Friday, 3 April 2026

More easy viewing Kitts

Overnight rain eased in the morning then lunchtime heavy showers. A fresh SW wind.

A few shots by Janet around Middleton Nature Reserve main pond feeding area yesterday.
Long-Tailed Tits


Bullfinch

Reed Bunting 

Goldfinch

Chaffinch - all the above would have been present today too

South shore
Pete checked from Ocean Edge at 11:24

2 ad and one 2cy kittiwake heysham two outfall

27 pale bellied Brent red nab 


I walked along the sea wall 14:15 - 15:30 Malcolm
The tide was just leaving the Red Nab rocks, but 27 Brent were already back, or they remained on the water. Red Nab would have been completely covered at 13:00 high water.

There are no Wigeon now, and the gutweed is thriving in the longer, warmer days.

Shelduck 4 (2 + 2)
Red-breasted Merganser 1 female
Little Egret 2
This is one of Janet's from yesterday. The Egret looking like a guard for the Redshank

Rock Pipit 1 along the sea wall and 1 between lighthouse and waterfall in the harbour 
Wheatear 4 males (3 along foreshore 1 on Red Nab)
Wheatear
Linnet 6 on saltmarsh and Ocean Edge grass
Linnet

Slightly unusual, there were only two species of gulls on the outfalls.
Common Gulls 7 minimum 
A nice shot of a 2nd calendar year Common Gull by Janet yesterday 

Kittiwake 4 adult and a 2nd calendar year all on No.2 outfall
All four adult Kittiwakes in this shot


Adult Kittiwakes 

2nd calendar year Kittiwake

This is one of the adults. It doesn't need a single wing flap in this clip.

This Cormorant in the harbour caught what looks like an eel, but it is a bit
early for eels. It also swallowed it very quickly, eels tend to make a nuisance 
of themselves. I suspect that this may be (or rather, was) a Lamprey.

Shaun checked later in the afternoon and things had changed:

16:30-17:30

Kittiwake 10 - 5 adult + the 2CY on Outfall 2. 4 adult on Outfall 1 after following in the ferries. They hung around the seaward end for a while before heading back into the Bay. The 5 + 1 on No.2 were still there when I walked back.

Wheatear 8 - 5m + a female on the beach at Red Nab. Plus 2m Ocean Edge.

Rock Pipit 3 Ocean Edge. One chasing another. Territorial dispute. 



Thursday, 2 April 2026

First Sandwich Terns

A dry day with sunny spells. A light variable wind.

Pete checked from the back of the harbour

Heysham sea totals on and off 0700-0900: 

whooper swan 177 inbound either flying or floating with flock max 78. All but four were in Cumbria

Kittiwake flocks of 9,7,8 inbound

7 Canada geese

Red throated Diver 1,1,1 

2 Sandwich Tern in then out  (first this year)

12 Sand Martin in 


Dan Haywood checked from the Stone jetty

Movements 0900-1100, incoming tide;
Eider 220 flew or floated ‘in’ (ie NE)

Sanderling 41 SW
Bar-tailed Godwit 35 NE
Red-breasted Merganser 23 ‘in’ (floating or flying)
Kittiwake 18 flew ‘in’
Common Gull 9 ‘in’
Whooper Swan 7 floated ‘in’
Great Crested Grebe 7 floated ‘in’
Red-throated Diver 5 floated ‘in’ (all in non-breeding plumage)
Sandwich Tern 4 flew ‘in’ then ‘out’ ie SW

Common Scoter 2 (injured fem floated in, male flew ‘in’ then ‘out’)
Goosander 3 ‘in’
Little Gull 1 ‘in’
This report from Dan posted on LDBWS web page, follow this link for his full report and a nice shot of a Red-throated Diver

Heysham Nature Reserve

Jean was underwhelmed with her ringing session

Ringed two Goldcrest and caught a retrapped Dunnock and a retrapped Goldfinch. 

As soon as I took the net down I heard two Redpoll - they had been sitting in a nearby tree watching me take down. One Linnet flew over.


South shore - Janet

Pale-bellied Brent goose 17 on Red Nab


Pale-bellied Brent geese


Redshank 

Little Egret - look how lush the gutweed has grown 

Cormorant and Little Egret

White Wagtail

Wheatear. Both the Wheatear and the White Wagtail quickly moved on



This Cormorant has caught a Common Blenny. This is just about as big as
Blennies get. This one certainly won't get any bigger!


2nd calendar year (2cy) Kittiwake on No.2 outfall

Later when Kevin Eaves checked the outfall the 2cy had been joined by two adults.


Kittiwake

Middleton Nature Reserve - Malcolm 

Main pond

Mute Swan pair, both on the water, plus an immature 

Mallard 4 males

No Shoveler seen

Little Grebe at least 3

Coot taking nesting material to the reedbed. Little Grebe behind

Then the grebe sees a rival and shoots off to see it off.

This is the rival being seen off, a third grebe in the background. They all duck under the water when the gulls pass low over the pond.


