Black-tailed godwits, Leighton Moss

Public transport routes and services change and are sometimes axed completely. I'll try to update any changes as soon as I find out about them. Where bus services have been cancelled or renamed I'll strike through the obsolete bus number to mark this change.

Saturday 26 January 2019

Number-crunching

Having noticed that my bird list for Pennington Flash had got to 98 species I got to wondering about some other sites. I've just done a quick trawl through my records for the past thirty years (they're not complete: there's eight years' worth missing in the middle because I've put the notebooks safe and can't remember where) and  here's a few highlights:

  • Bowling Green Marsh 90
  • Brandon Marsh 69
  • Carrington Moss 77
  • Chorlton Water Park/Sale Water Park complex 85
  • Crosby Marine Lake 87
  • Crossens 87
  • Dawlish/Dawlish Warren 115
  • Elton Reservoir 81
  • Exe Estuary 75
  • Frodsham Marsh 93
  • Hollingworth Lake 66
  • Hoylake/Red Rocks 68
  • Leighton Moss 132
  • Leasowe 57
  • Marshside 100
  • Martin Mere 145
  • New Brighton 49
  • Pennington Flash 98
  • Seaforth 92
  • Topsham 79
  • West Kirby 75

Snipe, Leighton Moss

Just kicking around in everyday life and keeping your eyes open seems to do no harm:
  • Manchester City Centre 33
  • Bolton 48
  • Radcliffe 66
  • Rochdale 60
  • Salford 55
  • Stretford 69
  • Wigan 59
And if you'd have asked me I'd have said the garden list was in the high twenties, it turns out to be 44.

Just goes to show. (I'm not sure what.)

Pennington Flash

Sketch map of Pennington Flash
Pennington Flash has become one of my regular visits. For years I read about it and thought it out of bounds as it didn't seem feasible by public transport from where I live. One day I had a bit of an explore and it turned out to be dead easy once you know how. Over the past couple of years, and rather to my surprise, my list for this site so far is 98 species. The official list for the site is currently 244 species.

Pennington Flash includes the flash itself, a big lake created as a result of mining subsidence, a collection of small pools, thin wet woodland and a couple of meadows. There are good numbers of wildfowl all the year round, with yet more coming in for the Winter. You also stand a good chance of seeing kingfishers as they fish around the pools. The woodland offers all the usual suspects and you have a very good chance of seeing willow tits here. Pennington Flash is particularly popular for its Winter gull roosts; amongst the hundreds of gulls there there's usually something interesting to find (eventually!): Iceland, yellow-legged and Mediterranean gulls are regular and most years at least one Caspian gull visits.

Dusk from Ramsdale's Hide

Getting there via Leigh

  • The V1 bus runs regularly every quarter of and hour from Manchester to Leigh. It's a quick service using the Leigh Guided Busway which is a sort of hybrid bus/tram affair. If you're travelling from outside Greater Manchester it's probably easiest to get a train to Salford Crescent and pick the bus up from there (the bus stop is across the road and a block to the left from the station exit).
  • The 34 bus goes from Piccadilly Gardens to Leigh is less frequent and takes a little longer.
  • The 126 bus is an hourly service between the Trafford Centre and Leigh. If you miss that you can wait for the 132 bus to Wigan, get off at Sale Lane and get the V1 from there.
Once you arrive at Leigh Bus Station you need to go over to the bus stop on King Street (the side of the bus station opposite to the shopping centre) and get either the 34 or 600 10 bus (you won't have a long wait). Depending on the traffic it's a five or ten minute bus journey. You need to keep an eye out for the junction with the dual carriageway, your bus stop is just after the fire station on the left hand side. From here, cross the road and the main entrance to the country park is opposite the Robin Hood.

It's also possible to walk down the canal from Leigh town centre. It's a nice walk on a fine day.

