea still providing

Showers till mid morning then dry with some sunshine in the afternoon. A fresh WNW wind.

Seawatch report - Pete 0620-0820.  
Vibes of being too late this am with virtually everything outbound in the first 40 mins and the sort of morning lingering skuas, reluctant to overland in the weather, used to be found off JBP.  
All out unless stated: 
Gannet 21
Sandwich Tern 85
Common Tern flock 3
Kittiwake 5,15
Red throated diver 1 in
Razorbill 1
Guillemot 1
Common Scoter 20,5,6 in, 
Goose spp 5 glimpsed as disappeared flying away. 
2cy Shag flew across the harbour mouth towards wooden jetty at 0656.

David Kaye started at 0600 and extras were:
5 Gannet out (26 in total)
6 C Scoter (37 in total)
2 Red throated diver

Heysham skear - Malcolm 12:15 - 13:30
Not much to see in the strong onshore wind
Sandwich Tern 20+ a few valiant birds were attempting to fish, but most just sat on the mud facing the wind
Sandwich Tern on a deserted shore
A couple of optimistic Sandwich Terns trying to fish

I managed to locate another green ringed Herring Gull
This is a typical view, with the bulk of the ring hidden, but it eventually revealed 
itself to be N:01E. Ringed at the Ribble estuary in 2019. It was seen at Heysham
in  2003 plus last year

Oystercatchers not counted, but far fewer than of late
Bar-Tailed Godwit 17

Bar-Tailed Godwits

Whimbrel 1
Ringed Plover - a flock of 12 flew across the skear