Saturday, 7 July 2018

England Omen?

The World Cup continues to dominate, with England getting past Colombia on penalties earlier in the week, taking us to a quarter final against Sweden later this afternoon. Optimism is in the air this morning, amd so news of a Great Egret on Neumann’s encouraged an early morning patch twitch. I’ve only seem one on patch before, despite their near constant presence at Sandbach and being more or less annual on patch with brief stayers. This morning’s bird, found by Dave Hughston, was the second of the year after a brief spring bird on Ashton’s, so a welcome patch year tick for me as I joined a small band of locals in Pod’s hide in the glorious sunshine. The water levels continue to drop as the incredible summer continues. There are some puzzling arrivals on the flashes, with 3 Pochard and half a dozen Wigeon unseasonal. Waders, too, are already moving with 30 Black-tailed Godwits and 3 Little Ringed Plovers with the usual post breeding gathering of Lapwings.
 
 

Tuesday, 3 July 2018

Autumn Already 3rd July 2018

The long hot summer continues. It's been hot and dry for a couple of months now and the land is parched. Many birds seem to be having a good breeding season. The chilled evenings in the sunshine have been great, not to mention a thoroughly entertaining world cup (England are still in as I write this, but that may change against Colombia this evening). There's nothing quote like a fine British summer.
 
Birding has - predictably - been on the back burner, but the fierce sun is rapidly drying out Neumann's and Ashton's and so both look great for some early wader passage and that has proven to be the case with reports of multiple Green Sandpipers, Greenshank and so in the last few days.
 
With that in mind, a quick visit at lunchtime today was in order and duly rewarded - two breeding male Ruffs, 2 Black-tailed Godwits, a Green Sandpiper, two Redshanks and around 30 Lapwing graced Neumann's, as did a single Common Tern. Reed warblers still chugged away in the reeds, but the various ducks were now well into moult.
 
It's beginning to feel a lot like autumn....

How Not to Twitch, aka a right Royal Balls Up. 20th June 2018

I'll keep this short. On the evening of Wednesday 19th June news came through that the very long staying Channel Islands American Royal Tern had finally crossed into England and was roosting on the tern island in Pagham Harbour, Sussex, and present until dusk.
 
A simple plan was hatched an so I drove overnight with Mark Sutton, Al Orton and Malc Curtin to be there before dawn. Everyone knows terns head out to feed early so a pre-dawn arrival was paramount.
 
Sadly we cocked it up, setting the satnav with the postcode, this took us to the wrong side of the harbour and necessitated a 15 mile / 20 minute retrace of our steps. In those valuable minutes it got light enough to see, the bird was showing initially but as predicted rapidly pissed-off out to sea minutes before our arrival. We hung around until lunchtime but predictably it didn't return, in fact that evening it was seen 75 miles further west  in Dorset.
 
The Little Terns, Med gulls and so on did nothing to help lighten the mood. At least for me this was only an upgrade, having seen the Gwynedd Royal Tern in 2009. As such the twitch was a pre-empt of a potential future split where American and African Royal Terns will be classified as distinct. The 2009 bird was widely considered to be African, but in all likelihood will probably never be fully assigned.
 
As this year's bird has been around Guernsey since February 2017, so there's perhaps chance it will reappear yet.
 
Only ourselves to blame. Amateurs.

Tuesday, 5 June 2018

Double Blakeney - 2nd & 3rd June 2018

Some birds are simply more inspiring than others, and I have a tendency to remain relatively unenthused about splits; of course they all count for us OCD listers, so it makes no sense to distinguish between a stunner and a split. But in reality excitement is also part of the twitching buzz, or at least it should be, so for me splits tend to feel more of a functional tick to sate that OCD and keep moving upwards rather than the best twitches which are genuinely exciting avian adventures.
 
So last Wednesday (30th May) when news of a Moltoni's Warbler came through from John O'Groats it barely registered. A lack of enthusiasm coupled with an impending minor elbow operation meant I ruled out going immediately, although secretly acknowledging that if it stayed I would inevitably crack at the first opportunity. Moltoni's Warbler was until recently a sub-species of Subalpine Warbler, recently raised to full species status. Spring males are identifiable on subtle plumage characteristics, but best confirmed on call. All other ages require calls or DNA to identify. So on paper, for the moment at least, it remains a truly rare bird here. The stats are almost certainly a reflection of fledgling status and difficulty of identification though - Moltoni's are very likely to be annual at the very least. 
 
I consoled myself that there would soon be another as the Scottish bird had departed on Thursday, had my op and settled in for a pleasant weekend with the kids (Han Solo movie anyone?). I saw Malc Curtin Thursday morning at the patch (where a Grasshopper Warbler reeled on Ashton's) and he joked there would soon be one on Blakeney Point in Norfolk. That turned out to be an uncannily accurate prediction, as it proved to be exactly the case on Saturday 2nd June, with news breaking at lunchtime of a singing and (crucially) calling male. Social plans were shelved and travel plans immediately hatched. I couldn't drive from the op, so arranged to be collected by Mark Sutton (thanks Mark) who was travelling from Anglesey, and we were joined by Malc and Mark Payne.
 
