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| Robins |
It was a warm day, we're building up for the heatwave that's already arrived down South. A gentle toddle of a walk was called for so I headed over to Hadfield to do a mile or two of the Longendale Trail.
Along the way I counted the large white butterflies the train passed where ordinarily I would have been counting woodpigeons. Why not count both? you wonder. Well, apparently it's either/or. You see one or the other. Much in the same way you don't see Bruce Wayne and Batman riding a tandem.
One feature of the Hadfield line is that whichever direction of travel you're facing between Glossop and Manchester, you're facing the other way between Glossop and Hadfield. Which is why I was facing backwards as we passed Dinting Junction. I don't usually expect to see much as the trains passes the trees here, an occasional squirrel is a highlight. So I was surprised to see an adult tawny owl sitting on a tree by the trackside, half asleep watching the trains go by. Luckily, I was travelling backwards so I could keep an eye on the retreating figure and confirm I wasn't seeing things. Also luckily it was a stretch where not many trees come right up to the trackside so there wasn't a lot of leaf cover in the way. Both my recent encounters with tawny owls have reminded me that they're seriously chunky birds.
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| Starting the trail |
I got off at Hadfield and walked round the corner and onto the Longendale Trail. Woodpigeons and magpies clattered about in the trees by the path, a chiffchaff sang, I could hear the thin contact calls of young robins to their parents. I got ready for another walk full of hints and whispers of small birds. And I was surprisingly wrong.
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| Robin, with a bustle of old feathers waiting to moult |
A couple of blackbirds rummaged about the old trackside, a juvenile dropped down out of a tree onto a wayside seat the better to have a look at me as I walked past. A young robin flitted across the path and disappeared into a hawthorn bush, where it started begging calling. An adult robin with a preposterous bustle of unmoulted back feathers dropped out of the bush to hunt on the path, grabbing a beakfuls of insects and flying back to feed the youngster.
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| Juvenile blackbird |
There was a passage of jackdaws overhead, flying down to feed on the fields by Bottoms Reservoir. They passed over in small groups of half a dozen or so birds, each group sounding like fifty.
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| Juvenile robin |
A little further on a juvenile robin sat by the old trackside watching passersby. It was old enough to be fending for itself though the wing-twitching when an adult flew into the next bush suggested it was still being fed occasionally. In a week or two there'll be enough red on its chest for its parents to be chasing it off their territory.
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| Juvenile robin |
Although the robins were showing well the titmice, blackcaps and chiffchaffs were keeping to cover. As the path reached the open cover above Bottoms Reservoir a song thrush ran across the path and started fossicking about under the hedgerow. A few goldfinches, and fewer greenfinches, twittered about in the trees and hedgerows.
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| The trail opens up above Bottoms Reservoir |
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| Agrimony |
The grassy verges, more knapweeds, vetches and agrimony than grass, were busy with meadow brown butterflies and an assortment of bees. Swallows flew low over the fields above and below the trail, chattering as they passed overhead. Down from the path jackdaws and rabbits outnumbered the sheep in the fields.
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| Rabbit |
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| Bottoms Reservoir |
The reservoir was showing what a dry year it's been. Caravans of Canada geese strung across the water as they shuttled between the banks. A few lesser black-backs flew low over the trees by the side, there were more of them loafing with a crowd of black-headed gulls over by the dam.
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| The Longendale Trail |
I walked up as far as Valehouse Reservoir and had a sit down. A willow warbler a couple of trees away made a point of ignoring me. An oystercatcher flew by. A couple of rooks flew over to join the jackdaws. It was a not unpleasant quiet July afternoon out in the open country.
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| Small skippers courting |
I made my way back. I noticed a lot of small skippers in the wayside. You can bet your boots I had a good look to make sure they were small skippers. A chiffchaff made itself known in the hedgerows as I passed.
As the embankments rose over the path it looked like every family of robins had come out of cover to present itself to the world. Some youngsters will soon be chased out into the world, some had barely left the nest. One proud parent with a couple of downy youngsters sat on a bare twig in a patch of sunlight posing for old men with cameras.
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| Robins |
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| Robins |
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| Robins |
The lighting was challenging, the backlighting of the robins and the background in deep shade ran the risk of burning out the figures of the robins but the photos turned out okay. I had less luck with the young robins being fed at the top of the opposite embankment.
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| Juvenile robin |
I was so engrossed in the beauty pageant on the embankments I didn't notice the brown hawker patrolling about me until it did a close fly-by of my left ear.
I had ten minutes to wait for the train at Hadfield. I spent the time watching the swifts wheeling lazy circles over the station. I looked out for the owl on the way back but it had moved on. It must have known I had my camera ready this time.
































































