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| Pied wagtail |
It was an early start. The blackbirds and robins sang a lusty dawn chorus. By the time the early morning errands had been done they'd been succeeded by blue tits, coal tits, house sparrows and woodpigeons. It was a mild grey morning so I got the Liverpool train and an all-areas Saveaway, the plan being to go up to Southport to try and put twite on the year list while I was still awake then drift back calling at wherever and seeing what was what.
Suburban railway stations are an underappreciated birdwatching resource. Waiting for the Ormskirk train at Liverpool South Parkway a mixed tit flock — silent blue tits and long-tailed tits and noisy great tits — bounced through the trees and a carrion crow love triangle played out in the treetops. My year list at my local station currently stands at 24 species.
The highlight of the journey North was the quartet of roe deer grazing in a field just South of Hightown.
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| Southport Marine Lake |
Arriving in Southport I went straight to the marine lake and had a walk round to see what was about.
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| Greylags |
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| Herring gulls and mute swans |
The wind picked up and had an edge to it but it was otherwise pleasant walking. The inland sides of the islands were lined with greylags, Canada geese and coots. The mute swans out on the water were tending to cruise about in pairs but an impressive caravan of them kept passing up and down beneath the Marine Way Bridge. Most of the mallards were loafing on the side by the Promenade, together with a few pairs of gadwalls and yet more coots. The herring gulls outnumbered the black-headed gulls about two to one and I couldn't find any lesser black-backs. I looked in vain for either the smew or the snow goose. The only diving ducks were a pair of tufted ducks bobbing about near the paddle steamer and two female goldeneyes out in the middle of the lake. Dabchicks bobbed up and down in the water with gay abandon. The only white goose was a white farm goose with the mob of swans, greylags, coots and herring gulls on the corner jetty.
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| Herring gulls |
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| Gadwall |
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| Tufted ducks |
Jackdaws, magpies and carrion crows idled in the trees on the island. Until they noticed that a sparrowhawk had landed in a tree for a rest. It was quickly seen off the premises.
Blackbirds, song thrushes, greenfinches and chaffinches were busy in the sea buckthorns on the seaward side of the lake. The tide was best part low so I didn't expect much chance of twites in the sailing club compound but it was worth a go. I wasn't surprised to only find a meadow pipits and some oystercatchers. A skein of pink-footed geese flew over and into the salt marsh beyond.
I crossed the road for a look at the salt marsh. Wherever any pink-feet were they were either well in the distance or mid-distance with their heads down, grazing. There were plenty of shelducks about and a drake pintail flew in and landed where the salt marsh meets the beach a couple of hundred yards out from the road. Closer by, skylarks and meadow pipits flitted about the marsh while pied wagtails rummaged about at the base of the sea wall.
I was watching a pair of meadow pipits chasing each other round the marsh when I noticed a flock of finches rise out of the marsh and fly about a bit before settling back down and becoming immediately invisible. I'd seen where they'd gone so it was a simple matter of waiting for them to rise again to move on a bit. I was lucky, I only had to wait a couple of minutes and they were back up. This time I could be sure they were a couple of dozen twites as much by what I wasn't seeing as their snub faces.
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| The salt marsh North of the pier |
Redshanks and black-headed gulls pottered about on the mud around the pier, oystercatchers loafed on the margins of the marsh to the South. It seems strange not to have a snow bunting hereabouts this Winter, I had a look for one anyway, just in case. The only little egret of the day (I seem to be writing that a lot lately) flew in and rummaged about on the marsh with a dozen starlings.
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| Southport Beach |
I walked down to the Transpennine Trail Gateway and asked myself what I wanted to do next. The day and the wind had caught up with me so I walked down to Lord Street and got the X2 to Liverpool. As the bus waited at the lights to join the Formby Bypass I glanced up at a bird drifting high up in the breeze. As it slowly drifted closer I realised it was a red kite. I should have realised before it got that much closer, nearly anything other than a kite would stall and drop out of the sky flying at that speed. I wonder if it's the same one I saw near Bank Hall last month, or the one that keeps turning up unexpectedly over Marshside.
There was the possibility that after a bit of a breather I could get off and walk over to Lunt Meadows or a visit to Crosby Marine Park. It remained a possibility, I just didn't have the energy. I did somehow rack up 55 species for the day, though.