Black-tailed godwits, Leighton Moss

Tuesday, 31 December 2024

Year end round-up

Wryneck, Rishton Reservoir 

Any year that begins with my walking down the road from home to see a cattle egret is going to have points of interest.

As ever the weather has been a feature of the year and, as is becoming a pattern, it has been utterly unpredictable. Overall it's been a grey, wet year interspersed with sunny periods ranging from half an hour to half a week. June and early July was a long wet week in April, with conspicuously negative effects on both insect life and breeding birds. A lot of the Summer breeding birds, particularly the warblers, gave up and moved on before August was half over. How lasting those effects will be is something to worry about.

Whether it was the weather or old age creeping up on me I found Summer birdwatching very hard work this year. It felt like I wasn't trying but looking back I can see that I was doing at least as much birdwatching as ever. Perhaps the perpetual leaden skies dampened my normally ebullient spirits. Autumn seems to have been spent chasing after specific birds — not just year listers and lifers — and not finding them, the dip list was a bit dispiriting. It would be easy to feel a bit down on my luck so I'll make the effort to look at the many positives.

I really shouldn't be surprised that adding to the life list is hard work now I'm approaching the halfway mark of the British List. Don't think I didn't scope out the logistics of a day trip to Lothian looking for rare scoters! Repeatedly. And there were dips: I was within twenty yards of what would turn out to be the pale-legged leaf warbler at Bempton, and probably considerably nearer the barred warbler at Hoylake, a garden or two from adding the scarlet tanager at Shelf to my British List, probably a reedbed away from the marbled godwit at Flint, and God knows what else I've overlooked elsewhere. The year listing was similarly peppered with the ones that got away. Everybody saw yellow-browed warblers but me.

Oddly the fact that I have been within a hundred yards of two would-be lifers a few times at one place hasn't got me down. I'm very happy that they're there and that someone responsible for them has trusted me enough to tell me about them. And I may yet get them. Or not, as the case may be.

  • It felt good to finally see a roseate tern though I wouldn't have predicted seeing one right in front of the hide at Hodbarrow. Now I've got my eye in I wonder if I'll be able to spot one in passing some time.
  • The trip out to see the black-winged pratincole on the Nottinghamshire border was a thoroughly enjoyable adventure and a nice, if distant, bird. A credit to the patch watcher who found it.
  • Wilson's phalarope is a bird that I've missed a couple of times so it was good to see the bird on the Junction Pool at Marshside. A very different beast to the other phalaropes, much more like a shank than the others.

  • It took two goes to get the wryneck at Rishton Reservoir, a bird I've been dipping for years. It was lovely to finally see one and well worth the wait.
  • I'd gone to Bempton hoping to bump into a scarce warbler and instead got a very bad and entirely unsatisfactory view of a long-eared owl deep in the cover of a hawthorn tree in the pouring rain. Like you do. I'll see one properly some day.

Another first of a different kind was seeing both Greenland and European white-fronted geese in the same year.

I won't make any guesses about next year's lifers save that they probably won't include red-tailed tropicbird or blue-footed booby.

The list of places to visit or revisit grows exponentially. Which is great so long as I don't treat not getting to All The Places as a stick to beat myself with. I've not explored Cumbria and Yorkshire as much as intended and I've neglected parts of Cheshire and most of North Wales. On the other hand, Warrington and St Helens have had a thorough going-over and I've explored a lot of new places. Of course, the problem with exploring new places is that along the way you do a lot of: "I wonder where that goes…" It's not a conscious thing but I do find myself following the impulse and ending up having a deep rummage round in different places each year. So this year it turned out to be Warrington and St Helens. I'm not going to try and predict what happens next year, it'll be interesting to find out.

The stats

The year list ended at 213, the same as last year, which will do me.

Species counts for the BTO recording areas for 2024:

  • Caernarfonshire 25
  • Cheshire and Wirral 118
  • Cumbria 83
  • Denbighshire 41
  • Derbyshire 60
  • Flintshire 41
  • Greater Manchester 132
  • Lancashire and North Merseyside 159
  • Lincolnshire 22
  • Nottinghamshire 22
  • Shropshire 24
  • Staffordshire 28
  • Yorkshire 89

The Greater Manchester list stands at 190, the British list at 307, and the life list at 387.

