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| New Moss Wood |
What to do on a sunny Bank Holiday Monday? A couple of ideas didn't survive bus schedules and a horror of city centre bank holiday rail mayhem. I got the first train to Irlam that wasn't affected by an incident in Liverpool and went for a walk on the Salford Mosses.
A medley of birdsong was the almost constant backing track for the day. As I walked to Moss Road, woodpigeons, robins, dunnocks and blackbirds sang in the gardens and street trees. At the allotment they were joined by great tits, goldfinches, chaffinches, a blackcap, a chiffchaff, a coal tit and a drumming great spotted woodpecker.
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| The path to the old railway junction |
I crossed Moss Road for a nosy at the hedgerows along the path to the old Wigan to Altrincham line. Blue tits, wrens and a song thrush joined the songscape. Everything went quiet as a female sparrowhawk circled over, a chaffinch calling the alarm, and then it drifted over to New Moss Wood. The all clear lasted a minute, she powered back and headed into Cadishead. The singers paid not a jot of notice of the buzzard that floated low overhead and into the wood.
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| New Moss Wood |
The songscape in New Moss Wood was the same but quieter, more spread out, and the singers that much harder to spot. Unlike the three buzzards spiralling round each other over the wood, calling all the while, before going their separate ways. Most of the green in the wood was provided by nettles and it didn't take long before I met the first of an army of peacock butterflies. There were plenty of nettles to go round, which didn't stop one of the peacocks attacking any small tortoiseshells that drifted into its territory. There were quite a few brimstone butterflies and my attempts to photograph them gave me a selection of out-of-focus photos of dandelions. Pheasants, carrion crows and jackdaws called from the fields, jays and magpies from the woodland canopy and a willow warbler sang in the birches by the car park.
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| Dryad's saddle |
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| New Moss Wood |
Goldfinches and house sparrows sang in the hedgerows along Moss Road and lapwings were setting up territories on newly-sown fields. The flocks of rooks, jackdaws and carrion crows rummaging about the fields didn't help the lapwings' nerves any.
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| Little Woolden Moss |
Little Woolden Moss was quiet, in a Canada geese, mallards and black-headed gulls having a doze sort of way. The reserve was phenomenally busy with cyclists, which is a bit challenging on such narrow paths but we coexisted amiably enough. The chiffchaffs in the trees by the Moss Road entrance were replaced by the willow warblers of the birch and willow scrub.
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| Little Woolden Moss |
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| The Eastern pool on Little Woolden Moss |
A kestrel hovered over the field by Lavender Lane, ignored by a cock pheasant escorting his lady over the open ground. I didn't expect a male stonechat to bob up out of a bramble patch, it was a nice surprise. A pair of stock doves were more predictable but still very nice to see.
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| Astley Road |
The walk down Astley Road into Irlam was fairly quiet. Chiffchaffs sang broken calls as they wound down for the day while blackbirds, robins and a mistle thrush got their second wind and started singing ready for evening. A curlew called as it flew low overhead. Chaffinches, goldfinches and greenfinches quietly rummaged about in the hedgerows and treetops, linnets bustled about in the trees. A singing yellowhammer by the motorway came as a lot of a relief, they're very few and far between these days.
I had a while to wait for my train home. While I was waiting I was serenaded by songbirds. A blackbird, robins and a wren were the key vocalists with contributions from chaffinches, goldfinches and great tits and a constant backing throb supplied by collared doves and woodpigeons. Which was nice.























































