Light wind SSW in morning SSE by evening, plenty of sunshine but cooler than yesterday.
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| Male Large Red Damselfly |
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| Burnet companion |
Light wind SSW in morning SSE by evening, plenty of sunshine but cooler than yesterday.
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| Male Large Red Damselfly |
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| Burnet companion |
Light SE wind, high cloud with plenty of sunshine and the odd light shower
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| Swift - I don't often get an half decent shot of a swift (MD) |
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| This is the female, just above the nest site, but she will never fly to it when she knows she is being watched. |
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| If you go to watch them feed their young, please give them plenty of space, certainly no closer than this, I was sat on the lighthouse wall, almost behind the lighthouse. |
Light east wind shifting to ESE by late afternoon and south by evening. The threatened overnight rain didn't materialise but heavy showers in the morning and some thunder showers early evening. Sunshine in between.
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| Spotted Flycatcher feeding above the wood on Heysham Head |
East winds all day, freshening slightly in the afternoon. High cloud with sunny spells.
Three hours over the incoming tide (7.15 – 10.15 am) produced:
1 2nd CY Kittiwake
c.200 Common Scoter – numerous distant groups of 10 – 20 flying in or out so probably some duplication; largest group = c.35
c.55 Pink-footed Geese – 3 distant groups
34 2nd CY Black-headed Gull – flying into the Bay in a single group
4 Sandwich Tern
1 Arctic Tern
2 Red-throated Diver
c.20 Swallow & 1 House Martin – low over the sea in ones and twos
1 Harbour Porpoise
Red Nab (PM, JR)
Little Ringed Plover 1 flew from Red Nab to the Power Station non operational land (this area was checked recently, but this species can easily be missed)
Middleton Nature Reserve
Ringing report from Alan:
The wind was variable in strength this morning and not great for mist netting. A small selection of species was caught including the 100th Lesser Redpoll for 2022.
The catch comprised:
Wren 1
Robin 1
Blackbird 1
Sedge Warbler 1 plus 1 retrap
Reed Warbler 1 plus 1 retrap
Lesser Whitethroat 1
Common Whitethroat 1
Chiffchaff 1
Blue Tit 1 retrap
Lesser Redpoll 5
Heysham skear (MD)
I walked the morning tide in then just did another quick check of the inner skear in the afternoon, before the outer skears were exposed.
Eider 55
Red-breasted Merganser 4
Great Crested Grebe 6
Shelduck 6 out ( morning)
Little Egret 4
Grey Heron 1
Shag 1 feeding (afternoon)
Swallow 3 (morning) 7 (afternoon)
Dunlin 1
Turnstone 6
Sanderling 2 (afternoon)
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| Sanderling - the one on the right is moving towards summer plumage, but the one on the left is still, pretty much, in winter plumage |
Kevin took this shot yesterday on the south sea wall, its a gull pellet. Interestingly it includes what looks to be the claw of a small Edible Crab. A gull would not eat a crab this size whole, they normally remove the claws first, and when eating Shore Crabs, the claws are often discarded. I suppose the extra meat in an Edible Crab claw makes it worth swallowing.
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| Gull pellet made up largely of crab (looks to be an Edible Crab) |
Light variable breeze early on settles to WSW by 08:00, and remained there till evening when after a breathless period it moved to NW. high cloud with plenty of sunshine.
None of the Auks got as far as the Stone Jetty. The following is Nick Godden's report from Stone Jetty, as posted on LDBWS web page - obviously there will be some overlap:
14/5/22 6.15-9.50
Skua sp light morph in at 7.55 too distant to ID
Gannet 24
Eider 112
Kittiwake 15 out
Red-throated diver 1 out
Whimbrel 1
Sanderling 2
Swallow 53
Sand martin 2
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| Sanderling with Oystercatcher |
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| Butterfish - nice to see an old friend (MD) |
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| These are tracks left by a Hermit crab, you can see the groove in the mud where its shell has bobbled along |
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| Male Pied Wagtail about to take a bill full of insects into the Power Station grounds. |
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| There are some Eider in this shot, but the reason I am posting it is to show just how clear and blue the sea still is after two days of strong SW winds which typically stir up the sediment |
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| Dunlin - this shot just to show how effective their camouflage is in this terrain |
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| Sanderling in partial summer plumage - these were just resting |
Wind not so fresh today and pretty much due west. High cloud with some sunny periods.
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| Large female Wheatear |
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| Little Egret with a small flatfish |
A fresh SW wind moved to west after lunch. Plenty of sunshine with just the odd light shower.
Seawatch from the North Harbour Wall
06:30-08:30 (high tide at 08:27hrs)
SW F4, cloudy
A bit slow this morning with birds rather distant. The wind was a few degrees more southerly than forecast.
Pomarine Skua - 1 into Bay at 07:35
Arctic Skua - 1 dark morph in at 08:12
Gannet - 2 into Bay, 6 out
Common Scoter - 8 in, 25 out
Grey Plover - 22 out
Small waders - 5 in, 30 out
Guillemot - 3 out
Razorbill - 3 in
Auk sp- 11 in, 3 out
Arctic Tern - 5 in
Goosander - 1 out
Red Nab
Pink-footed Goose - 2
Wooden jetty
Shag - 1
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| The "no swimming" pond female Mute Swan with 9 cygnets |
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| Small Heath - first of the year |
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| Early Purple Orchid (I think MD) |
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| A pretty flower, with the less than flattering name....... Bogbean |
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| The deserted main pond nest, you can make out broken eggs. The female was sitting here yesterday |
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| The original main pond male, now only tolerated at a distance. I was fearful for his life yesterday, he could have flown away, but chose to remain with his mate. |
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| Pair of Common Bluetail damselflies |
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| Almost mature Azure Blue damselfly |
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| Not sure about this one, other than it is immature |
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| Female Wheatear |
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| The "no swimming" pond female with her cygnets (at least 7) now on the main pond. I'll spare you the images of the main pond male being attacked by the aggressive male |
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| Large Red Damselfly |
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| Mother Shipton moth |