The journey across was easy enough, but time was against us as we started the long slog up the infamously gruelling 3 mile shingle headland that is Blakeney Point. In reality it wasn't too bad, just long, and we arrived hot and sweaty by largely untroubled. Terns entertained along the way, with Little, Common and Sandwich all constantly present. A female Common Scoter flew past and a few Avocet nests on the shingle surprised us, but we never really broke stride to look, arriving at 7.20pm. The bird had been extremely elusive, as most of the departing birders had informed us along the walk up, but had shown briefly just 10 minutes beforehand. We waited. We pished. We tried to persuade it to show. Nothing, not even a call. Was it really still in there?
 
Darkness was coming and hope rapidly faded, leaving us with the unwelcome prospect of an  overnight stay, no food or accommodation and a return walk out tomorrow in the unlikely event the bird remained. And that was after the long walk back in the gloom. Not the most appealing of prospects overall. Thankfully after a couple of calls John and Jane Gregory kindly offered us their Stiffkey house (they were in Scotland), so we had digs. We'd missed any hope of food, but the pub supplied cheese and biscuits and a few pints. Things were looking up as I passed out in a comfy bed. Our plan was to wait on news before heading back to the Point. That news was surprisingly quick to come in the morning, but largely unfed since yesterday lunchtime we opted to wait for a cafĂ© in Wells to open and feast before driving back to get a one way boat out at 10.30 and so requiring just a one way walk back. Middle aged tart birders. As we drove through Morston I speculatively called 'Beans Boats' and was told they had a boat out going in the next few minutes, with a return boat at 12.30. Happy bloody day. We were aboard the boat in minutes for the pleasantly brief crossing.
 
The Moltoni's Warbler showed well quickly after we arrived, although a scope was required to see it well. It was initially very mobile skipping between patches of vegetation, and appeared to have left at one point, only to eventually return to it's original spot as birds so often do. Job done and the sun shone. Aside from the Moltoni's, only a migrant Reed Warbler and resident Linnets and Skylarks were noted on the point, with the odd overflying Marsh Harrier and a few common waders. We got the 12.30 boat off and set off on the relaxed drive home, arriving at 5pm. A twitch that was definitely more about the journey than it was the bird, but they all count.
 

My classic record shots
Photo by the finder Dave Andrews @ipterodrama
 
Steve Gantlett's shot @CleyBirds
 
 
 
   

Monday, 28 May 2018

Bank Holiday Weekend 26th-28th May 2018

The long hot spring spell continued for the second consecutive bank holiday weekend. With warm easterlies continuing and thunderstorms forecast there were grounds for local optimism and so I spent a few hours each day on patch. Both Saturday and Sunday were disapointing, with just the recently resident Black-tailed Godwit flock (currently c40 birds but constantly changing numbers) and at least two pairs of Little Ringed Plovers seemingly settling to breed. A single Redshank persists quietly at the back of Ashton’s, suggesting there is a nest deep in there somewhere. About five pairs of Lapwings appear to have failed on there too, as usual, but one or two pairs setting up on Neumann’s Stilt Island gives us some hope yet.

On the bank holiday, Greg found 2 Avocets and the first Ringed Plover of the year on Neumann’s, so a return trip was required. The avocets were busily feeding round the back of Stilt Island and looking rather resplendent; surely this species will breed on patch soon?

Patch avocets. Once a real local rarity, now a few records annually. Up to four pairs of great crested grebes nesting on Neumann's too - it was unheard of to see a grebe on here a decade ago so water conditions must be changing too.

 

Black-tailed godwit flock
 
Shelduck pair
Reed warbler

Thursday, 24 May 2018

Patch 24th May 2018

Nice to see thet Turnstone on Neumann's today at lunchtime, a real cracker of a bird. Sure common on the coast, but it's been a few years since my last on the patch so this full summer bird was most enjoyable . It was feeding busily on stilt island, which also has at least 3 active Black-headed Gull nests. As far as I know they have never successfully nested on patch, although there have been plenty of failed (usually 1st year birds) on Haydn's, which also has several nests this year.

Also on Neumann's today there was a Little Ringed Plover. Having finally arrived now there is some mud starting to appear in the heat wave, they may well yet settle down to breed.

On Sunday (20th) I finally caught up with 5 Black-tailed Godwits and a Greenshank up on Haydn's, the same day as my first LRP of the year (latest ever!). There had been over 100 godwits earlier in the week, so I vey much caught the back end of the passage.

Weather looking very promising for the next few days. Here's hoping for some late wader action!

Sunday, 20 May 2018

Tern Tastic 20th May 2018

News of a brief appearance of a White-winged Black Tern on Neumann's today was a bit of shock to say the least, especially given the lack of recent migrant terns. Not one black tern has appeared in Cheshire yet this year. Sadly it didn't linger on the Flash, but luckily it had only relocated to the Mere where Malc refound it. I was stuck at work so had to sweat for a few hours, but was there by 5pm and watched it for an hour. Always a little distant, but the light was superb and the views were excellent.

Whilst I was flouncing up to Fair Isle yesterday the patch had delievered some good local birds for the regulars, including Great White Egret, Avocet, Greenshank and a flock of Black-tailed Godwits, so following Monday's Garganey and Wood Sandpipers it was a bit a red letter week.
 


Photos by Patrick Earith @ArthriticPeak