![]() |
| Tufted ducks, Manchester Ship Canal |
It was one of those early mornings overcrowded with filthy weather that invite you to pull the bedclothes over your head and pretend it hadn't happened.
By mid-morning the weather started settling down and it began to look like the plans for the day might be feasible after all. There had been reports over the weekend of a female lesser scaup amongst the tufted ducks on the Manchester Ship Canal at Lymm. I've seen a handful of lesser scaups and only ever seen females in the company of drakes. I wondered if my ID skills were up to it. I checked the weather forecast. Sunshine and showers over lunchtime, it said. So off I went.
![]() |
| Common gull, Humphrey Park |
Sunshine and showers it was. The wind was brisk and in the fifteen minutes it took to walk to the bus stop on Stretford Road there were three intervals of brilliant sunshine and three heavy showers. It was ideal worm-charming weather for the gulls. I got the 255 to Partington and from there I got the 5A into Lymm. Along the way the rain stopped, replaced by varying degrees of bright and gloomy as the clouds sped by overhead.
The last report of the lesser scaup had it near the inlet North of Statham Pool. Looking at the map there was a path that ended at the canal close by. I got off the bus at Barsbank Lane and walked up, under the Bridgewater Canal where it becomes Star Lane, past the abandoned Altrincham to Warrington line which is this stretch of the Transpennine Trail, across the road and it becomes Pool Road, dead straight all the way and not very far at all yet umpteen names.
![]() |
| Statham Pool |
I had a quick nosy at Statham Pool. A pair of mallards dozed on the banks. Great tits, chaffinches and goldfinches fussed about in the bushes and a nuthatch called from one of the trees. I walked down what was now Statham Lane and watched a pair of great spotted woodpeckers courting in the treetops.
![]() |
| Statham Lane |
The road became two diverging paths and I took the one to my right. To be fair, the sign did say: "Restricted footpath," it was proper February walking. Luckily, feet had passed that way before so I meandered across the thick, sticky mud and deep puddles treading in their footprints wherever possible. I was relieved when the path veered away from a farm gate and became a thin avenue of wet grass. And all of a sudden I was at a dead end.
![]() |
| Manchester Ship Canal |
The Ship Canal was visible beyond a thick curtain of tall reeds. It had become a bright, sunny lunchtime but the visibility wasn't great through the reeds without using my binoculars to blur out the foreground. When I did, there was a small raft of tufted ducks and they were all tufted ducks. There was another, slightly larger, raft just downstream. A couple of great crested grebes, an adult and a first-Winter, cruised by. I returned to the nearby raft of tufties, there were more this time. And something else. A first-Winter drake pochard. There were five of them, with an adult drake, they drifted into view and then were hidden by reeds again. There was a big raft of about fifty tufties upstream. It slowly dawned on me that there were upwards of a hundred tufted ducks on this stretch but at no time was I seeing them all at once.
After about fifteen minutes I saw the lesser scaup. She was with a small raft of tufties — more ducks than drakes — that had drifted out into view from the near bank and was slowly drifting downstream. I nearly missed her, not just because she spent so much time underwater. About half the female tufties had white blazes on their faces. The lesser scaup didn't look to have much white on her face at all so she blended into the crowd until she bobbed up in front of a drake tuftie and I got a better look at her. She didn't have the boxy shape of a tufted duck and her head was appreciably darker than the rest of her body, as though she was wearing a hood. I watched a little longer, to make sure I wasn't indulging in wishful thinking, until they drifted out of sight.
A female scaup, a greater scaup in this context, had also been reported. I had no luck with her. She was reported about half an hour later upstream from here.
As I turned to walk back I wondered if I should walk the Transpennine Trail into Heatley or else into Grappenhall. It started pouring down. The hint was taken: I was catching the bus back from Lymm. Returning to the gate I noticed a footpath along the edge of a field back to Statham Pool. Keen not to indulge in another mudfest I took it, which turned out to be a good idea.
![]() |
| The path between the pools |
![]() |
| The unnamed pool |
Beyond the field the path ran along a causeway between Statham Pool and a fishing lodge on the right and a larger, wilder pool filled with drowned willows on the left. Titmice, chaffinches, blackbirds and robins were busy in the trees. Teals called from the pool though it took me a long while to find them. A group of drake shovelers were considerably easier to pick out amongst the willow roots.
I followed the path round and into town. The sun came out so I walked a few hundred yards of the Transpennine Trail just so I could say I did it.
![]() |
| Lymm Dam |
I had half an hour to wait for the bus so I had a look at Lymm Dam. Mallards loafed on the banks, a mute swan cruised the side, black-headed gulls squabbled and great crested grebes barked at each other. My knees voiced their objections to all that sliding about in the mud earlier so I had a sit down and enjoyed the view until it was time to hobble over and get the bus. It had been a far better day's birdwatching and walking than I'd expected.
![]() |
| Lymm Dam |



















