Getting there from Wigan 

  • The 600 and 601 10 from Wigan to Leigh and the 34 from St. Helens both go down St. Helens Road past Pennington Flash. The bus stop is nearly opposite the Robin Hood pub. As  you pass through Lowton keep an eye out for the industrial estate on the left, you'll know it because there's a big vet's building by the road. When you see that you know your stop's next.
The main entrance to the country park is just down the road.
Reedmace by Bradshaw Leach Meadow

The country park

Coming in through the main entrance and passing by the little car park you'll have a choice of paths: 
  • If you turn left the path takes you round to the south bank of the flash. You'll pass the East Bay Hide and then reconnect with the main path at the bridge over the brook. In Autumn this can be a productive diversion, the hedges around the meadow seem to be a popular stopping point for migrating passerines.
  • If you carry on straight ahead the tree-lined path passes Bradshaw Leach Meadow then enters some thin woodland before joining the other path at the brook.
From here you'll walk through the main car park. The country park is very popular, even so it's worth taking your time here to see what's about, especially when the resident wildfowl and gulls out on the water are joined by Winter visitors. The visitor centre is at the end of the car park, this is where the toilets are. 
Black-headed gulls, Horrocks Hide
From here, follow the path along the margin of the flash to the F.W.Horrocks Hide. This overlooks the beginning of the nature reserve end of the flash.The spit of land jutting out in front of the hide is worth checking out, particularly during wader passage. Gulls and, in Summer, terns loaf around with the cormorants at the far end. Later in the year look out for family groups of goosander.

Be warned: this hide is always cold, even in Summer! Mind you, on a really nasty Winter's day you can check out most of the gull roost from this hide rather than feeling quite so exposed as you would standing by the edge of the flash.

A Temminck's stint had turned up and had settled down in a nice place out in the open for a snooze so that everyone to see it from the F.W.Horrocks Hide. Just as everybody got their bins and telescopes trained on the stint this drake mallard came along and plonked himself right in front and wasn't for moving for more than an hour. The brown smudge behind the mallard is the top of the stint's back.
As you come out of the hide the path leads on to the Tom Edmondson Hide and beyond. There's the usual woodland species — mixed tit flocks in Winter, a nice selection of warblers in Summer. The main path is effectively a causeway between a series of small pools. You'll often see dabchicks, teal and shoveler though water rails and reed warblers tend to be heard more often than seen along this stretch.

The Tom Edmondson Hide is built on similar lines as the Horrocks Hide but feels a lot less exposed. It overlooks a couple of pools and a small reed bed with a small gravel patch separating the pools. Ducks often rest up on here and you may see snipe feeding here. These pools are probably the best places to find gadwall at Pennington Flash. There's usually a few herons and often a little egret. It also seems to be a good spot for finding juvenile kingfishers in late Summer.

From Tom Edmondson Hide

Juvenile kingfisher, Tom Edmondson Hide
A few yards further along the path forks. Check out the brambles and reeds here, it's a good place for finding warblers and it seems to be a preferred haunt of singing Cetti's warblers. Not much further is the Ramsdale's Hide. This overlooks a pool which is open to the flash proper. More ducks and waders and very nice too.

The path continues on to the main path. If it's been wet I'd generally prefer to retrace my steps and rejoin the main path there. If time's short or the weather bad you can follow the path back down towards the play area near the visitor centre and visit the hides down here.

Carrying on from Ramdsale's the main path leads on to the canal that acts as the northern border of the park. The choices from here are:

  • Turn right and continue in a loop around the wooded areas and small pools, eventually getting to the rest of the hides.
  • Turn left and have a wander round the northern part of the park. This is less productive from a birdwatching perspective but is a nice stroll.
  • Walk down the canal back to Leigh town centre, which can be a pleasant walk on a Summer's afternoon.

There are three hides and a viewing point in the eastern side of the park. Anticlockwise from the play area the hides are:

  • Pengy's Hide. This is a small hide which gives you a full view of one of the pools you can see from the Tom Edmondson Hide. There's a small feeding station by this hide which gives you a taster for the next hide.

