Sunday, 27 July 2025

An increase in Juvenile Meds

Another dry and mainly overcast day with a west breeze

South shore
Ian Walker did a thorough check of the Mediterranean gulls 23 minimum, including 12 juveniles and  2 x 2nd calendar year. Likely an additional 2 birds on Red Nab, but they could have flown from the feeding area so not included in the count.
Two of the adults were colour ringed, one white and one yellow, unfortunately feeding at the seaward end of the beach by the old wooden jetty.
Rock Pipit 1 on Red Nab

I walked from the saltmarsh then along the sea wall 09:00 - 10:30 (Malcolm)
Wheatear 1 near the slipway 
Wheatear

Both the Wheatear and a Pied Wagtail were more interested in preening than me.

This adult Mediterranean gull tends to feed near the sea wall
near to the edge of No.1 outfall 

This is the white ringed bird, it had moved higher up the beach and
revealed itself to be the Dutch bird seen yesterday. Its only sighting 
since leaving last year was at Brockholes Nature Reserve 24/06/25
The yellow ringed bird had already moved on.

An adult with two juvenile Mediterranean gulls,
plus a juvenile Black-Headed gull stretching its wings

These are resting Black-Headed gulls in the middle of the feeding beach
 by the wooden jetty. The reason most of the Meds were at the seaward end is
that there are no Sandmason worms tubes exposed closer in at the moment

In the Nature Park
Gatekeeper 3
Meadow Brown 4
Large White 3
Small White 3
Red Admiral 6
Speckled Wood 3
Common Blue 5
Not bad considering that the sun was behind the clouds
Meadow Brown

Large White and a Red Admiral 

Common Blue



Saturday, 26 July 2025

Another Med returns

Warm and dry, despite being predominantly overcast. A light west wind after a calm start.

South shore (Malcolm) 09:00 - 10:30
No Wheatear seen this morning, perhaps it has finally moved on.
Rock Pipit 2 - one on Red Nab and one on the wooden jetty
Shelduck 1 - first seen for a while, but the numbers of small snails on the surface of the mud are increasing rapidly 
Shelduck
Little Egret 4
Grey Heron 1
Mediterranean gull 8 - 6 adults, a 2nd calendar year and a juvenile, all on the beach between the wooden jetty and No.1 outfall.  One of the adults had a white ring.
This is the white ringed adult, it has just caught a Sandmason worm.
Ringed in the Netherlands as a chick in 2019, it was first seen at Heysham 
in 2020 and has returned every year since. Hopefully it has been seen 
elsewhere since it left last year. It normally is, but not outside of the UK 
apart from 2021, when it was seen in Belgium 
A Curlew and several Redshank were also after the Sandmason worms. The Curlew gets one at the end of this clip.
Grey Seal 1 feeding at the seaward end of No.1 outfall


Janet took this shot of a small Dunlin flock as she walked the promenade 
past the play area off Knowleys Rd


Heysham skear (Malcolm) 16:30 - 18:00
Great Crested Grebe 1
Great Crested Grebe

No Eider or Mergansers seen
Oystercatcher 150, but more were arriving all the time.
Curlew 90+
Redshank 110
Turnstone 45
Dunlin 2
Ringed Plover 3

Two of the Ringed Plovers

Gulls 200 large gulls, predominantly Herring, two with rings, but both seen previously.
Herring and a Lesser Black-Backed gull
The central bird is ringed

Black-Headed gulls 45 shrimping in the drainage channels

Lesser Black-Backed juvenile closer to the promenade 




Friday, 25 July 2025

Hummingbird Hawkmoth. Another? Or lingering?

A dry but mainly overcast day. A west wind.

South shore (Malcolm)
Just two quick checks, saltmarsh to Red Nab on the rising tided this morning, then along the sea wall this evening.
Wheatear 1 immature near the slipway
Almost all trace of juvenile plumage now gone

Rock Pipit 3 on Red Nab
Mediterranean gulls 9 - just one adult and a juvenile on Red Nab this morning. 6 adults on the beach by the wooden jetty this evening. Plus 3 juvenile alternating between resting and feeding on the outfalls.
Adult Mediterranean gull

Juvenile Mediterranean gull

A very young juvenile Black-Headed gull (left)
The older Black-Headed gull on the right is moving to first winter plumage 

Grey Seal 1 feeding at the seaward end of No.1 outfall
Grey seal bottom left

In the Nature park this evening 
Hummingbird Hawkmoth 1 on the Buddleia between the white barrier and the small anemometer. Unfortunately, it headed towards the small anemometer before I could get a shot, and I couldn't relocate. There are a lot of Buddleia bushes around!
This is the bush that it was on. The same bush where Alison and Kevin 
saw one on 13th July. The small anemometer in the background 

Butterflies 
Red Admiral 5
Painted Lady 1
Meadow Brown 2
Gatekeeper 3
Large White 2
Green-Veined White 1 (not often seen here)
Common Blue several
Speckled Wood 4
Painted Lady

Green-Veined White

Middleton Nature Reserve (Janet)


Common Whitethroat 

Red Admiral enjoying Blackberry juice 


the lane behind Bell Aire Park (Alison)
I'm still seeing lots of 7-spot Ladybirds but today also 14-spot. Also a large number of Figwort weevils and their rather slug like larvae
14-spot Ladybird 

Figwort weevil

Figwort weevil Larvae 


Thursday, 24 July 2025

Wader numbers growing, but insects still the main interest

A warm sunny day with a west wind,

Middleton Nature Reserve 
These shots from Janet.


Some of the several Copper-Tipped Longhorn moths.
See Tuesday's post for the location 

Male Red-Veined Darter where the Swans rest on the west bank
of the main pond

Male Common Darter, one of several

Comma

Meadow Brown

Male Gatekeeper

Male Large white

The Coot chicks are growing 

Chiffchaff 

Kevin Eaves took this shot of a Common Sandpiper on the peninsula of the main pond.
Common Sandpiper 

Heysham skear (Malcolm) 14:00 - 15:30
I went down early on the ebbing tide. There was very little skear showing, but at least it concentrates what birds there are.
Oystercatcher 50 - many more arriving later
Curlew 3
Redshank 98 - probably more arrived later
Turnstone 84 - probably more arrived later
Dunlin 1 arrived later
I can empathise with this shot.
 Redshank and Turnstones looking out to sea

Redshank and Turnstone 

Turnstones 

Turnstone 

This one looks like it's on a mission!

Redshank 

Gulls initially 100 growing to 250 mainly Herring gulls. Two ringed birds seen, but both have been seen here before.
Red-Breasted Merganser 6 female type flew north together 
Great Crest Grebe 1
Starlings flying back from the skear, they collect fragments of barnacle
shells for grit


This Hoverfly was in Kevin's moth trap.

A nice intruder in my Heysham moth trap last night. Volucella zonaria, or Hornet Hoverfly.
It's the UK's largest species of Hoverfly and really is quite chunky.