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| Cormorant, New Brighton (A carbo bird) |
Yesterday was cold and windy and I really didn't feel like battling against it so I had a writing day. Which finished just after 3am when I noticed the time. Today was cool rather than cold, probably because the wind had lessened considerably, so I headed over to the Wirral to see what was about. I've seen very few reports of purple sandpipers at New Brighton this Winter but you never know your luck so I'd go there first. Once I'd finished there I could the go over to West Kirby to see what was on the marine lake.
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| Turnstone, West Kirby |
At Liverpool I just missed the New Brighton train so I headed over to West Kirby first. It was a very high tide, high enough for kayakers to ride over the seawall to the lake with plenty of clearance. Turnstones fussed about the car park end of the lake unheeding of people and not particularly fussed about dogs. Herring gulls and black-headed gulls bobbed about on the water, rather more herring gulls sat on the rooftops in town.
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| Red-breasted mergansers |
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| Scaup |
Walking down the promenade I soon started picking up red-breasted mergansers, half a dozen of them in total. Most were cruising about the seawall end but one pair steamed across the lake shadowing a group of goldeneyes. A drake scaup lead the way for a while until he dived and re-emerged where the goldeneyes had been half a minute ago.
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| Little Eye, Middle Eye and Hilbre from the marine lake |
I carried on walking to the end of the lake, just in case anything else had drifted in, because I was feeling greedy. Nothing had but there were half a dozen common scoters out in the middle of the river. A couple of small flocks of knots and a few redshanks flew downstream to roost on Hilbre. Walking back I could see that Little Eye was covered with cormorants and a pair of great black-backs.
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| Dunlins and redshank |
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| Redshanks and dunlins |
I'd had my lunchtime walk so I headed over to New Brighton where the tide was on the point of turning and the redshanks were leaving the pontoon roost to chase the retreating tide. A few turnstones stayed behind and scuttled about amongst the black-headed gulls and herring gulls, a handful of dunlins caught up with their sleep. There was no sign of any purple sandpipers. A flock of starlings bustled about the promenade and pied wagtails skittered about the car park.
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| New Brighton |
The emerging beach was dotted with black-headed gulls and redshanks. The sea defences to the lighthouse were littered with oystercatchers and cormorants. I walked down past Fort Perch to the river. The sea defences there were crowded with cormorants. All the dumpy waders scuttling about were turnstones. Upstream three sanderlings and a dunlin played tig with the tide.
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| Cormorants (The adult on the left is a sinensis bird.) |
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| Great black-back, cormorants and herring gulls |
On the way back I noticed that the herring gulls were joining the black-headed gulls on the beach. I'd noticed a very noisy first-Winter bird begging from its parent on the cinema roof when I arrived. They'd moved down to the tideline and it was still nothing doing as far as a free meal was concerned.
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| Herring gulls A first-Winter begging from a parent. |
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| Herring gulls A pair, female on the left. They'd been doing heads-raised courtship displays just before this picture was taken. I waited for them to resume the display but they'd other plans. |
It was still early afternoon, I felt I should be able to fit another site into the day's itinerary but I hit a wall of weariness. Thinking that quarter of an hour's sit down might get me a second wind I got the 411 bus to Hamilton Square Station. It didn't work, I called it a day. I went back home via Wrexham. Like you do.


























































