I was suspicious of another sunny day. The knees creaked and my flat cap needed another dose of air refreshener to stop it smelling quite so conspicuously like a distressed sheep.
I'd only been able to get suet pellets when I went to the shop on Friday so the spadgers and starlings squabbled over them while the blue tits and great tits did occasional smash and grab raids on the feeders. I'll have to get some sunflower seeds, the coal tits and goldfinches are missing out.
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| Lostock Park |
I had a quick nosy at my local patch. The park was predictably busy of people on a mild, sunny Sunday afternoon. Which meant the magpies were mostly in the surrounding gardens rather than the park. There was a distinct "liaisons on the school bus" vibe to the rooftops of Barton Road. Robins, blackbirds and great tits sang in the trees by the play area. More great tits sang in the trees at the far end of the park, and they were joined by goldfinches, a wren and a greenfinch. Blue tits and a chaffinch fidgeted about in the bushes but it was otherwise fairly quiet.
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| Barton Clough |
It was even quieter in the waste cornfields. A few woodpigeons, pigeons and magpies flew about. Herring gulls and black-headed gulls flew high overhead. A couple of robins sang, a great tit scolded me from one of the hazel bushes. Even the usual song thrush was silent. Consolation came as the buzzard made a cameo appearance, skimming the tops of the Lombardy poplars in the park and putting the wind up the woodpigeons. It's been a while since I last saw it.
Walking back through the park through the avenue of poplars I upset a mistle thrush which rattled at me from one of the branches just above my head and a bullfinch wheezed from the treetops.
I got the 256 into Flixton and walked down from Town Gate to see what was about on Irlam Locks. The starlings were massing and singing on the electricity pylons and don't think I didn't look at them all to make sure none of them were pink. Similarly the masses of black-headed gulls on the water treatment works were given close inspection, just in case a Mediterranean gull was lurking in amongst them. I'm at that point in the game where I'm worrying about the speed of additions to the year list again. It happens every year and the only unpredictability about it is when it's first going to manifest and make me fidgety. As I've also realised that at some point in the future my birdwatching statistics are going to be a record of my declining powers I can see that I may have to give my head a serious wobble one of these days.
The spadgers in the hedgerows were noisy. Blackbirds fossicked about in a flooded fields by Town Gate Farm. Looking at the immense puddle across the road and the gateway it's to be hoped the farm has the use of an amphibious landing craft.
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| Irlam Road |
The Ship Canal was quiet, just a few mallards and a pair of coots. Cormorants dried their wings on the locks in the company of more mallards and handfuls of black-headed gulls and pigeons. Downstream more mallards and cormorants cruised the canal. There was no sign of the usual mute swans and great crested grebes and the only wagtail was a passing pied wagtail.
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| Downstream from Irlam Locks |
It was a surprisingly low-key day given the weather. Perhaps the birds needed a rest after battling through a week of wind and rain.



















