As usual I'll finish the round-up with a few of the reasons why I go out birdwatching. This year I think I'll do a separate post for the landscapes and supporting cast because even on quiet birdwatching days there's a good reason to be out there.

Lapwings, Martin Mere

Gadwall, Sands Lake

Dunnock, Old Hall Lane, Bolton

Bullfinch, Leighton Moss

Common scoter, Irlam Locks

White wagtail, Hoylake

Cattle egret, Urmston

Black-throated diver, Crosby Marine Lake

Red-breasted goose, pintail and shelduck, Martin Mere

Egyptian geese, Pennington Flash

Robin, Stretford

Black-tailed godwits, Marshside

Mandarin ducks, Etherow Country Park

Spadger, Stretford

Common sandpiper, Walkerswood Reservoir

Garganey, Elton Reservoir

Whitethroat, Marshside

Shelducks, Meols

Mandarin ducks, Etherow Country Park

Ring-necked duck, St Helens

Black-tailed godwits, Marshside

Pink-footed geese, Banks Marsh

Red-necked grebe, Burton Riggs

Coal tit, Chorlton Ees

Great spotted woodpecker, Sale Water Park

Black-necked grebe, Low Hall

Swallows, Rivington Pike

Gannets, Bempton

Stonechat, New Lane

Grey wagtail, Hesketh Park 

Mandarins

Mandarin ducks 

Yesterday was a bright, sunny day despite the Met Office promising another day of December gloom. I was rather hoping they'd get it wrong today, too. Weather alerts and warnings were issued, cancelled, updated and revised with gay abandon yesterday evening. It was a gloomy dawn but over the next hour or so the sun shone invitingly on the horizon below glowering clouds. But it was a strong wind blowing more and darker clouds in. I decided I wasn't going to spend the last day of the birdwatching year stressing about trains and inclement weather.

So I bobbed over to Etherow Country Park to take photos of mandarin ducks in the gloom.

Drake mandarin 

Drake mandarin 

Female mandarin 

One of the things I like about mandarin ducks pictorially is the abstract shapes they generate by moving about. Even more so when there's a crowd of them.

Mandarin ducks 

Drake mandarins

These two have almost certainly paired up now

Drake mandarin 

Mandarins and mallards 

Drake mandarin 

Mandarins 

Mandarins

I knew there was a healthy population here but the fifty-odd I saw today — mostly drakes — was a surprise.

A pair of mandarins see out 2024


Monday, 30 December 2024

Mosses (again)

Roe deer, Chat Moss
Sadly, the chap down the road didn't see them crossing over.

I felt that I had unfinished business with Chat Moss, not even getting to try and find the hooded crow the other day so I thought I'd nip over and see if I could find it. In the event "nipping over" turned into a four and a half hour's meandering walk over the mosses.

It was a bright and sunny morning as I got the 100 from the Trafford Centre to Irlam. As we passed Port Salford I was surprised to see a roe deer grazing on the lawn of one of the industrial units. I'm more used to seeing serried lines of molehills around there.

By Cutnook Lane 

I got off the bus and walked up Cutnook Lane, encountering a reassuringly conventional mixed tit flock — great, blue and long-tailed tits — bouncing round the trees either side of the motorway. A couple of dozen magpies fed on the flooded field of turf, no ducks this time, while woodpigeons and carrion crows fossicked about the paddocks.

There were a lot of cars parked up at the junction of if Cutnook Lane and Twelve Yards Road. I was worried that the lanes were going to be busy with people working up an appetite for lunch by walking the dog but I only bumped into a couple. Perhaps something else was going on.

Chat Moss 

Chat Moss 

Further up the little lane the pools could be seen well through the birch scrub in the bright light. A couple of shovelers and at least one teal mingled with the dozen or so mallards clustered in the corner of one pool and a heron sat on one of the islands. Nearly all the open water was empty of birds. A lot of carrion crows were flying around, mostly in pairs, and I checked each as they came but wasn't seeing any hoodie amongst them.

