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| Juvenile grey heron, Woolston Brook |
It was a game of two halves. The morning continued the heavy rain of the night before and had a cold wind to add to the misery. The wind lingered past lunchtime but the clouds rolled away and by mid-afternoon it was a sunny Summer's day. I decided I'd have a walk down to Woolston Eyes to see how the nesting Mediterranean gulls were getting on — the reports are that they have chicks — and see if I have any luck spotting any young black-necked grebes.
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| Woolston Brook |
I got the train to Padgate and walked down to Woolston Brook. Blackbirds, blackcaps, wrens and robins sang in gardens and the hedgerows by the brook. The wind eased and I took my coat off as I walked along the brook. A chiffchaff joined the songscape, as did greenfinches, dunnocks and woodpigeons. A song thrush scuttling along the path had too many worms in its beak to venture a song. Blue tits marshalled youngsters through the trees like the Bash Street Kids on a school trip. Halfway along a young heron, all dark and grey, was picked out from hiding by the sun shining through the reeds.
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| The New Cut |
The songscape was sparse along the New Cut Trail, for the most part just the occasional chiffchaff, woodpigeon or wren, the songbirds were busy gathering food for hungry mouths or herding unruly youngsters through the undergrowth. Dunnocks and blackbirds reluctantly made way for passersby, flying up into the trees on the cut if the passersby had four legs each. Song thrushes were a bit more cautious, the robins so cautious I was a long way down the trail before I heard or saw one. The warming sun brought out the butterflies, a few speckled woods and large whites skittered over the reeds in the stretch by Grey Mist. My first black-tailed skimmer of the year hawked low over a patch of borage sown behind one of the gardens by the trail.
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| Ladybird larvae eating aphids I think these are harlequin ladybirds, there were a lot of 13-, 14- and 15-spot ladybirds about. |
The calls of black-headed gulls heralded the approach to the end of the cut at Woolston Weir. Just before I got there I heard an unfamiliar gull call and looked up to see a Mediterranean gull, a second calendar year bird, float over the treetops. I shouldn't have been so surprised, if there's a pair nesting on Woolston Eyes it's not unreasonable to find others nearby.
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| Tufted ducks |
The river was high and fast after a weekend of heavy rains. A crowd of tufted ducks dozed on the river upstream of the weir and a gadwall quickly disappeared into the cover of the bank. Mallards fussed about by the bridge over the gates. As I crossed over I was escorted by a cob mute swan whose pen was on a nest in the reeds on the other side.
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| Woolston Weir |
The walk up and along the bank by No.2 Bed was accompanied by peacock butterflies and a thin songscape of blackcaps, chiffchaffs, Cetti's warblers and song thrushes. Black-headed gulls flew about, calling loudly whenever a lesser black-back cruised by. The views of the river were now largely obscured by a lush growth of bracken and Himalayan balsams. Every so often I'd see a few tufted ducks or a great crested grebe. Most of the time I'd just see a lush growth of bracken and Himalayan balsams.
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| Walking over to No.3 Bed |
I was so busy worrying about fiddling with the padlock on the gate on the bridge and dropping my keys in the river that I walked past the path to the bridge, only realising I'd overshot when I got to the car park. Which shows how useful irrational anxieties are. The padlock opened first go and I was across the bridge. For once there weren't any ducks at all lurking on the river on this bend.
Blackbirds and blackcaps were doing the bulk of the singing on the other site with backing vocals from wrens, chiffchaffs and dunnocks. As I got to the top of the bank a buzzard flew over from No.2 Bed and headed westwards. Oddly, this didn't cause a clamour from the black-headed gulls nesting on this bed. Unlike the great black-back that passed by as I was settling into the Sybil Hogg Hide.
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| From the Sybil Hogg Hide |
A crowd of gadwalls littered one of the pools by the hide. Canada geese, coots and greylags cruised about, the greylags heard more than seen. There was a lot of kerfuffle in the distance as the black-headed gulls saw off a lesser black-back. Closer to hand a male marsh harrier rose out of the reeds and quickly flew over the river.
