 |
Kestrel, Stretford Meadows |
I wasn't feeling particularly energetic today so I opted for a short toddle over Stretford Meadows in the Spring sunshine.
 |
Dry |
The hedgerows by the garden centre were stuffed full of spadgers, dunnocks and great tits and a pheasant called from somewhere in the trees. I was amazed by the baked, nearly hard, mud surface at the entrance to the meadows. Chiffchaffs and robins sang in the trees, a pied wagtail flew off from the mostly-hidden little brook and orange tip butterflies chased each other in the undergrowth.
 |
Stretford Meadows |
Out in open country it was still a lot early for whitethroats and orchids, robins and goldfinches sang from hawthorn bushes and lesser celandines glistened in the sun. Magpies bounced about as usual but the carrion crows were preoccupied in the trees. Odd ones and twos of woodpigeons passed by, a couple of lesser black-backs flew past and pairs of collared doves and stock doves flew circuits of the meadows.
 |
Kestrel, Stretford Meadows |
I found a muddy patch by the cricket pitch and walked it for reassurance's sake even though my boots scarce left an imprint. I meandered round the top of the mound and took the paths that are usually damply off-putting just because I could. The usual male kestrel flew in to see what I was doing, or more likely see if I was going to flush out any food items, and sat in the female's usual tree to watch me pass by.
 |
Comma, showing the comma on its hindwing, Stretford Meadows
|
 |
The same Comma, sunbathing |
Walking by the bramble patches, sheltered from the wind by the trees at the Sandy Lane side of the meadows, there was a profusion of butterflies. Orange tips, small whites, small tortoiseshells, peacocks but mostly commas. I had to take evasive action as a pair of commas chased a peacock out of what was evidently their territory.
 |
Small white, Stretford Meadows |
 |
Walking to Stretford Ees |
I walked down by Kickety Brook into Stretford Ees. A blackcap added to the songscape by the motorway and a song thrush sang by the canal. Another song thrush quietly minded its own business as it rummaged about by the side of the brook. I was very struck that I hadn't seen or heard any parakeets yet.
 |
Song thrush by Kickety Brook |
Chiffchaffs, robins and great tits sang in the trees by the tramlines, wrens and a nuthatch just sort of exploded in song. The river was lower and calmer than it was earlier in the year, babbling over the shoals at the curve near the bridge, a pair of mallards bobbing along with the current.
 |
Sale Water Park |
Sale Water Park was busy with people, understandable on a sunny afternoon and many had evidently headed straight here from the school run. There was a handful of lesser black-backs out on the lake at this end and a few coots puttered about in the reeds. The black-headed gulls had evidently all departed for their breeding colonies.
A mallard drifted about the teal pool on Broad Ees Dole and a mute swan dozed in the trees. The pool by the hide looked deserted at first, the dabchicks seemed to have it all to themselves. A heron flew by but didn't land, a drake gadwall cruised the far bank and a pair of moorhens were making baby moorhens on the near bank. Three Canada geese cruised in, had a quarrel and cruised out again.
 |
Dabchick, Broad Ees Dole |
 |
Honestly, it is a dabchick |
I walked by the Sale Water Park lake. A few swans cruised about, a herd of swans clustered in the far corner of the lake. The pair of great crested grebes kept to midwater away from people, dogs, swimmers and excitable mute swans. The usual crowd on the slipway was a couple of Canada geese and some coots, the ducks were otherwise engaged.
 |
Mute swans, Sale Water Park |
A crowd of Canada geese dozed on the pontoon with a couple of lesser black-backs and a pair of cormorants which kept making a start at courtship rituals then kept thinking better of it.
 |
Cormorants and Canada geese, Sale Water Park |
A few of the mute swans and Canada geese retreated to Barrow Brook for a doze. One of the mute swans was sitting on last year's nest half-hidden in the trees but I wasn't convinced it was nesting, it would have been a lot more grumpy about the other swans and geese being so close.
 |
Mute swan and Canada goose, Barrow Brook |
I sat by the café and watched the feeders for a short while. The squirrels were keeping the titmice at bay, scurrying off at the approach of dog walkers and leaving the field open for great tits and nuthatches to dive in. The only ring-necked parakeet of the day squawked loudly as it flew by at treetop height.
I sloped off under the motorway and caught the 248 into Davyhulme for the shopping I was going to do after walking round Stretford Meadows.