Thursday 20 April 2023

Spring at last (and migrants)

I think we have finally left winter behind and are looking forward to the increasing temperatures and the flood of migrants heading our way. The coastal path added lesser black-backed gull and sandwich tern, while WOW pitched in with a sandwich tern and a sand martin or two. Comber turned up a hoopoe which had seriously overshot and took two visits to get a not very good photo. Another record shot I hear you say? Then it was off to England for family time and two walks round Elton Reservoir which is my go-to birding site when I am in Bolton. 

I have a few from WOW over the past few weeks, nothing startling but some of interest to those who like bling.

Pintail

Black-tailed godwit just starting to colour up
       
Ringed black-headed gull
(Courtesy of John Fraser)

2LC3
(Courtesy of John Fraser)
                                       
Shoveler

Flotilla of tufties

Ringed godwit
Well into breeding plumage

Pair of posing Mediterranean gulls

The godwit was one of over 20 ringed at WOW in April 2021 and has been re-sighted here regularly. The young black-headed gull was ringed in S Scotland last year and this was the first re-sighting. Also finally got a starling, willow warbler, blackcap and a grey plover. I have seen grey plover at WOW before but not recently and it remains a not very common species at WOW. I have absolutely no idea how I got to April 20 without picking up starlings. Could have missed them earlier in the year but when I realised they hadn't been seen and starting looking they just weren't there. 


The hoopoe pitched up in a cemetery in Comber and gave good views. Unfortunately it was harassed a bit by photographers and became a bit flighty. I went twice and stayed well away so the photographs are not the best, but hey, it ticked three boxes -  County Down, Northern Ireland and 2023. Could have added it to a UK or British Isles list if I had them, but I don't.

Initial view was distant

Closer but behind a bench

Walking away!

Closer in
At this point the camera battery packed in - should have charged it but forgot. 

I managed two walks round Elton reservoir - see first photo - during Easter week and both walks added spring migrants to the list. Willow warbler and chiffchaff were common and I finally added house martin and swallow - one of each. I also managed to see a great spotted woodpecker on the nut feeder at Elton and then heard one drumming in the area six days later. Elton has had a run of good birds recently but it's a matter of right time right place, and the alpine swift had moved on. The second photo shows the River Irwell just below Elton, the third photo shows "The dip" and on a warm misty morning I was listening to song thrush, blackbird, robin, dunnock, chiffchaff, great tit, goldfinch and willow warbler all topped off with a drumming great spotted woodpecker - magic!!


Elton Reservoir

River Irwell

Birdsong in the Dip

2023
124: Glaucous gull
125: Fulmar (omitted from the Islay trip)
126: Sea eagle
127: Golden eagle
128: Hoopoe
129: Sand martin
130: Willow warbler
131: Great spotted woodpecker
132: House martin
133: Swallow

NDCP
56: Lesser black-backed gull
57: Sandwich tern

WOW
70: Sand martin
71: Sandwich tern
72:Grey plover
73: Blackcap
74: Willow warbler 
75: Starling



Monday 3 April 2023

Islay (Again)

What keeps pulling me back to Islay? It takes me three hours to get there, and three hours to get back and I get 6 hours on the island. The boat is fast and generally comfortable although it can be a tad choppy occasionally. This trip had three hours of wet and windy weather before it cleared up and the raptors took to the air. That is the draw every winter, 35000 wintering geese and a raptorfest. This year I logged 50 species including twite, barnacle geese, white-fronted geese, hen harrier, golden eagle, white-tailed eagle little egret and pintail. The boat journey had gannet, kittiwake, razorbill, guillemot, black guillemot and red-throated diver. As usual I am depending on David Miller for good photographs  or pointing you at the JBirds - Birding by Boat Facebook page where you can drool over the photographs taken by people who have a good camera and know how to use it. Gary Gray and Albert Boyle were on my boat and they snapped what I was watching. Check out the link and scroll down to find the photographs. 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/jbirds/


Here are my photographs  (Last three) and David's photographs (all the rest).

Note angle of horizon to the boat!!

Barnacle geese

White-fronted goose

White-tailed eagle (juvenile)



Loch Gruinart reserve

Port Ellen

Ardnave Point

Rain, what rain?

The trip added the following to the 2023 list, but obviously left the two local patches as they were! Will I go back to Islay for yet another visit? Of course I will, we didn't get the chough. 😞


2023
125: Golden eagle
126: White-tailed eagle