Saturday, 21 January 2023

Spring migrants

I have enough photos and enough birding to justify another post. It is coming in two parts, what is happening at WOW and what is happening in the garden and along the coastal path. First what about the title?? Well it is January 21 and I have seen four birds I would normally be looking for in March or maybe April:

January 2 a sandwich tern in Killyleagh

January 9 a gannet at Carnalea

January 17 a chiffchaff in Strickland's Glen

January 21 a lesser black-backed gull at Carnalea

It seems that climate change is giving species a chance to hang around over winter. Add to this the success of little egrets and increasing sightings of glossy ibis and great white egrets, plus the loss of ring ouzel and Bewick swans and the lower counts of overwintering northern ducks like goldeneye and pochard and I think we have the evidence from nature that things are changing. 

Let's move on to WOW. I have added quite a few birds to this year's list. Millet has encouraged birds to come closer to the windows and the feeders have added small passerines. The summary at the end gives an update on where we are, including the fine second winter Iceland gull which turned up this week. It was one of 11 new birds for 2023 including robin, dunnock and mute swan!!

Roosting curlew

Coot

Wigeon

Black-tailed godwit

Teal (F)

Teal (M)

Large white duck?

Hiding with the shelduck

With herring gulls, must be an Iceland gull. 😎

The coastal path has been walked (or limped) quite a few times and the garden has been well watched to see what garden birds can go on the Irish Birding garden bird survey. Again the summary at the end shows where we are and a few photographs give a flavour of what I have been seeing.

Four of these

Two very wary hooded crows

Just one song thrush

Only two goldfinch

Fieldfare

Maximum of nine blackbirds

Male blackcap - there is also a female.

I think I am slightly ahead of last year as I was around the mid 80s in January. The two patch lists are on par and as per normal I am well over 50% of the target in the middle of January. It just gets harder as the year rolls on!! Onwards and upwards as God willing I have a trip to England to look forward to.

2023
80: Twite
81: Lesser black-backed gull
82: Gannet
83: Black guillemot
84: Purple sandpiper
85: Red-throated diver
86: Grey wagtail
87: Chiffchaff
88: Iceland gull
89: Goldcrest
90: Raven
91: Guillemot

NDCP
23: Coal tit 
24: Gannet
25: Oystercatcher
26: Dunlin
27: Rock pipit
26: Ringed plover
29: Shag
30: Eider duck
31: Redshank
32: Common gull
33: Pied wagtail
34: Song thrush
35: Collared dove
36: Purple sandpiper
37: Black guillemot
38: Great black-backed gill
39: Red-throated diver
40: Great-crested grebe
41: Moorhen
42: Long-tailed tit
43: Wren
44: Chiffchaff
45: Lesser black-backed gull

WOW
38: Rook
39: Brent goose
40: Jackdaw
41: Rock pipit
42: Lesser black-backed gull
43: Dunlin
44: Meadow pipit
45: Common gull (all on January 12th)
46: Little grebe &
47: Pochard (on January 14)
48: Iceland gull
49: Goldcrest
50: Raven
51: Mistle thrush
52: Song thrush
53: Goldeneye
54: Eider
55: Guillemot
56: Mute swan
57: Grey heron
58: Dunnock
59: Robin (all on 19 January)

Sunday, 8 January 2023

2023 kicks off

Good start to the new birding year with the traditional "Round the Lough" trip from dawn to dusk. This year we started at the flood gates in Ards, went south to Portaferry, crossed to Strangford and then headed north until the light faded at Killyleagh. We tallied 72 species, dipped out on a few we should get and had a few birding highlights en route.

Dawn at the flood gates was spectacular on a clear cold morning with ice on the car park. The highlight there was a large lapwing flock. Other highlights included synchronised fishing from 25 or more red-breasted mergansers in Castleward Bay, 2 Slavonian grebes in Greyabbey Bay south, 2 carrion crows at Strangford, a female pochard and three whoopers at the Quoile and a finch flock of 300+ near Killyleagh . This was largely made up of linnets and goldfinch but also contained, tree sparrow, house sparrow, reed bunting, chaffinch and yellowhammer. The icing on the cake was a sandwich tern at Killyleagh in fading light. There's a list at the end which is there for my records, but feel free to have a browse. 

Th local patch - garden and coastal path - added blackcap(garden) and kingfisher(Long Hole) plus all the usual suspects to start the year. Dunnock was the first bird seen. 

Lapwing at dawn

Rising tide at the Flood Gates

David (rustic bunting) Miller managed some bird shots as well as a few nice scenes so here are a selection.
Stonechat

Goldeneye

Redwing

Song thrush
Brent and shelduck

Buzzard

Yellowhammers

Yellowhammers

WOW on Thursday added 4 to the 2023 list and got the patch off to a 38 start including buzzard, sparrowhawk, snipe, knot and both godwits. 

