The east wind switched to NW late morning, but remained light. Dry with long sunny periods.
Heysham skear - low water 08:30 (MD)
Eider 23 - 10, 12 & 1 all female/immature
Great Crested Grebe 13
Red-breasted Merganser 3 female/immature in one feeding group.
Little Egret 19
These spring tides come in very quickly, these are some of the birds trying to feed while being displaced. Note the young Little Egret with quite yellow legs, towards the end of the clip.
Grey Heron 1Pink-Footed goose 3 low to the east.
First Pink-Footed geese returning |
There wasn't a great number of waders, no doubt more were on the outer skear
Oystercatcher c200
Curlew c150
Redshank c120
Turnstone c80
Knot 1
Harbour mouth early evening, Craig Bell
Pink-Footed goose 4
Whimbrel 2
Middleton Nature Reserve
Janet had a look in the morning
Cetti's Warbler 1 singing between the main and "no swimming" ponds
Black Darter 1 male on the flat area to the west of Tim Butler pond (the first record within the recording area this year)
Male Black Darter |
Brown Hawker 2
Migrant Hawker 10 - just 1 female
Common Darter 10+ - these are two ovipositoring in the "no swimming" pond (my camera seems to be making up its own sound effects now!)
Speckled Wood several
Meadow Brown 4
Small White 4
Red Admiral 2
Brimstone 2
Large White 1
Mute Sawn 2 adult 8 Cygnets
Mallard 4
Tufted Duck the odd looking female is still on main pond
Coot 8
There are still no wildfowl on the "no swimming" pond
Swallow - continuous high number feeding and moving through. 30 minimum
Grey Heron 1 - it catches a small fish here
Long Tailed Tits at least 15 in one feeding flock, plus 1 Chiffchaff with them.
Sparrowhawk 1
The late summer rain has swollen the Hawthorn berrries. There were already high numbers but now they are large too. I suppose this will be the case in most of the rest of the country too.
Heavily laden Hawthorn bush |
I thought this female/immature Blackbird had already started eating them, but it was actually eating Blackthorn fruit (sloes).
Quite often, sloes are the only berries/fruit to remain late into winter. I think the larger ones are just too large for even the largest thrushes to swallow.
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