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| Goldcrest, Marbury Country Park |
It was a cool, grey morning with a biting wind. I'd decided it was high time I went for a wander round Marbury Country Park and the Northwich flashes. Oddly, I found an early report of a couple of black-necked stilts on Ashton's Flash a bit off-putting, which is ridiculous, they're lovely birds to see. I stuck to the plan, noticing along the way that the reports of the birds were jumping between the flashes and Budworth Mere. Whatever. I was going for my walk and it might or might not involve stilts.
The choice, as always was to get the Chester train to Northwich and walk up or the 9a bus from Warrington straight to the entrance to Marbury Country Park. Trains and buses being as they are, there's a fifty minute wait for the 9a in Warrington but it's a simpler and more reliable connection for me than trying to get the Chester train and I can hit the ground running, so that's what I chose.
I got off the bus at Marbury Hall Nurseries and had a quick glance over the road at Kennel Wood where the woodpigeons and jackdaws were flying around and blackbirds, chiffchaffs, willow warblers and robins sang.
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| Marbury Country Park |
There was more of the same as I entered the country park and walked through the arboretum to Budworth Mere. Blackcaps, robins and wrens predominated but had plenty of competition from chiffchaffs, blackbirds and nuthatches. Blue tits and goldcrests quietly sang to themselves in the trees, great tits scolded passersby and dunnocks silently skittered around under bushes. It was a tad busy.
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| Dunnock |
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| Budworth Mere |
It was damned cold by Budworth Mere, the wind was Skegness bracing. This didn't stop a reed warbler singing in the reeds, nor any of the other warblers singing in the trees by the mere. Tufted ducks, coots and mallards cruised about, great crested grebes dozed in small groups and a kingfisher shot across the water into the trees on the opposite bank. Midway across the opposite bank Canada geese and greylags loafed in the company of a bunch of lesser black-backs and a couple of shelducks. A few black-headed gulls flew about and a common tern fished just offshore.
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| Mallards |
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| Tufted duck on a choppy mere |
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| Bluebells, Wood |
I wandered on and into Big Wood as the sun started to flirt with the idea of making a sustained appearance. The birdsong continued with song thrushes, chaffinches, goldfinches and greenfinches joining the chorus. A treecreeper kept coming down to the path to collect nesting materials, zipping off every time the camera got it in focus. I gave up after a couple of minutes, I was too close to the nest for both our comfort.
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| Bluebells and windflowers |
A chap told me to look out for a green woodpecker in the field on the other side of Big Wood and I thanked him greatly. We don't get a lot of green woodpeckers round our way and I've yet to get one on the year list. I turned and headed for the field, past carpets of bluebells and a mistle thrush singing in the trees.
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| Blackcap |
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| Marbury Country Park |
A whitethroat sang in a hawthorn bush as I reached the path that runs between the wood and the field and I started scanning round. I kept finding the same woodpigeons, mistle thrush and magpie. I know from experience that though green woodpeckers are big and bright lime green with red splashes about the face they can be surprisingly inconspicuous when they're pillaging ants' nests so I kept looking. Walking down a bit there were carrion crows and rabbits, then a song thrush bounced through the patches of sedge in a field of rough pasture, and then a couple of blackbirds. Then I heard a green woodpecker. The yaffling call was coming from round the corner, stage left. I walked round and scanned that corner of the field. Another magpie. The yaffling resumed, this time from the trees I'd just left behind. I gave it another couple of goes and packed in trying to see the beggar. A call counts for the year list.
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| Heading for Marbury Lane |
I crossed the canal and walked down onto Marbury Lane. The songscape continued unabated in the trees. A pair of mallards supervised their ducklings from a distance on one of the little ponds, the adults in one corner and the ducklings in another.
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| By Marbury Lane |
The sun came out in earnest and all the blackbirds singing in the hedgerows kicked the volume up several notches. Speckled woods, orange tips and brimstones started to flutter along the hedgerows and grassy verges. I noticed some stock doves in a field by the lane. I don't often get the chance to take photos of stock doves close up except at Pennington Flash, here was an opportunity to get some more. One posed obligingly, the sun catching the iridescent green and purple patch on its neck. The camera battery said no, and I'd left the spare battery at home. On the plus side this surely guaranteed I'd get cracking views of the stilts.
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| Ashton's Flash |
The stilts had been on Ashton's Flash all afternoon so I headed straight there. I walked up to the viewpoint and had a look round. There were mallards, Canada geese, greylags and coots on the pool in the centre of the flash. A bit more searching found some shelducks, teal and moorhens. Half a dozen lesser black-backs stood aloof from half a dozen herring gulls and a handful of black-headed gulls steered clear of both. Reed buntings and reed warblers sang in the reedy scrub and lapwings chased jackdaws off the flash, temporarily. No sign of stilts. There was a group of birdwatchers on the bund between Neumann's Flash and Ashton's Flash and it looked like they had the shallow scrape in the corner in their sights so I walked round.
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| Ashton's Flash |
"Any luck?" I asked a birdwatcher I'd let onto earlier. He smiled and nodded at the scrape. Mallards, lapwings, oystercatchers… and there in plain sight not fifty yards away a pair of black-necked stilts. They are very lovely birds to see. Even if your camera battery's flat.
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| Neumann's Flash |
I went over and had a look at Neumann's Flash, tiptoeing past mallard ducklings on the path to the hide. It was quiet on the flash, perhaps a dozen tufted ducks, a handful of grebes dozing in the distance, a pair of shelducks and a few lesser black-backs having a wash in the corner by the bund. Oh, and a reed warbler singing its heart out just in front of the hide.
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| Gorse |
Checking the buses I found I'd just missed the number 9 back to Warrington so I'd have to walk through to the bus interchange in Northwich to get the 9a which was due in half an hour. This was when I realised I'd never got the 9a back to Warrington and didn't know the way to the interchange. Looking it up I found the quickest way was a path through Carey Park which turned out to be a lot more pleasant than walking down Old Warrington Road as I usually do, and it got me into the town centre a lot quicker and easier, too. I must remember this next time.
I didn't have long to wait for the bus. All day it had struck me that I hadn't seen a single hirundine flying about. As the bus wound its way through Antrobus the natural order of things reasserted itself as an angry swallow chased a jackdaw across the road.