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| Jack Lane Nature Reserve |
It was a bright morning but after a busy week running errands I didn't feel like braving a trip into town for weekend fun with trains. In fact, despite the weather, I was greatly inclined to spend the day in bed. In the end I compromised by having a bacon butty and rather a lot of tea before going for a slow dawdle round Wellacre Country Park.
The moment I stepped over the threshold it clouded over. I had my coat and boots on and had just locked the door so I was committed to the cause so wandered round the corner and got the 256 into Flixton. When I got off the bus robins and woodpigeons were singing in the school yard by the bus stop, which became the constant backing track for the afternoon.
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| Wellacre Wood |
Wellacre Wood was surprisingly busy of birds. Great tits sang in the undergrowth with the robins. Blue tits bounced about in the trees, goldfinches twittered in the treetops, magpies and parakeets clattered about with the woodpigeons. A dozen redwings in one of the hawthorn bushes on the margins was a nice surprise, the blackbirds flitting about everywhere were more expected. I honestly hadn't expected much this time of year, a useful reminder to keep an open mind as much as eyes and ears.
Carrion crows, magpies and a collared dove fossicked about around the horses in the field by the path, woodpigeons and magpies in the field by Jack Lane. Looking over towards the water treatment works a couple of dozen black-headed gulls fussed about while fifty-odd starlings whooped and whistled from the electricity pylons as they assembled ready to go off to roost.
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| Jack Lane Nature Reserve |
I was expecting the path through Jack Lane Nature Reserve to be very muddy and was pleasantly surprised to find it was okay. The water in the pools was high and the little drain between the higher and lower pools, which was bone dry most of last year, was an active rush. Unlike the birds. There were magpies, woodpigeons and robins aplenty in the trees around the reedbeds but it was otherwise very quiet until I walked down the lane towards Dutton's Pond and bumped into a mixed tit flock in the trees on the embankment. I'd given up on hearing or seeing any reedbed birds at all until a moorhen piped up at the corner of the reserve.
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| Mallards, Dutton's Pond |
A dozen mallards drifted about Dutton's Pond with a couple of coots. A couple of chaffinches flitted about in the willows and a song thrush sang from the big trees over the way. It had been threatening to rain and the intermittent spitting turned into a proper shower that lasted all of ten seconds then pretended it never happened. A pair of squirrels took this as a cue to chase each other noisily about the tree tops. Like you do.
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| Dutton's Pond |
Feeling lazy I didn't walk up to the top of Green Hill, limiting myself to trying to keep tabs of the runners and riders in the tit flocks in the trees at the base. In the end I concluded it was about a dozen each of blue tits and great tits and that the small flock of chaffinches were passersby. Another song thrush sang with the robins and woodpigeons and a carrion crow was doing its operatic best from the top of one of the alders.
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| Green Hill |
The Mersey was still high and there were no waterbirds about. Yet another song thrush sang from the waterside while woodpigeons clattered about in the trees. I looked at the interesting colour of the clouds blowing in and headed to the bus stop for the 255 back into Stretford. It had been a quiet afternoon ramble about with hints of an early Spring.
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| Bluebells, Wellacre |


























