Bluebells, wild garlic and three-cornered leeks, Pengy's Hide

  • The Bunting Hide. This overlooks the main feeding station. It's worth making yourself comfortable and waiting to see what comes along. Reed buntings and stock doves both sometimes reach double figures and you'll often see good numbers of bullfinches. You may need to wait a while for the willow tits to turn up but when they do they give very good views.

Willow tit

  • Teal Hide, including a hide used for educational purposes. This overlooks a pool with a small reedbed at the far end. The Teal Scrape is another place often favoured by family groups of goosanders.

Walking back from these hides it's worth checking out the flash again to see if anything's flown in while you've been having a wander. The car park oystercatcher may also make an appearance.

As you leave the park the bus stops are on your right. All the buses from the stop on this side go to Leigh Bus Station. Cross the road for buses to Wigan and St. Helens.

Useful links





Friday 25 January 2019

Frodsham Marsh

Sketch map of Frodsham Marsh

I don't visit Frodsham nearly as often as I should. Frodsham village is pretty, easily accessible by train and the marsh offers some very good birdwatching. The habitat is a mixture of wet farmland and water management lagoons bound by the M56, the River Weaver and the Manchester Ship Canal. I treat the brook called Holpool Gutter as the western boundary. Further west lies Ince Marsh.

The rivers and lagoons attract wildfowl and waders, the fields and lagoon edges attract good numbers of passerines and both these attract the attention of birds of prey.

Sadly the excellent Frodsham Marsh Bird Blog is no more. The last time I checked the annually-updated site list currently standing at 261.

This is a working area; most of the paths are used by vehicles. Be prepared to encounter potholes and muddy patches of track.

Lordship Lane
Starting from the train station, walk up to the junction with the main road and make a decision:
  • Turn right, cross the road and turn into Ship Street to go down to the eastern end of the marsh.
  • Turn left, cross the road and continue down then turn into Marsh Lane to go down to the central part of the marsh.

(In principle it should be possible to go straight to the western end of the marsh from Ince or Helsby stations but I've never done it.)

Both routes take you over the M56 and through wet farmland. The finch flocks are mostly linnets, goldfinches and chaffinches. You might strike lucky and see one of the coveys of grey partridges.

Ship Street

Ship Street narrows after it crosses the motorway and eventually takes you down to the Weaver Bend. There is nearly always a variety of ducks and waders on the river and it's always worth working your way through them in the hope of finding something unexpected, even if it's "only" a wintering common sandpiper. As you follow the bend round clockwise you'll find yourself walking around the ICI Tank and eventually back to the lane that becomes Ship Street. From here you can either retrace your steps and walk back to Frodsham or you can complete the circuit and walk along the river towards Marsh Farm and then either walk down the path towards Manchester Ship Canal or walk down Brook Furlong Lane to explore the lagoons.

Don't be too dismissive of the factories beyond the marsh: they're favoured perching places for peregrines.

Marsh Lane

If you turn left and go down the main road you'll pass a lot of very picturesque buildings (nearly all of which have heritage plaques on the wall) before you come to Marsh Lane. Walk down here until you get to a fork in the road. The road to the right goes over the motorway and becomes Brook Furlong Lane. If the weather's been very wet lately this is probably the best route into the centre of the marsh — it's the shortest route and the track's in better condition.

I generally turn right and follow Marsh Lane to its end. (It wasn't until I started putting the notes together for this blog that I realised I usually walk clockwise around sites.) The lane runs parallel to the M56 for a while giving you a chance to check out the field and hedgerows on this side. Be careful as the noise of the motorway traffic can drown out that of vehicles coming along the lane. Once over the motorway the state of the track becomes pretty lamentable. It can be worth it, though, particularly in Spring when the fields are peppered with wheatears and other passerines on passage migration.