These are the courting pair. You can hear them trilling in this clip.



"no swimming" pond
Mute pair both on the water
Mallard 2 males
Tufted Duck 7 (2 female)
Gadwall pair
Cetti's warbler 1 and Chiffchaff 1 singing
Peacock Butterfly 2 flying together

Fence pond and central marshes
Mallard 2 male
Cetti's warbler 3 and Chiffchaff 2 singing
Common Buzzard 1 over to the north
Peacock butterfly 3


Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Kittiwake lingers

An overcast day with just a few light showers. A light SW wind.

Janet made an early start
Middleton Nature Reserve 
just after sun rise, but I didn't see any sun, It was too dark for any decent photos!!
A fine Roebuck

Female Pheasant 

Wren singing its little heart out!

Mute Swan pair

Along the south sea wall
This Little Egret has caught a Common Goby by Red Nab....

.......it didn't last long!


2nd calendar year Kittiwake on No.2 outfall. Likely the one that arrived yesterday 

Wheatear by the lighthouse 

Rock Pipit near the lighthouse 

It certainly doesn't look undernourished!

Heysham skear - Malcolm 15:00 16:00
Something lifted everything as I was walking out. I couldn't see any specific cause and suspected that a Peregrine attack on the Knot was most likely. These don't normally lift the Oystercatchers but they are probably skittish after at least one Osprey passed over yesterday.
Brent, Oystercatcher and gulls, the Knot were already distant

Pale-bellied Brent goose 25 the most seen at one time
Eider 85 close in, more further out

Red-breasted Merganser - it was difficult keeping track of them 13 minimum but suspect more

c1000 Knot returned for a while before 750 flew north again. Only four flagged birds seen from three different schemes, but all previously recorded.
Bar-Tailed Godwit a solitary bird with the Knot
Bar-Tailed Godwit, Oystercatcher and Knot

Out of area news:

Osprey headed out to sea over Knott end towards Walney 1100ish 

Bonapartes gull 1st w Myerscough quarry. It may end up in our area (watch the outfalls or low tide channels). If you want to see images check out Paul Slade's Facebook page

Paul Slade - 1st winter Bonaparte's Gull, Myerscough... | Facebook


Tuesday, 31 March 2026

High Brent count and first Osprey

A light west(ish) wind. Mainly overcast with the odd sunny spell, but it did remain dry after early morning rain.

Pete did a couple of early checks:

from back of the harbour looking through harbour mouth 0735-0835. Calmer than expected and light poor:  

single ad Little gull

flock 22 Kittiwake

3 Red-throated diver

4 Common Scoter

single razorbill or guillemot.  

All inbound 

singing rock pipit

single Harbour porpoise


From Ocean Edge

Pale-bellied Brent goose 98 on Red Nab- this is the highest count so far this winter period


Ad plus 2Cy Kittiwake Heysham 2 outfall


Janet had a walk around later

Wheatear 4 quickly moved along the foreshore to Red Nab





This male was carrying food. Clearly not to feed any young,
 perhaps an offering for a mate

Rock Pipit 1 on Red Nab

Rock Pipit

Male Chaffinch in the Nature Park 

Great Spotted-Woodpecker 1 male along the path at the southern edge of Middleton Nature Reserve 

Middleton Nature Reserve 
Pairs of Shoveler and Gadwall on the spit

Male Gadwall

One of two male Mallards, no sign of the females

This Little Grebe was being chased by a Coot


Male Greenfinch under the feeders

Heysham Skear - Malcolm 14:00 - 15:45
Pale-bellied Brent all over again. Most seen at one time was 74, but presumably most of what Pete counted would have been around.
As well as the Brent in this clip you can see Knot and Oystercatcher amongst the rough terrain of the skear.

It was quite hazy, and the sunlight filtering through the mist seemed to
make it harder to see. Makes for atmospheric shots though!

Eider 55
Red-breasted Merganser 5
Little Egret 2
Osprey 1 (not too long ago this would be highlighted in red, but there has been a significant increase in the frequency of sightings in recent years. So much so that at one point last year one was classified as "a nuisance" when its arrival spooked the Mediterranean gulls!)
At 15:15 all the birds on the skear lifted and started screaming (don't think they regarded it as just a nuisance, although in fact Ospreys are no threat to birds at all). Unfortunately the Osprey was in front of the hazy sunlight making for difficult seeing, but this clip paints the picture as the Oystercatchers quickly move it on. It continued NW across the bay.

It's difficult to say how many Knot there were. Initially there were 1500 on the skear, then about half of these flew north. I was checking the remaining birds on the northern edge when the Osprey lifted everything. When everything settled again there were at least 1200 sat in a freshwater runoff in the southern corner. Some if not all of these would have been additional, possibly spooked from further south by the passing Osprey.
Just a few of the Knot in the freshwater runoff. They then flew to western 
edge of the skear. No point in trying to follow them. A few flagged birds
were seen earlier, but no new ones.