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Buzzard, Garston |
The day started with an astonishing assemblage of gulls on the thawed school playing ground:
- Black-headed gull 22
- Common gull 2
- Herring gull 32
- Lesser black-back 8
When I first glanced out of the kitchen window I thought there'd been a snow clearing operation and it had all been dumped on the field.
I fancied exploring somewhere new today, just to recharge my batteries. A shore lark had been seen at Oglet yesterday, I've never seen a shore lark and Oglet is on my to-do list so I headed thataway. Looking at the map I reckoned I could get the train to Liverpool South Parkway, the 82a into Garston and walk down into the coastal park and along the Mersey into Hale. Part of me thought of continuing through to Pickering Pasture and on to Widnes. There's certainly a walk to be had there but not by me and certainly not in January. Not knowing the terrain at all it might be ambitious getting to Hale. As the train passed Flixton and its frozen flooded fields and back gardens I wondered if getting to Oglet might be a bit ambitious.
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Buzzatd |
The train and bus did the required job and I was soon walking down Estuary Road. The paths were mostly clear, it was the crossing points that were icy. The string of pools alongside the road were all frozen. Robins, magpies and blackbirds rummaged about and a flock of goldfinches mobbed a kestrel as it flew by. A buzzard was sitting in the car park of the Argos warehouse, I'm getting used to seeing them in industrial estates.
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Dropping down into the coastal reserve |
Just after the warehouse I noticed a flight of steps going down into the Speke and Garston Coastal Reserve, so I took it, disturbing two herons and a fieldfare that had been feeding by the bottom of the steps. The path at the bottom was a metalled roadway and easy walking up to the sailing club. Where the path dived into a hedgerow and became a patchy quagmire of half-frozen mud which looked worse than it really was. A mixed tit flock of equal numbers blue, great and long-tailed tits passed along the hedgerows, some of the birds coming back to have a look at me when they realised I was there and none of them up for staying still to have their photos taken. The same could be said of the blackbirds and robins, a couple of fieldfares were invisible rattles until one flew over to some trees behind the hedge.
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Walking towards the airport |
I'd been hearing redshanks and curlews. The path emerged onto an icy road in open country leading to the viewing point by the fence to the John Lennon Airport. I was baffled and wondered if I'd taken the wrong turning. Luckily there were dog walkers about so I asked one of them. He'd never heard of Oglet but said there was a very muddy path at the end that followed the fence round. He emphasised that it was very muddy. He wasn't wrong, it looked better than it really was and I was doing well if I was making half speed. On the other hand I was getting increasingly good views of the near bank of the Mersey through the trees and started to see dozens of redshanks and a few curlews.
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Grey plover |
The tide was on the ebb and the waders were impatient to get feeding. Here and there they'd be joined by small groups of dozing mallards. A couple of bar-tailed godwits mingled with a crowd of redshanks along one stretch of mud, a grey plover worked alone, a pair of oystercatchers flew down the river. I'd walked about a mile upstream when I started seeing groups of dunlin at the water's edge and a flock of about eighty teal loafed and whistled on the mud by a low grassy bank.
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Teal, mallards and heron |
The path slipped through some trees and into farmland. The paths along the field margins were mostly a good deal more reliable than the ones I'd been walking so far. This is where the shore lark had been seen the day before. I could hear skylarks but couldn't see them so I didn't hold out much hope for the shore lark. All the action on the first ploughed field was over the rise of the field on the other side: every so often a small flock of lapwings rose and settled back again, every so often a woodpigeon or jackdaw and, finally, the briefest glimpse of a flock of about forty skylarks which disappeared over the brow as soon as I realised what they were. The next field was quieter, just half a dozen carrion crows rummaging about. I bumped into a lady who told me this was the field where her friend had found the shore lark, she was only seeing skylarks about today.
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Looking over the Mersey to Stanlow |
The next couple of fields hadn't been ploughed. There were more carrion crows and woodpigeons and half a dozen pheasants. Something floated up out of the long grass by a hedge and disappeared through it. "That was a short-eared owl," I told myself. Try as I might I couldn't pick the bird up again to confirm it was an owl. I gave myself a stern telling off for getting giddy and carried on my way. I passed a gent who was going after the shore lark, I wished him better luck than I'd had.
I made a bit of a muck of the connection between the path and Oglet Lane but I got onto it and walked down to Hale Lane. If I make a repeat visit I'll get the 82a to Bailey's Lane and walk down this way. I was waiting for a gap in the traffic to cross Hale Road when the bus arrived. The driver took pity on me and I was on my way to Widnes.
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Little egret, West Bank |
The 82a passes West Bank on its way through Widnes to Runcorn, which was convenient as there were reports over the weekend of an adult Kumlein's gull on the river there by the bridges. I got off the bus and walked through the subway and under the railway viaduct onto the West Docklands Park and scanned the river. There was a crowd of unidentifiable large gulls on the mud banks across the river. Closer by it was all black-headed gulls. A little egret and some redshanks fossicked about by the near bank. I reckon I ought to be able to recognise an adult Kumlein's gull unaided but if it was out there it was a job for a telescope and a lot of patience. Perhaps I'd have more luck on the other side of the bridge.
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Mallards, black-headed gulls, common gulls and lesser black-backs |
I walked under the bridge and onto the old transport bridge wharf where crowds of gulls were finding what they could on the newly-emerged mud. Most were black-headed gulls with a few lesser black-backs and common gulls, nearly all the herring gulls were loafing on the mud banks with a few great black-backs and cormorants. It was good to see a variety of ages of common gull, we generally only get adults round our way so I appreciated the chance to get my eye in on first- and second-Winter birds. I'd written off my chances of seeing a Kumlein's gull but was happy enough with the consolation prize of a first-Winter Caspian gull standing tall over a group of herring gulls.
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Mallards and black-headed gulls |
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Lesser black-back, common gull and mallard |
I walked round to Spike Island in the fading light. I thought it would be nice if the usual ruddy shelduck were around to be added to the year list. I was staggered when there it was the moment I turned the corner.
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Shelducks and ruddy shelduck, Spike Island |
I headed for the bus stop to get the 110 to Warrington and thence home. I went onto Birdguides to pass on the records of the Caspian gull and the ruddy shelduck and noticed a report of a short-eared owl at Oglet. Judging at the time it was submitted the chap I'd been talking to must have seen it just after we'd spoken. I made myself give myself an apology.
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Gulls and carrion crows, West Bank |