Eventually you'll come to the junction with Lordship Lane at the model aircraft flying field. This stretch of Lordship Lane follows the southern boundary of No. 6 Lagoon. A circuit of this lagoon is well recommended. Whichever direction you take as you walk down the lane it's worth keeping an eye out for stonechats, there's usually a pair or two hereabouts. No. 6 Lagoon is the only one with a large stretch of standing water; the eastern half is shallow open water and the western half is under reeds. This water can hold large numbers of ducks and waders.

Black-tailed godwits, No. 6 Lagoon
On the other side of the track, No. 3 Lagoon is wet pasture dotted with wind turbines. In Winter there are good numbers of lapwings, redshanks and golden plovers. A large flock of ravens do the tidying up around here. You have a chance of seeing buzzard, sparrowhawk, peregrine or marsh harrier any time of year and in Winter you may find a hen harrier or a merlin.

Raven. This was one of the thirty-odd ravens kicking about No. 3 Lagoon late on a Winter's afternoon.
If you turn right onto Lordship Lane at the model aircraft field and carry on walking past the junction with the path that goes round No. 6 Lagoon you'll eventually get to Holbrook Gutter. In Winter you may see flocks of curlew feeding in the fields on your left as you walk down the lane. Holbrook Gutter is a brook that meanders its way along the western border of No. 4 Lagoon. Cross the bridge here and check out the field opposite the fertiliser factory. In Winter there's usually a lot of lapwings here, there may be some geese or whooper swans and you might find either a little egret or a great white egret further out on the margins of the Gutter. From here it should be possible to walk through to Ince or else retrace your steps a little and take the path down to Helsby but I've not done this yet so I don't know how feasible this is in practice.

A steady meander round stopping regularly to enjoy the view and try and find out whatever it was that flew into that bush over there would take two or three hours, a lot less if you get a push on and/or just go round one part of the matsh.

Wednesday 9 January 2019

Leighton Moss

Sketch map: Silverdale and Leighton Moss

Leighton Moss is a dead easy day out by public transport (so long as the trains are behaving themselves) as the main entrance to the reserve is literally just round the corner from Silverdale Station, on Storrs Lane. The only reason for it ever to be much more than a minute's walk is the bird life in the brambles and trees by the station. The reserve is famous for its reed beds; marsh harriers and bearded tits breed here, bitterns used to breed here regularly, less frequently these days.

Silverdale Station is on the Lancaster to Barrow-in-Furness line with a few through trains from Manchester and Carlisle.Not every train that goes through stops here; it's sometimes possible to make a connection to a quick train via Arnside. If you're lucky you'll get ten minutes to wait for your connection, which gives you the chance of a look over the very picturesque stretch of the river by the station.

Leighton Moss

There are two parts to the reserve: the complex of reed beds and pools by the visitor centre and the salt marsh about a mile down the road to the south. The paths are mostly very good; the only one that's a bit rustic is the path through the damp woods between the Lower Hide and the road to the north-east of the reserve. In Winter, with one eye on the train timetables, it can be a bit of a push to fit everything in, especially if you feel the need to stop for a pot of tea and a sausage bap at half time.

The only downside to Leighton Moss is its popularity: some of the hides (particularly the Causeway Hide) can get very busy.

Marsh tit
From the visitor centre the first port of call should be the feeding station by the little bit of garden. This will give you the chance to get your eye in and you might strike lucky and see one of the reserve's marsh tits. (Don't give up if you don't see one here, there are plenty more chances.)

From here you've got three options:

  • Follow the path to the right on to Lilian's Hide and then through the reed beds to the Tim Jackson and Griesdale hides.
  • Follow the path to the left on to the public causeway and then through to the Causeway Hide and further on to the Lower Hide.
  • Go back through the visitor centre, turn left on the road, over the bridge and turn left and follow the road down to the Allen and Eric Morecambe hides.

