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| Redwing |
It was a cool, grey day. I got the morning's errands sorted and set out for a day out, using one of my Delay Repay compensatory return tickets for a visit to Leighton Moss.
As has become a habit I stayed on the Barrow train up to Ulverston and got the train back to Silverdale so I could check out the estuaries on the Cumbrian side of Morecambe Bay.
There was plenty of ice on the pools by the coastal hides at Leighton Moss though there was plenty enough free water for a few mute swans to cruise about. A buzzard sitting in one of the trees made a change from the usual marsh harrier.
The tide was fairly low so the birds were spread out over the estuaries. For once there weren't any black-headed gulls on the Kent at Arnside, which must be a bit like the ravens leaving the Tower of London, a sign or portent of something. There was just the one pigeon on the viaduct and a redhead red-breasted merganser swimming up one of the channels. There were some redshanks with the teals in the land drains on the Meathop side of the estuary.
There were plenty of black-headed gulls at Grange-over-sands and they all seemed to be on the ornamental lake in the park. A couple of curlews fed in a damp field between Kents Bank and Cark. The land drains beyond Cark were thick with mallards though the salt marsh was barren. There were more mallards, together with a dozen redshanks and thirty-odd wigeon on the Leven as the train passed over. I'll have to wait another day to add eider to the year list.
As ever, Ulverston Station was busy with herring gulls and they seemed to be warming up for the breeding season just as much as the rooks and jackdaws inspecting nests in the treetops. The usual robins were notably absent.
On the way back I picked up a curlew with more mallards, redshanks and wigeons on the Leven and a little egret on the frozen salt marsh. Another was on the salt marsh at Kents Bank, which is usually bouncing with them. It was a relief to see half a dozen black-headed gulls as we crossed over the Kent into Arnside.
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| Ivy and spleenwort, Silverdale Station |
The hedgerows at Silverdale Station were busy with blackbirds and redwings feasting on hawthorn and ivy berries. I still haven't seen any fieldfares this year and I didn't today either.
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| Chaffinch |
After the frenetic activity at Amberswood yesterday the feeding station by the Hideout was a sedated affair though there was no shortage of birds. Chaffinches, blue tits and coal tits dominated the feeders with great tits and greenfinches bathing in every so often. Robins and dunnocks were always about, either on the ground under the feeders or the bushes by them, or else begging for scraps from old blokes who didn't have any bird food in his pocket. As the day progressed I felt increasingly guilty I didn't have a bag of mealworms with me. The mallards were nearly as bad but they shuffled back to join the pheasants and moorhens tidying up on the floor under the feeders.
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| Blue tit |
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| Chaffinches and coal tit |
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| At Lilian's Hide |
The paths were surprisingly good given the recent weather, they were dry and the ice was can't. Which couldn't be said of the pool at Lilian's Hide which was completely frozen over. I headed for the reedbed hides, passing through mixed tit flocks along the way. I had no luck — again — with marsh tits but the treecreepers in the flock showed very well, right up to the second the camera got them into focus. Pairs of robins ganged up to demand food with menaces as I walked along.
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| Walking into the reedbeds |
Moorhens skittered about on the paths and there was a constant squealing of water rails in the reeds. Every so often a rail could be seen dashing across the ice in a gap in the reeds before disappearing from view and letting out a gut-wrenching squeal. When I first started birdwatching I was told that a water rail sounds like a pig with its balls caught in a mangle and I imagine that's not far wrong.
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| The treecreepers were showing well but were very camera shy |
The pool at the Tim Jackson Hide was also froozen over and deserted.
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| The robin relented and hopped back into the trees by the path. |
Walking back I was trying to take some photos of fungi on my 'phone when a robin flew over and perched on it. It took some persuasion that I was walking round empty-handed.
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| Honey fungus |
I passed by Lilian's Hide and headed for the visitor centre, yet more robins making themselves available for feeding.
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| When you have to switch to your camera's macro setting to get a photo of a robin |
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| Robin, the same bird as above |
A pair of marsh tits weren't begging but they weren't unduly fussed by my presence and spent a good five minutes fidgeting their way through the brambles by the path at ankle height. It was only as I was trying to photograph them that I realised how bad the light was. Slow shutter speeds are not your friend whenever photographing small birds, and certainly not when you have to use the camera's macro setting to get them into focus.
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| When you have to use the macro setting to take a photo of a marsh tit fidgeting about round your ankles in murky light. |
As I was leaving Leighton Moss to head to the station a flock of redwings were feeding in the hedgerow by the car park. They were indifferent to passing cars, and not much fussed by passing people. I turned the corner and round onto Silverdale Station and could easily have reached out and touched some of the redwings in the hawthorns by the wall. From my perspective it was good to see them so close. From their perspective they were too cold and hungry to be worrying about daft old men.
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| Redwing |
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| Redwing |




























































