 |
Knots, Meols |
It was scheduled to be the last day without rain for a while so I had a day at the seaside.
 |
Kerr's Field: lapwings and black-headed gulls |
It was a cold, bright morning with a keening wind when I got off the train at Moreton. I walked down to Kerr's Field, which turned out to be heaving with birds. Pied wagtails and redshanks skittered about in the paddocks as I walked by. There was a crowd of oystercatchers, lapwings, black-headed gulls and herring gulls in the big field with small groups of teal dabbling about in the pools.
 |
Teal, Kerr's Field |
The hedgerows behind Leasowe Lighthouse were busy with house sparrows, greenfinches and goldfinches. I got some practice in on spotting them in preparation for the Spring passage when these hedgerows are full of surprises.
 |
Turnstone and common gull, Leasowe |
I'd guessed right on the wind direction when deciding to start from here, it was blowing into my back and when I dropped down onto the revetment the sea wall provided some welcome shelter. The tide had turned and was slowly engulfing the sand banks. Oystercatchers and herring gulls loafed on the shrinking sandbanks while curlews and redshanks were busy feeding up while they could. Closer by, carrion crows and common gulls dropped cockles onto the concrete slope to crack them open, each thud and crack punctuating the calls of the gulls and waders out on the beach. There was a notable absence of little egrets.
 |
Brent geese, Leasowe |
 |
Brent geese, Leasowe |
As I approached the groyne I bumped into a group of light-bellied brent geese as they browsed the seaweed at the base of the revetment.
 |
Brent geese, Leasowe |
 |
Redshanks, Meols |
 |
Curlew and redshank, Meols |
 |
Knots, Meols |
As always, passing the groyne changes the birdscape. Knots joined the turnstones rummaging about in the seaweed and the redshanks feeding on the mud. The herring gulls were loafing nearer to shore along with a few lesser black-backs and a lot of fidgety black-headed gulls. As the tide rolled in the distant waders preceded it, waves of more redshanks and knots and, eventually, hordes of dunlins.
 |
Stubborn oystercatchers |
 |
Not-so-stubborn oystercatchers |
By the time I reached Meols Promenade the waders had started to come in quite close though the majority of the dunlins were still for keeping their distance. A few pairs of shelducks dabbled in the wet mud and mallards rummaged about in the marsh grass. All the waders were frantically feeding while keeping one step ahead of the tide. Lowering my binoculars and looking at the moving mass of birds it was like watching a tide in front of the tide. I had a stroke of luck: suddenly all the birds far out from the shore rose like a cloud and flew in a lot closer. At first I thought the encroaching tide was the cause then a peregrine stormed over the beach and headed inland followed by an irate herring gull.
 |
Knots, redshanks, dunlins and shelducks |
 |
Shelducks |
A little stint had been reported a few times over the past week but I didn't hold out any chance of seeing it if it was still hanging about. It was probably somewhere in the distant mass of knots and dunlins paying chicken with the tide. Which didn't stop me looking twice a few times at some undersized dunlins in the nearby marsh. When I actually did see the little stint I made a good case for it being another undersized dunlin until one walked close by and dwarfed it. It was a fidgety little beggar, skittering about between clumps of grass so every time I got a good enough look to confirm it was a stint it disappeared stage left. I took a couple of photographs, the most successful of which managed to catch the end of the tail of the bird behind the grass at the edge of the picture.
It was still only mid-afternoon so I thought I'd move on. I'd have no joy walking on to Red Rocks now the tide was in so I walked up to Manor Road Station. I'd half a mind to head over to West Kirby then I remembered there'd been a report of white-fronted geese by the roadside in Brimstage, a quarter of a mile walk from Heswall Station so off I went.
I had quarter of an hour's wait at Bidston for the Wrexham train. Bidston Station's surrounded by reedbeds so the calls and songs of robins, greenfinches and reed buntings came as no surprise. Unlike the trackside Cetti's warbler.
 |
Brimstage Road |
It really was just a quarter of an hour's walk from Heswall Station down Brimstage Road to the flooded fields in question. It was a bright afternoon but the wind was bitter cold and cutting. Pheasants prowled hedge bottoms, woodpigeons and carrion crows clattered about and a flock of a few dozen stock doves flew over the road and disappeared into a field of stubble. The first field had a line of Canada geese end to end and I thought I was going to be unlucky but the next field had a line of grazing greylags on the far side away from the road and I spent a while scanning the flock.
I kept getting distracted by one greylag that had an orange collar on it, too far for me to see any letters or numbers which might tell me which study team had slipped it on it. I kept coming back to a pair of geese near a tree that didn't look quite right for greylags but had their backs to me and their heads down as they grazed. They looked browner and less broad in the beam but not convincingly white-fronted geese from this angle. Eventually one brought its head up and had a good stretch. A European white-front, thinner-necked than the greylags and with a less massive beak, salmon-pink in the low afternoon light though I could hardly see the white blaze behind the beak.
A flock of chaffinches flew into the trees by the roadside as I walked back to the station. I spent a while hoping to find a brambling but had to make do with a flock of a few dozen chaffinches which is something I'm not seeing often enough lately. While I was scanning the flock I saw the next Wrexham train go through the station which put paid to any ideas I had about adding a visit to Neston and Parkgate to an already full day's itinerary. I didn't have long to wait for the Bidston train and I wended my weary way back home, the year list now standing at 126.
 |
Bidston Station |