Take your time walking through the reed bed areas. Most of the birds in the reeds will be blue tits, robins and wrens; in Summer they're joined by reed warblers and sedge warblers, with chiffchaffs and willow warblers in the trees. And there's always a chance of striking dead lucky and bumping into some bearded tits! Inevitably, water rails are more often seen than heard. The pools hold mallard, teal, gadwall and shoveler, with wigeon and pintail in Winter. In Summer hirundines and swifts hawk over the pools and these — and the huge numbers of dragonflies on the reserve — attract hobbies. On a very good day you may see four species of heron: grey heron, little egret, bittern and great white egret. And once in a blue moon…

Juvenile purple heron, August 2017
Near the visitor centre the trees attract all the usual woodland species. The fields by the reserve attract green woodpeckers but they're usually heard rather than seen. And wherever you are keep looking up once in a while: marsh harriers can fly in quite low, buzzards soar above the wooded hillside to the east of the reserve and in Summer you may see one of the ospreys commuting between Morecambe Bay and Foulshaw Moss. In Winter, particularly after Christmas, there can be some spectacular starling murmurations.

Marsh harrier
A lot of the small birds are so used to visitors they're almost tame to the point of impertinence. If you're like me and feel guilty when you're faced with a robin begging for food it's as well to have a bag of dried mealworms in your pocket. Many of the robins and great tits will feed from the hand; I once saw a nuthatch surprise somebody by doing it. I sort of expect robins and great tits to come a-begging, I'm still surprised when coal tits and marsh tits join in. All you have to do is stand still in some places and they'll come to you whether you're feeding them or not.

From Lilian's to the Griesdale Hide

Lilian's Hide overlooks a large pool surrounded by reeds. Lapwings and black-tailed godwits roost here when the water's low. You can often see snipe at the water's edge and in freezing weather you've a good chance of seeing water rail.

Right by Lilian's Hide is the Skytower. At first sight it's a bit of a gimmick but it provides an excellent panoramic overview of the reserve and lets you get your bearings in the scheme of things. In Winter and Spring this treetop view is a good way of finding siskins.

Moving on the path along the edge of the reserve is fringed by willows. On your left there is a big reed bed, on your right are some fields and the railway line. Take your time and check both sides, it's usually worth it. At the bottom of the path it turns sharply left and into the reed bed. You'll hear more than you see and most of what you'll see will be flying over. It's a very pleasant walk.

Reeds

The path forks at a large willow tree. The Tim Jackson Hide is to your right and the slightly larger Griesdale Hide to the left. It's a toss-up as to which to go to first. They both overlook small reed bed pools fringed with willows. Sometimes they're both dead quiet, sometimes one's busy and every so often both are busy. The only thing you can predict is that in freezing conditions they'll be quiet of bird life. Red deer can often be seen from these hides though they're often tricky to spot. Wood sandpipers seem to favour the Griesdale Hide, very often giving excellent views.

Wood sandpiper

Along the causeway to the Lower Hide

The path from the visitor centre to the public causeway mostly runs closely parallel to the road and gives a nice view over this part of the reserve. It then turns into a short stretch of boardwalk through a corner of the reed bed . The point at which this path meets the causeway is currently the territory of a particularly vocal Cetti's warbler.

Be careful walking along the causeway as cars do use it to get from the road to the other side of the reserve. There are a couple of open areas with grit trays that are used by bearded tits in Autumn; your best chance is early in the morning, by eleven o'clock you've probably missed them. If you don't like crowds you'd best wait for the bad weather.

Female bearded tit
The Causeway Hide overlooks a large pool fringed by reeds. There's a tiny island in the middle which is used by resting waders — lapwings, redshanks and greenshanks — and cormorants. Black-headed gulls often nest here though last year they were put off by a pair of great black-backed gulls that raised a couple of young. This tends to be the best place to see otters or, if you're lucky, a bittern.

