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| Chat Moss |
After Thursday evening's train meltdown I didn't want anything to do with trains yesterday. Which turned out to be just as well, I'd just walked out of the gate on the way to a walk round the park when I got a 'phone call telling me I was needed urgently to sort something out. Perhaps I'm getting the sixth sight in my old age. I couldn't raise much energy or enthusiasm for an excursion today, either, so I headed off to the Trafford Centre to play bus station bingo.
Right up to the moment I got to the garden gate it had been a bright, sunny day. Cool though it was it was mild for December. The clouds rolled in and looked ominous as I waited for the bus to the Trafford Centre. Luckily for me the stiff breeze kept them moving on and it was quite bright when I got off the 100 and started walking up Cutnook Lane.
The last time I came this way the scalped turf fields were busy with finches and wagtails. Today there was not a one. Turf fields don't leave much pickings after harvest. A couple of magpies fossicked about on the fields, over the road half a dozen carrion crows rummaged about in the horse paddocks. I spent an embarrassingly long time finding the great spotted woodpecker that was taking exception to me in the naked beech tree three feet away from me. I could blame the sun in my eyes but not with any great sincerity.
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| Cutnook Lane |
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| Cutnook Lane |
The hedgerows were dead quiet, as December hedgerows sometimes are. The birds are too busy with the business of survival to be bothered advertising themselves. A couple of blackbirds flitted about and robins and wrens ticked fron the depths of the bracken as I walked up the lane.
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| Walking up to Croxden's Moss |
The woodland walk up to Croxden's Moss was even quieter than the hedgerows. A couple more blackbirds and a wren fidgeted in the undergrowth and another woodpecker gave me a barracking and that was it. The pools could be seen clearly through the birch scrub and no waterfowl were on them. All year when you can't see anything of them there is no end of furtive quacks and squabbles, today not a sausage.
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| Croxden's Moss |
A skein of forty-one pink-footed geese flew low over Croxden's Moss and settled down noisily somewhere the other side of the railway line. About a dozen carrion crows rummaged about on the bends of the flooded moss and I checked every one of them just in case last Winter's hooded crow had paid a return visit.
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| Chat Moss |
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| Croxden's Moss |
I walked along the rough path parallel to Twelve Yards Road. A passing chaffinch was the only finch of the afternoon, which is very unusual. Handfuls of magpies, woodpigeons and blackbirds flitted about the trees and a pair of mallards dabbled in the usual pool to the North.
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| Approaching Four Lanes End |
A male kestrel flew into one of the trees as I got to the path that takes me back to Twelve Yards Road. Another was hovering over the field on the other side of Twelve Yards Road. I'd been hearing the mutterings of pink-footed geese close to hand, forty-four of them were grazing deep in the rough pasture.
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| Short-eared owl |
A short-eared owl was hunting low over the rough next to Lavender Lane when it wasn't sparring with a kestrel intent on pinching its prey (they were too far away for me to identify what it was). Further out the jackdaws and lapwings were flying off to roost.
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| By Astley Road |
I headed down Astley Road as the sun set. Mistle thrushes and blackbirds settled in the trees. Carrion crows fossicked about on the turf fields, which were being grazed by sheep. My passage down the road was marked by the ticking of wrens in the land drains, roughly fifty yards apart.
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| Irlam Moss |
The hedgerows South of the motorway were a bit busier. Great tits and dunnocks joined the robins, thrushes and wrens and pheasants called from the field margins. I walked into Irlam and put my trust in the train home and was only ten minutes late getting there. It was an oddly quiet sort of a walk for the solstice weekend.





















