I also took a run up to the Waterworks in Belfast and finally managed to see two ring-necked parakeets  which have drifted in over the winter. Not only a 2023 tick but a Northern Ireland first and a Co Antrim first as well. Flushed with success we went on to Whitehead for a spot of lunch and added twite.

2023: Great-crested grebe, little grebe, Slavonian grebe, cormorant, shag, grey heron, little egret, mute & whooper swan, greylag & brent geese, shelduck, mallard, pintail, teal, shoveler, gadwall, wigeon, tufted, eider, goldeneye, merganser, pochard, buzzard, moorhen, coot, oystercatcher, lapwing, ringed plover, knot, dunlin, turnstone, snipe, black-tailed godwit, curlew, redshank, greenshank, herring, common, black-headed & great black-backed gulls, sandwich tern, wood pigeon, collared dove, meadow &  rock pipit, pied wagtail, dunnock, robin, stonechat, mistle & song thrush, blackbird, fieldfare, redwing, blue, coal & great tit, carrion & hooded crow, rook, jackdaw, magpie, starling, house & tree sparrow, chaffinch, goldfinch, bullfinch, linnet, reed bunting and yellowhammer. (72)

73: kingfisher
74: blackcap
75 Sparrowhawk
76: long-tailed tit
77: greenfinch
78: bar-tailed godwit
79: Ring-necked parakeet
80: twite

NDCP: dunnock, wood pigeon, magpie, herring gull, robin, blue & great tit, chaffinch, goldfinch, blackbird, fieldfare, redwing, jackdaw, rook, starling, hooded crow, blackcap, black-headed gull, turnstone, cormorant, kingfisher, brent goose, coal tit. (23)

WOW: Oystercatcher, lapwing, black -tailed godwit, snipe, curlew, moorhen, coot, sparrowhawk, buzzard, mallard, wigeon, tufted, shelduck, teal, shoveler, woodpigeon, hooded crow, greylag, magpie, black-headed gull, herring gull, blackbird, pied wagtail, goldfinch, chaffinch, linnet, blue tit, redshank, great tit, long-tailed tit,  greenfinch, great black-backed gull, gadwall, ringed plover, turnstone, knot, bar-tailed godwit, rook. (38)


Sunday, 1 January 2023

2022 - a tale of fractured rib, Covid and osteo-arthritis.

Time for an update and a wrap of 2022.  Things have been slow as the year wound down in the wettest November on record. Overall the year started well but a series of health issues (see title) limited the amount of birding I could do and the walking definitely slowed down and occasionally stopped altogether. Now that I have come to terms with limited mobility I will hopefully be able to work round the issues and might even do a bit more birding from the car or allow more time to walk slower and rest more often when looking for migrants. 

WOW added a few species to the list but is well off the 100 target I normally look for. Lack of walking for spring migrants didn't help and the feeders were either empty or down for a lot of weeks so I missed the odd tick there. Photo here shows a frozen WOW in early December. Most species went elsewhere and the coot and shoveler were concentrated in the two areas of open water.

I finished on 88 with a late rush of stuff I should have ticked earlier in the year plus an unexpected female pochard. Glaring omissions included peregrine, little stint, redpoll, bullfinch, reed bunting, blackcap, sedge warbler and chiffchaff. How could I miss a blackcap at WOW!!

Female pochard x 3



The local North Down patch finally added a red-throated diver, and finished on 67.  70 is the target but look what I missed - jay, siskin, greenfinch, redpoll and Mediterranean gull, -  again the main issue was the inability to walk the coast in spring and autumn. I can't remember the last time I walked into Bangor along the coast, never mind through the town to Ballyholme.  However a fieldfare on a neighbour's tree was an unexpected surprise. The big news patch wise was finally getting waxwings on the patch - only 5 minutes walk from the house. They spent over a week in a berried tree in Maxwell Road and it was nice to catch up with them along with every birder and photographer in Northern Ireland, plus one from Dublin who made a 5 hour round trip to see them. I took a lot of pictures, so here are three.

Hooded crow at sunset




A wet Christmas week in Bolton added nothing to the year list although the new dormer roof looks promising as I can easily view Richard's feeders and the trees at the bottom of his garden. Santa brought a nice tripod which will stay in England and help Bolton birdwatching.  I had nice views of treecreeper and nuthatch in the poplar tree but no woodpecker this time. 

2023 will kick off in the garden on January 1 and the annual round the lough trip on January 2. 

2
022
193: Willow tit
194: Waxwing
(This includes 42 from Florida)

NDCP
65: Red-throated diver
66: Waxwing
67: Fieldfare

WOW
82: Pochard
83: Goldcrest
84: Stonechat
85: Red-throated diver
86: Rock pipit
87: Long-tailed tit
88: Buzzard