Carrying on down the causeway there's a little bridge over one of the channels. On your right the channel leads on to a complex of small shallow pools. Water rails are often heard in the reeds at this corner and in the height of the chasing-each-other-round-like-clockwork-mice season they can be so busy chasing each other they forget they're supposed to be masters of hiding in the reeds. Past this point there's a stretch of wet woodland, mostly alders, on your left stretching down to the Lower Hide and beyond. In Winter check the treetops for lesser redpolls.

At the bottom of the causeway, on the left, there's a gate to the path leading to the Lower Hide. This tree-lined path runs along the edge of the reserve with the wet woodland on your left and farmland on your right. The farmland attracts curlews and cattle egrets have visited here.

On the path back from the Lower Hide to the Causeway..
The Lower Hide is smaller than the Causeway hide and sits on the opposite corner of the pool. The margins of the pool are shallower here so waders come closer to the hide at this side.

Beyond the Lower Hide the path to the road deteriorates and can be very wet in places. It can be worth exploring, though, as this end is quieter and wilder than the rest of this part of the reserve and can throw up the occasional surprise. Once you get to the end I'd retrace my steps, it can be a bit of a hairy walk back down that road.

The salt marsh hides

The Allen and Eric Morecambe hides are about a mile's walk away from the visitor centre. The hides overlook pools at the edge of the salt marsh and attract good numbers of wildfowl and waders, always with the chance that something unusual has come along with the migrating flocks.

Follow the road away from Silverdale Station till you come to the junction with the road to Warton. Turn left here, carry on over the level crossing then over the narrow (one vehicle wide) road bridge. Just after this bridge there's a turning on your right that goes under the railway line. Follow this down to the car park. The gate at the far end is the start of the path to the hide. The fields and trees in this part of the reserve are particularly worth checking out for passage migrants.

The first hide is the Allen Hide. This overlooks a small, shallow pool that is very popular with waders. In Summer you'll see avocets and black-headed gulls, in Winter greenshank, redshank and one or two spotted redshanks.

Redshanks and greenshanks

Further along is the slightly bigger Eric Morecambe Hide. One side of this overlooks the Allen Pool, the other looks out over a bigger pool and then out into the salt marsh. High tide is best as that brings birds in towards the hide. On a sunny Winter's day it can be as frustrating as rewarding as the bird that most looks like something special will invariably be the one sat on top of a bank with the sun right behind it. Don't forget to check the muddy corner to the left for waders!

On the walk back to the visitor centre, or Silverdale Station, there are a couple of lay-bys where you can stop and have a look at the southern end of the reed beds. Be careful on the way back: the junction with the road to the station is a bit of a blind bend and there's an unhelpful bend on the approach to the junction with Storrs Lane. Alternatively, if you've the time and the bus timetable allows it, you could turn left at the junction and spend some time in Silverdale village before getting the bus back to the station.
Dusk at Leighton Moss

Saturday 5 January 2019

Crossens and Marshside

Shelduck, Marshside
I had a toddle out to Southport the other day, got the bus out to Crossens then walked down to Marshside and got the bus back into Southport from Hesketh Park. I noticed that the sign at Crossens says that it's 4½ miles to Southport Station.

A really nice Winter's day, crisp and bright but with hardly any wind so it made for nice strolling weather. The tide was out so the geese were scattered across the salt marsh — for every pink-footed goose you could see in the well-cropped fields there would have been three or four with their heads down feeding in the long grass further out. There had been reports of both Russian and Greenland white-fronted geese, barnacle geese and a tundra bean goose. I managed to see just the bean goose and that only by one of those strokes of luck where as you're scanning a flock of a couple of hundred geese two of them happen to raise their heads and you realise one's a head taller than the other and needs a second look. There had also been reports of lots of raptors — merlin, peregrine and kestrel and both marsh and hen harriers. I didn't have much luck on that score, my worst on this patch, and just saw a kestrel and a marsh harrier and both fairly distant. Ah well, it gives me an incentive to go back for another go for pride's sake.

Still, a nice way to spend a few hours in Winter sunshine.

