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| Blackbird, Irlam Moss |
The regular reader will not be remotely surprised to hear that I left the house on a sunny day and it was raining when I got to the station. They might be more surprised to hear that it stopped raining as the train got into Irlam and it became a fine, if muggy, afternoon which seemed to bring out all the songbirds.
For once I didn't complain about late-running trains, my first swift of the year flew high overhead Humphrey Park Station three minutes after the train was due.
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| Dandelion |
Blackbirds, a blackcap and a coal tit sang in gardens as I turned into Astley Road from Liverpool Road. I hadn't gone far before adding great tits, dunnocks, robins, blue tits and house sparrows to the songscape and an oystercatcher called loudly as it flew past. The woodpigeons were busy feeding and couldn't be bothered joining in. Jackdaws and pigeons flew hither and thither and half a dozen lesser black-backs circled noisily, keeping two schools' playgrounds in view.
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| Astley Road |
The songscape got louder and more varied as I walked down Astley Road. Goldfinches, chiffchaffs, blackbirds and wrens joined in. The calls of pheasants, lapwings and carrion crows came from the fields where blackbirds and song thrushes rummaged on the turf and grey partridges bustled about the field margins. A pair of kestrels flew low over the Jack Russell's gate, they would turn out to be the only kestrels I saw all day.
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| Irlam Moss |
Swallows hawked over the junction with Roscoe Road and greenfinches bounced about in the hawthorns. Over the way half a dozen black-headed gulls danced for worms in the grass.
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| Pied wagtail The disruptive black and white plumage works best on damp mud. |
Over the motorway and the turf field was awash with black-headed gulls, woodpigeons and blackbirds. Out in the middle a couple of lapwings did a display flight. A few pied wagtails, starlings and a mistle thrush hunted along the field's edge. A pale shape fidgeting about in the mid-distance was a female wheatear. There were far more pied wagtails and starlings flitting about the horses' fetlocks in the paddocks across the road. Further down a flock of rooks had the big turf fields all to themselves.
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| Chat Moss at Four Lanes End |
The songscape resumed on the approach to Four Lanes End. Great tits churred and squeaked as they saw me on my way. Dunnocks, chiffchaffs and robins sang from the depths of bushes, blackcaps and blackbirds struck poses as they sang in trees.
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| Whitethroat |
The walk down Lavender Lane was punctuated by churring whitethroats and wrens. Mallards flew over to the wet field to the South, joining a Canada goose that seemed at a loose end. To the North, pheasants and woodpigeons rummaged about the rough grazing. Kestrels were notably absent. The chiffchaffs in the trees by the field edges gave way to the willow warblers singing in the willow scrub by the entrance to Little Woolden Moss.
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| Winter Hill from Little Woolden Moss |
I had an aim in view in today's visit. A whinchat's been on the ploughed barley field North of the reserve and I hoped to see it, as well as check to see if the yellow wagtails are back yet. I walked round, tiptoeing past peacock butterflies and getting the raspberry from willow warblers and great tits. The usual family of carrion crows were romping over the moss, upsetting black-headed gulls, lapwings and a curlew. I looked over the field. The rest of the usual crowd of crows in the far corner, check. A handful of lapwings, check. A bunch of jackdaws upsetting the lapwings, check. And in another corner, way over, a few stones. Except one moved. Was it the whinchat? All I was seeing was a head-on view of a bird with an orange chest and a bandit mask, possibly a pale eye stripe though it may be a pale crown to the head. A good ten minutes' worth of puzzlement ensued. Then I did the thing where you look away and look back to find it, just in case it really was a stone. It was twenty yards away to the right and still unfathomable. I shifted along the path a bit to see if I could position myself for a sidewards look at the bird. It was back where it started. Then it got a fit of the fidgets and showed the silvery grey back and bright white rump of a male wheatear before flying off. I started again and found I'd been looking at two birds all along, the second was still where I found it. Five excruciating minutes later it decided to hop about a bit and I established that it had a brown back and — crucially — no white arse. It was also a dumpier bird with less back end than a wheatear. I've never worked so hard to add a whinchat to the year list.
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| Hares-tail cotton grass |
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| Little Woolden Moss |
I glanced at the time. I had places to be in a couple of hours so I dashed back down Astley Road, in so far as I have a dash left in me, and caught the train to Manchester by the skin of my teeth. It was that time of day where I can get home by getting the train from Liverpool into town, stay on it and get off at my station on its way back to Liverpool. Had I missed it I'd have had to do a complicated sequence of buses and hope for the best. Can't complain too much, though, for large parts of the day the buses would be the only option. And I got to the places to be after a surprisingly pleasant and productive afternoon walk.






















































