![]() |
| Common darter |
The plan was to go yomping up some hills today. The knees were not keen on the idea. I paid no attention, we were going to get the train to Bolton then get a bus and go yomping up some hills today. Climbing the stairs up the footbridge to platform 2 at Oxford Road the knees staged an intervention that persuaded me that perhaps today wasn't the day. And that I need to be ordering a couple of bushels of fiery rubbing cream for the Winter. I'd received yet another complimentary return ticket in yesterday's post and my wallet was full to busting with them so I thought I'd use one up on a trip out to Cumbria.
The regular reader will be unsurprised to learn that the train to Barrow was cancelled at Preston.
At Preston there was an announcement telling passengers to get the next train to Lancaster (I think it was a Transpennine Express one). This sounded like a workaround until I looked at the train schedules at Lancaster: instead of waiting an hour and thirty minutes at Preston for the Windermere train and hoping to connect with the Carlisle train at Lancaster you'd be waiting ten minutes at Preston and waiting an hour and twenty minutes at Lancaster. Buttons to that, I thought.
On the way back I got off at Chorley and played bus station bingo, which is how I came to get the 347 to Mere Sands Wood via Eccleston, Croston and Rufford, joining up a few more dots in my mental map of West Lancashire along the way. And along the way I noticed that Stretford isn't the only town missing its woodpigeons.
![]() |
| Mere Sands Wood main entrance |
I got off the bus on Holmeswood Road near the entrance to Mere Sands Wood. Next time I come this way I must remember to get off at the bus stop on Cousins Lane in Rufford and go down the footpath round the back of the houses into the wood. The main entrance is not for the faint-hearted pedestrian, even with very considerate drivers. A skein of pink-footed geese passing over was a welcome distraction.
![]() |
| Mere Sands Wood |
It was another blowy day, thick cloud and sunshine alternating at irregular intervals. Once inside the shelter of the wood it was a very pleasant warm Autumn day. I had a meandering wander round the paths in a generally anticlockwise direction for a change. I don't know how I got into the habit of going clockwise round nature reserves and I have no idea if it makes any difference one way or another.
![]() |
| Mere Sands Wood |
Robins were singing and goldfinches and chaffinches were busy in the trees near the visitor centre. As I walked into the woodland I started hearing mixed tit flocks but it was only when I leaned back to stare up in the treetops that I started seeing them. The great tits, blue tits and nuthatches worked the upper reaches of the middle canopy while the coal tits and goldcrests stayed right up top. I could hear treecreepers but only saw the tail end of one of them as it flitted between trees. Even that started in the middle and worked its way up. An over mature female Southern hawker had me puzzled for a bit as it zipped around some bushes, all the bright colours had faded on the thorax so at first sight it looked entirely black and the abdomen had faded to a dull, pale blue-green.
![]() |
| Bathing gadwalls |
The pools weren't overly busy, a few mallards, coots and gadwalls on the water and a few common darters basking on the wooden railings of the viewing platforms.
![]() |
| Coot |
The woods were very picturesque in the low November sun.
![]() |
| Mere Sands Wood |
![]() |
| Mere Sands Wood |
![]() |
| Turkey tail fungus |
There were more chaffinches and tit flocks, there were some siskins with the goldfinches in one stand of birch trees, woodpigeons clattered about, magpies rattled, dunnocks and robins squeaked and wrens sang. I spent five minutes getting a crick in my neck watching a mystery squirrel building a drey in the top branches of a pine tree. It wasn't until it made a sortie for some more twigs that I could see it was a grey squirrel. In the end all the ones I saw today were greys.
![]() |
| The footpath to Curlew Lane |
On a whim I took the footpath out of the wood that eventually leads to Curlew Lane and thence either Martin Mere or Burscough. I thought I'd walk into Burscough Bridge for the train home. Unfortunately I wasn't sure whether or not the path into a farmyard was the footpath or not and couldn't get a good enough 'phone signal to download a footpath map so I retraced my steps back into the wood. I'll have a go at walking up from Curlew Lane some time.
![]() |
| Pied wagtail The plumage pattern makes more sense when it's not a car park or railway station. |
The cabbage fields had been harvested and left to the attentions of pied wagtails and skylarks. A field away something had brought a crowd of black-headed gulls and jackdaws over to one corner.
![]() |
| Looking over towards Tootle Lane |
![]() |
| Mere Sands Wood |
Back into the wood I carried on along the path by the woodland margin and was seeing much the same as before, and very nice too.
![]() |
| Mere Sands Wood from Rufford |
I took the path out of the wood and followed it as it jinked round the edge of the houses, accompanied most of the way by a very confiding goldcrest that disappeared into the hawthorn hedge any time the camera got it in focus. In the end I put the camera away and we almost walked hand-in-wing down to the top of the road.
I had a couple of minutes to wait for the next bus. The 347 to Southport, the 2a to Ormskirk and the 2a to Preston arrived within two minutes of each other in that order. I got the middle one, got off at Burscough Bridge station and had five minutes to wait for the train into Manchester and caught the train home from there because although we were stuck at Castlefield Junction for ten minutes my train home was eleven minutes late so I still had plenty of time to run across the platform to get it.
Despite Northern Rail's efforts I'd had a good day out.


















