Wigeon, Crossens

Tufted duck, Marshside

It's only when you see a great black-back next to a goose that you realise what a huge brute they are.
No wonder the teal and lapwings were spooked every time one flew over the reserve.

Tuesday 1 January 2019

Mersey Valley: Sale Water Park to Chorlton Water Park

Mersey Valley: Sale Water Park to Chorlton Water Park

The stretch of the Mersey Valley between Streftord and Chorlton Water Park is an easily-accessible complex of fields and wet woodland bookended by two small lakes. The Northwestern end — Stretford Ees and Sale Water Park — are part of the local flood defences; the central belt is the remains of old farmland; and the Southeastern end is the remains of old landfill. Consequently most of the wild landscape is quite young but this doesn't stop it providing hours of productive birdwatching. I find it better to spend a couple of hours walking round part of the complex rather than trying to take it all in one go.

Chorlton Water Park
The red lines on the map show the most straightforward access points to the complex.

Coming in from Stretford town centre or Stretford tram stop, walk down Edge Lane to the junction with Kings Road. Cross Edge Lane here and go straight down Lime Road and through Stretford Cemetery. Once you reach the path on the other side turn left and carry on. This path effectively acts as the boundary between Stretford Ees and the playing fields of Turn Moss and carries on to the bridge over Chorlton Brook and into Chorlton Ees.

Chorlton Ees
If you turn right as you come out of the Cemetery the path goes under the tram bridge and the canal aquaduct and becomes Hawthorn Road. Go through gate at the top of the road and follow the path that doubles back under the bridges, this takes you down to a bridge over the river and into Sale Water Park.

The 84a bus goes from Trafford General Hospital to Merseybank via Urmston, Stretford and Chorlton and goes down Ivygreen Road in Chorlton towards the Bowling Green pub. Footpaths in this area bring you into Ivy Green, the top end of Chorlton Ees or Hardy Farm.

The 23, 23A and 25 buses from Stretford to Stockport and the 86 bus from Manchester to Chorlton go down Barlow Moor Road. Get off at the stop by Chorlton Park School. Alternatively, get the Airport tram from Manchester and get off at Barlow Moor Road. Cross the road into Hardy Lane and follow the tram lines down to the bottom of the road. The path here brings you into Hardy Farm.

Sale Water Park is the next tram stop after Barlow Moor Road. Get off here to cross over the road into Sale Water Park or turn right and walk up the road to Jackson's Boat.

The 23, 23A and 86 buses continue down Barlow Moor Road past Southern Cemetery. Get off at the stop after the Crematorium, cross over and walk down Maitland Avenue to get to Chorlton Water Park.

Chorlton Water Park
Chorlton Water Park is a small lake bordered by trees and a good path. It's very popular with walkers and anglers. Mallard, gadwall and tufted ducks can be found all year round and great-crested grebes breed here. In Winter there may be pochard, goldeneye or goosander. The island at the car park end usually has a few cormorants hanging round it. Check out the overhanging branches on the island on the opposite end for kingfishers. You'll usually be able to hear ring-necked parakeets, you often may see them on the feeders in the car park or in the tops of the poplars over near the play area. The trees around the lake attract all the usual suspects, including siskins in Winter.

Tufted duck, Chorlton Water Park

Barlow Tip meets the Water Park at the end opposite the car park. There are a couple of paths into it: a rough one going uphill towards the top of the mound and a much better path leading diagonally across the tip from the corner by the river. There's a maze of rough paths in this area, many of them leading precisely nowhere, a few get you back where you started and a couple lead you to the path by the river. The waste tip was capped with clay when it was abandoned so don't think just because you're on slightly higher ground the ground won't get any wetter! The mosaic of bits of wet woodland and small open spaces suits warblers quite nicely.

Barlow Tip
Barlow Tip is fenced off on two sides by a golf course. You can either return to Chorlton Water Park or take a walk by the river.