Croxden's Moss 

I walked out onto the open peatland of Croxden's Moss at the end of the lane and had a look round. Over to the East a buzzard and a few black-headed gulls were wheeling low over the trees. Closer to hand there was a lot of activity at the edge of open land where the railway track is thickly lined with trees. A crowd of jackdaws and carrion crows were making a hell of a racket and were being very skittish, settling in the peat to feed and loaf for a few minutes then retreating to the trees. I had a look to see what was spooking them without any success, I was told later that a peregrine had been circling about.

Walking along the path running parallel to Twelve Yards Road I was keeping an eye on the flock of corvids. There was plenty of scope for confusion: a few of the carrion crows had extensive white markings in their wings (this is usually due to a dietary deficiency rather than leucism) and the strong light was bouncing off the glossy plumage of the crows on the ground like mirrors. But of course all the light bits were in the wrong place for a hooded crow. It took a while to find it because, ironically, it was standing in a shadow so looked mostly dark compared to the sunlit carrion crows around it.

Croxden's Moss 

A few mallards flew into the pool further on and a snipe flew out of it. I bumped into a very small flock of chaffinches — ten birds — and failed to find any bramblings or yellowhammers. I'm definitely worried about the yellowhammers on Chat Moss, my fieldcraft isn't so bad to warrant my seeing none here this year. I let on to a fellow birdwatcher as he walked past and we mourned the loss of tree sparrows here.

Pied wagtail, Chat Moss

At the corner where the path turns towards Twelve Yards Road a female kestrel flew low over the dung heap in the corner of the field and spooked a small flock of wagtails. Most were pied wagtails but there was a grey wagtail in the mix and, to my surprise and delight, a female white wagtail, standing out very pale amongst the others. For the only time of the day I wished the light was as bad as it had been last weekend, bracket the exposures as I may all I could get was bleached out photos of the bird as it stood out in the sunlight. The pied wagtails gave me a sporting chance by getting down and rummaging about in the heap.

Chat Moss 

I'd barely walked ten yards when I heard a sound and two roe deers bounced out of the drain and nearly ran into me. They stopped, we looked at each other and they turned tail. I managed to get a quick photo with my 'phone. Unfortunately the other birdwatcher didn't see them despite their running quite close to him.

I didn't want to retrace my steps down Cutnook Lane and I absolutely didn't want to traipse down Astley Road again. I decided I'd walk down into Little Woolden Moss then go down Moss Road into Cadishead and thence Irlam. 

Lavender Lane 

Walking down Lavender Lane I kept scanning the fields for any owls and finding magpies as cars and vans started congregating at the little car park by the reserve for an owl watch. I wasn't expecting any luck with the owls, it was still only just lunchtime, but I thought I might find the resident marsh harrier upsetting the jackdaws in the trees and fields to the North. I saw a shape float up over the tree line and realised it was a short-eared owl. Another joined it and rose quite high above the trees then floated down like a falling leaf. They were distant and weren't for heading any closer and quicky disappeared into the fields on the other side of the trees. I was getting all the bonuses today.

Little Woolden Moss 

Little Woolden Moss was in one of its quiet moods today with nothing on the water, no pipits, reed buntings or linnets and the resident carrion crows flying to and fro without landing. But it all looked very nice in the Winter sunshine.

The walk down Moss Road was very quiet of birdlife. The local farmers were catching up with maintenance work, including some very neat and tidy hedge trimming, and the noise and bustle was putting off everything but the crows.

Cadishead Moss 

Over the motorway about a hundred black-headed gulls danced for worms in a wet field in the company of handfuls of common gulls, lesser black-backs and woodpigeons

New Moss Wood 

New Moss Wood was surprisingly quiet. Robins sang, wrens chaffed and a buzzard called from the trees across the road. The small mixed tit flock I bumped into silently flitted across the ride and disappeared into the birch trees. A couple of redwings headed in the opposite direction.

It was getting late for moving on elsewhere and the joints were starting to stiffen now the sun was low behind the clouds. I walked into Irlam for the train and got the week's shopping done before getting the train home. It was a nice class of sunset.

Urmston Station sunset