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| Blue-tailed damselfly |
The bracken and brambles by the hide swarmed with blue damselflies. There were yet more along the path. Most were common blue damselflies, they swarmed about the bracken tops. Blue-tailed damselflies flitted about the path verges with their rather fluttering flight. A few azure damselflies were mixed in with the common blue damselflies, I could see that they were different but it was only when I caught them at rest I was confident of the identification.
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| Azure damselfly |
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| Common blue damselfly |
I'd managed to pick out the azure damselflies — well, the male ones anyway — from the swarms but there were a few individuals that looked different again. I wasn't sure if it was just that they were freshly emerged and still not in their mature colours or if there was something else I was seeing but not registering. Luckily a couple stayed still long enough for me to take photos to check out when I got home. I had a surprise. I've often thought I'd have no chance identifying variable damselflies but it wasn't much of an issue because they're very uncommon in Northwest England so it wasn't like I'd be likely to bump into in one. Well, I was wrong.
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| Variable damselfly The wine goblet-shaped black mark at the top of the abdomen is the easiest identifying feature. |
Blue tits, goldfinches and long-tailed tits fidgeted about in the trees and bushes along the path. As the path led into the meadows whitethroats churred from the brambles or jumped up into hawthorn bushes to watch me on my way. There weren't a lot of butterflies about, just a handful of red admirals. After an encouraging start it's being another bad early Summer for butterflies.
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| A map of No.3 Bed |
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| From the John Morgan Hide The nesting rafts are on the right. |
I went straight to the John Morgan Hide to see what was about. A couple of lapwings flew about, it looked like they'd finished their breeding season, I couldn't see any evidence of any youngsters. Most of the black-headed gulls were nesting on the rafts in the pool though one pair had a nest on the go in front of the hide.
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| Black-headed gulls |
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| Canada geese, gadwalls, shelducks and pochard |
Canada geese, gadwalls, a few mallards and shelducks loafed and dozed. Tufted ducks and pochards pottered about or drifted on the water. Here and there a great crested grebe cruised by the reed margins. A dozen swifts hawked low over the reeds, I couldn't see any hirundines. Aside from the black-headed gull colony, a big aside admittedly, it was all rather quiet.
The grass on the little islands was high enough to nearly hide Canada geese, the gulls on nests were small patches of white showing through. The rafts further out were carpeted in gulls. They were too far away to be able to see any youngsters though it looked like parents were feeding something at a couple of the nests. The Mediterranean gull nest was largely hidden from view from where I was sitting. I was relying on memory as to where it was and had just decided I'd got it dead wrong when I was proved right as the pair switched over and the sitting bird got up to stretch its legs and have a quick wash.
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| Black-headed gulls, Canada geese and Mediterranean gull (left) (Heavily cropped photo) |
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| Black-necked grebe |
The black-necked grebes were mostly distant and hugged the reed margins. A couple had youngsters in tow. One pair and their youngster were closer to hand but kept the reeds between them and the hide.
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| Black-necked grebe and chick |
I decided that the cuckoo I was hearing was wishful thinking but it was very insistent and flew behind the hide and called for a good five minutes, which I concluded was convincing evidence it was real.
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| Walking back to the bridge |
As I wandered back one of the whitethroats sang from the air before settling into a hawthorn bush. Walking down to the bridge I bumped into a family party walking up. "Is the cuckoo about?" I was asked. "Yes, it's calling now," I replied. The Cetti's warbler belting out a song by the path obligingly took a break and the cuckoo could be heard from the meadow. We parted and I walked down to struggle with the padlock on the gate and thence back onto the path by the Ship Canal.
Google Maps always tells me I'm going to take ten minutes longer to get to the bus stop at Latchford Locks than it does but better safe than sorry. I bustled by singing greenfinches, Cetti's warblers and chiffchaffs. Blackbirds, song thrushes and a chaffinch sang in the trees. I was expecting the ducks flying in out of the sun to be mallards but they were shovelers, a reminder not to make assumptions.
I had ten minutes to wait for the 5a which took me into Partington and five for the 255 back to Urmston whence I walked home. The noisy part of the breeding season is definitely over but there's still plenty about to be seen.

























