River Mersey

Along this stretch of the Mersey Valley the river is a nice, well-behaved length of water skirted by high grassy banks. There's usually a few mallard and Canada geese on the river, in Winter there may often be goosander. Grey wagtails breed here and can often be seen bobbing round on the rocks at the water's edge. In Winter it's worth checking out the alders and larches along the stretch by the golf course to see if there are any lesser redpolls amongst the goldfinches.

Grey wagtail, River Mersey
Approaching Jackson's Boat the tram line goes across the river. The bit of scrap ground here has been tidied up a bit lately but is still worth a look to see what's about. In tattier days I've heard Cetti's warbler singing from here but I don't hold much hope for one of them to return any time soon.

Ring-necked parakeets, Jackson's Boat
Ring-necked parakeets show well round here and particularly like perching in the trees around Jackson's Boat pub. Buzzards drift overhead, once in a while you might see a raven fly over.

From here you have three choices: bob over the bridge to Sale Water Park, turn right and walk through Hardy Farm into Chorlton or carry on straight ahead through Chorlton Ees towards Stretford. You can also walk through Hardy Farm or Chorlton Ees through to Ivy Green.

On either side you can walk down the river to the bridge by the Altincham tram line. It's a nice walk in good weather but from a birdwatching perspective it tends to be like being on the oustide looking in.

Chorlton Ees is like a bigger, rather older and mostly drier edition of Barlow Tip. Hardy Farm and Ivy Green tend to be more open and slightly drier again than Chorlton Ees. The paths tend to be quite good. There's some good woodland birdwatching here, with all the joys and frustrations that brings. In Winter you may strike lucky and see a woodcock.

Crossing the river at Jackson's Boat there are two ways of getting into Sale Water Park. You can walk down the road, pass the tram stop and get in near the visitor centre or you can walk a little way along the river and join the path running parallel to the road, which is a nicer walk so long as it's not pouring down. There's a seat by the side of the visitor centre; I'd advise sitting here for a while as it overlooks a feeding station that attracts the local willow tits.

Willow tit, Sale Water Park
Sale Water Park is a busy watersports area. Even so, it attracts a good number of ducks and gulls and a decent herd of Canada geese. Goosander are regular in Winter. Following the path along the North of the lake you eventually come to Broad Ees Dole. This is a pair of ponds surrounded by willows. A concrete hide overlooks the larger pond. In days gone by there was a wader scrape here, these days you'll see teal and dabchicks and possibly hear water rail. Resuming the path you'll often get nice views of teal on the smaller lake.

Broad Ees Dole
The path carries on around the Water Park or you can turn right and onto the bank of the river. From here you can either walk back down the river to Jackson's Bridge or cross here to walk down to Stretford.

2018 round-up

I'd set myself a target of seeing 200-ish species of birds in 2018. It turned out I reached 210 by mid-November and then stopped there (I missed a great grey shrike at Leighton Moss by 30 seconds and scan as I might the hundreds of teal at Martin Mere I couldn't magic one into being a green-winged teal). It was nice to add eleven to the life list and only involving just the three twitches (though it has to be said that the Timperley rose-coloured starling was not so much a twitch as a congregation of bewildered middle-aged men).
As part of the point was to get out and about and get some exercise I also aimed at averaging 100 species a month and managed 107, mostly by a combination of public transport and shanks' pony (a friend and I had a day out in July travelling round Furness and Lancashire for terns, owls and red grouse).. 
My birdwatching locations in 2018

There were some lovely birds along the way.
Avocets, Leighton Moss
Long-tailed tit, Stretford
Mandarin duck, Etherow Country Park
Pied wheatear, Meols
Redshanks, West Kirby
Wood sandpiper, Leighton Moss
Snow bunting, Crosby
Grey phalarope, Crosby
Great Egret, Leighton Moss
Red-throated diver, Dawlish Warren
Eiders, Dawlish Warren
Bullfinch, Pennington Flash
Glossy ibis, Marshside


A day off tomorrow, probably. I think I'll go on a wild goose chase on Thursday.