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Green woodpecker, Rivington Pike Cottage |
I spent yesterday sorting out and finally receiving the delivery I'd waited all day for, which was extremely frustrating as it was a lovely Autumn day. I went out to Wellacre Country Park at teatime to get a bit of exercise and try to wind down a bit but the mood wasn't conducive to birdwatching so I limited myself to walking down from Flixton Station, saying hello to the mallard and coot on Dutton's Pond, then having a nodding acquaintance with a mixed tit flock including a nuthatch in Wellacre Wood while trying and failing to see a passing skein of pink-feet through the leaf canopy.
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Georges Road |
It was another nice day today, I decided I'd do better. I've done hardly any hillwalking this year and haven't touched the Horwich moors so I got a 125 from Bolton Bus Station, got off at Georges Road and headed up the hill. The first half mile was hard work but the joints loosened up a lot and it was a good walk.
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Jay |
Robins sang in the hedgerows, carrion crows and magpies rummaged about in the fields by the road and jays with crops full of acorns commuted between Wilderswood and the fields, accounting for the proliferation of oak saplings in the fields not grazed by sheep or horses.
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Looking up to Winter Hill |
It had become one of those days when whatever you wore it would be wrong. When the sun was out I was dressed too warm, when a cloud rolled over or the road passed onto shadow the sharp edge of the breeze asserted itself. It was warm enough for butterflies, large whites and red admirals fluttered about the wayside and a surprisingly late meadow brown played peek-a-boo in the rank grass between bilberry bushes.
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Stonechat not cooperating with the cameraman |
I got myself a cup of tea at Rivington Pike Cottage, saying hello to many friendly dogs in the process. It had been a nice walk up and the joints had loosened up considerably so I deserved a few minutes sat down contemplating a rather pleasant landscape. A robin sang by the café and I could hear the ticking of stonechats but couldn't see them. A few linnets were more accommodating. I finished my drink and walked up the road. I hadn't gone far when the stonechats started showing themselves, flitting up from the field to strike poses on fenceposts before zipping back down into cover. A few more linnets emerged from the heather, meadow pipits bobbed up and sat on the fence before flying over the road and disappearing into the moors.
Then I had a shock. A flash of vivid green caught my eye and a green woodpecker flew up and perched on the fence. For the first time in my life a green woodpecker sat still long enough for me to get its photo. It lurched back down again to rummage amongst the rocks and heather by the hidden stream. Knowing it was there and seeing it were three different things.
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A few years back I stared in this field and was completely unable to find a wryneck. I feel a bit better about it after today. The green woodpecker in this picture is twice the size of a wryneck, is bright green and has a pillar box red cap. |
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Carrion crow |
Stonechats fly-catched from wire fences, mipits flew hither and thither, crows and magpies strutted about in the fields. I wandered over the county boundary to check out the plantation above the cottage, for once it was quietly deserted, sometimes there are titmice and I harboured an unlikely hope that some of the crossbills or siskins that have been passing over on migration might have stopped for a rest.
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Stonechat cooperating with the cameraman |
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Rivington Pike |
A kestrel hunted over the moor below the pike. I decided not to walk on over to Rivington, choosing instead to turn back and toss a coin between walking up Winter Hill and over to Burnt Edge and Walker Fold or down through Wilderswood into Horwich. Wilderswood won. As I walked down past the café a raven cronked by and drifted down the hill. There was a small passage of swallows, twos and threes heading roughly southwards, the more roughly when they skimmed over the heather and were chased off by mipits.
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Wilderswood |
The depths of the wood were mostly quiet, occasional great tits or chiffchaffs calling from the canopy. The rides and the clearings where the larch trees were felled a couple of years ago were livelier, wrens and blackbirds fossicking about in the heath and bracken, robins, titmice and chiffchaffs in the trees and bushes. Woodpigeons and magpies clattered about and jay's passed to and fro.
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Wilderswood |
I meandered my way round and down to Brownlow Road where long-tailed tits and coal tits bounced through the trees. The most wearisome part of the afternoon's walk was the meander down the steep streets of the housing estate into Horwich for the bus back to Bolton.