![]() |
Female black-tailed skimmer, Little Woolden Moss |
For some reason I was awake before the crack of dawn and stayed awake. I thought of all the things I could do with the day, decided I couldn't be doing with any of them and had an early lunch before getting the train to Irlam and a wander round the Salford mosses.
The day had started cloudy but a brisk wind was scudding the clouds away. It was one of those days where I was glad I didn't put my jacket on but should have chosen a thicker shirt. The wind was keeping the small birds under cover, the Zinnia Close spadgers had the privet hedges quivering and shivering with their chatter.
![]() |
Astley Road |
Goldfinches twittered and blackbirds sang in the hedgerow trees. The first dozen or so of the hundreds of woodpigeons I'd be seeing this afternoon grazed on the turf fields with the first handful of what would be dozens of large whites. Further over, by Roscoe Road, a tractor was mowing another turf field closely followed by a couple of lesser black-backs and a flock of swallows.
![]() |
Rowan berries |
It was a fairly quiet walk up to the motorway. Swallows and woodpigeons passed to and fro overhead and there were dozens more out in the fields. Commas, red admirals and large whites littered the verges, keeping out of the wind. I didn't see a kestrel until I got to Worsley View. The field behind was busy to woodpigeons and stock doves.
![]() |
Looking North from the motorway bridge |
The turf fields on the other side of the motorway were busy with crows and gulls. On the far side of the field by the motorway a couple of dozen black-headed gulls loafed just to one side of a couple of dozen lesser black-backs. Swallows skimmed the mown grass tops, pied wagtails skittered about and the pair of mistle thrushes rummaging about a trip of newly-scalped turf had four mildew-mottled youngsters.
A lone sand martin passed by as I passed the entrance to Hephzibah Farm. It wasn't until there I saw the first house martin, very high in the sky. A garden warbler sang from the trees by the stables.
![]() |
Kestrel |
Four kestrels were hunting over the rough pasture at Four Lanes End, a male, a female and two immature birds. The young birds didn't look young enough to be this year's birds, I was surprised they were tolerated. The same field also had a flock of a couple of dozen stock doves, or a dozen pairs of stock doves, rummaging about in the long grass.
![]() |
By Lavender Lane |
![]() |
Comma |
The entrance to Little Woolden Moss by the car park was fizzing with butterflies. Commas outnumbered the red admirals, large whites and peacocks. A common hawker patrolled the area at shoulder height, dipping occasionally to skim the bramble tops and getting mobbed by commas in the process.
![]() |
Red admiral |
Blackbirds, goldfinches, blackcaps and chiffchaffs sang in the trees. A whitethroat slipped into cover without making a sound.
![]() |
Syrphus sp. hoverfly |
![]() |
Little Woolden Moss |
The crows were out in force on the open moss and were joined by a mixed flock of jackdaws and rooks. Willow warblers called and occasionally broke cover but were too busy for singing. The reed buntings and linnets were occasional low flying objects in the bracken. A kestrel flew leisurely overhead and headed for the barley fields to the North. A minute later a hobby shot by at head height, I had time to register an iron grey back and fox red pantaloons before it was gone.
![]() |
Oystercatchers |
A first glance at the pools was misleading. It looked quiet but wasn't. A dozen black-headed gulls, including two very young, heavily tea-stained, birds, had found a sheltered corner near the jackdaws. The oystercatcher chicks were full grown but still showing brown tones in their plumage. There were a couple of dozen lapwings, the youngsters now full grown, and most of them standing close to the wicker hurdles to keep out of the wind. A mallard had nine tiny ducklings in tow and she marshalled them across the expanses of mud at a very brisk trot.
![]() |
Most of the lapwings huddled behind the hurdles to shelter out of the wind |
I'd hoped to see more dragonflies but the wind was keeping them undercover until I got to the birch scrub beyond the old hide site. Even them it was thin pickings. I looked at the basking site where I never see any lizards despite everyone and his dog telling me they've just seen one. There was a peacock butterfly and a black-tailed skimmer trying to warm up in the breeze. A handful of common blue damselflies bobbed about in the long grass and my first black darter of the year pottered about on the path before flying into some heather.
![]() |
Cross-leaved hearg |
![]() |
Heading into the birch scrub |
I decided to walk through to Little Woolden Hall and thence into Glazebrook and then go home. A few willow warblers flitted about the birch scrub, a blackcap sang in a thicket of birch and gorse.
![]() |
By Little Woolden Hall |
The fields by Little Woolden Hall were full of woodpigeons. Hundreds of them. Half a dozen stock doves and a couple of dozen pigeons lost themselves in the crowd. A skylark sang, a few meadow pipits and pied wagtails flew between fields, the swallows evidently had very active nests in the stables.
![]() |
Mallards |
A handful of drake mallards drifted up the Glaze upstream of the bridge. Two ducks and their ducklings loafed downstream.
It was an easy stroll down into Glazebrook with its spadgers and collared doves and I got the train home. I'd been lucky: I'd been upwind of the mown turf and pasture and downwind of the fields of ripening wheat and barley. Top tip for a high pollen count day: stick to ripening arable.