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| Teal |
It was a rainy start to the day with the promise of its becoming finer and it was very mild for the approach to mid-December. I thought I really should get out to Leighton Moss before another weekend's worth of yellow and amber warnings of heavy rain made itself felt so I took a risk and used another of my Delay Repay compo return tickets and, just for the record, today the trains behaved themselves.
I don't know if it's the mild weather or the Christmas spirit but there was a lot of billing and cooing amongst the rooks on the school playing field as I walked to the station.
I had wondered if I should set out early and go straight to Leighton Moss to try and catch the bearded tits, which generally abandon the grit trays and retreat into the reeds after eleven in the morning. I decided not, most of Leighton Moss is still underwater and impassable for visitors so I stuck with my usual routine of staying on to Ulverston and coming back to Silverdale to get a look over the estuaries and salt marshes on the Northern side of Morecambe Bay.
On the way up from Manchester it was as if the woodpigeons hadn't gone missing for most of November. They were in small flocks in fields, sitting on chimney pots, squatting on trackside equipment or swaying in the wind on telephone lines just like they'd never been away. There were plenty of carrion crows, jackdaws and magpies, too, Bolton was stiff with black-headed gulls and Preston with herring gulls and there were a lot of blackbirds in trackside hawthorns.
The coastal pools at Leighton Moss weren't crowded but there was a fair variety of birds out there. A few mute swans cruised about. Mallards, shelducks and teals dabbled in the pools, some groups of ducks in the distance may or may not have been wigeons. I registered but couldn't reliably identify the waders in the corners as we passed by.
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| On the way to Arnside |
There was extensive flooding between thje pools and Silverdale Station, and even more along the stretch of line before Arnside. One large field which occasionally gets damp enough for a great white egret to potter about in was a lake with a couple of dozen greylags sitting on an island.
It was lowish tide as we crossed the Kent, the train disturbing a large flock of pigeons and the pigeons disturbing the redshanks feeding on the mud by the viaduct. A couple of curlews plodded about regardless. Shelducks and carrion crows dotted the salt marsh on the other side and a small flock of linnets passed us going the other way. The usually large crowd of black-headed gulls at Grange-over-sands was thinly dispersed across the mud. A raven flew by, flocks of jackdaws and starlings bobbed up and down on the salt marsh, little egrets stalked creeks and the train headed inland to Cark.
The fields were flooded on this side, too. One which usually has a crowd of rooks and jackdaws today had mallards and mute swans. A flock of fieldfares were panicked out of the trees by the passing train, which made a change as I've only been seeing them in ones and twos this Winter. The pools on the salt marsh by the Leven were full to the brim but the marsh was oddly empty of birds. Perhaps the flooded fields were providing richer pickings.
The Leven looked quiet, the eiders and redshanks had spread out with the ebbing tide. One of the channels had a flock of eiders lining one bank, each a yard apart from its neighbours.
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| Blackbird, Ulverston Station |
I had twenty minutes' wait at Ulverston for the Lancaster train. The trees by the platform have been thinned out drastically but there was still plenty of cover for the robins and blackbirds to be bobbing in and out. Flocks of jackdaws tried to make themselves heard over the calling of herring gulls while rooks cawed softly in the treetops by the rookeries. It didn't really feel like the run-up to Christmas.
The train back was very busy, Northern's running a lot of short-form trains this week so travelers can get to know either as they stand in the aisles. As we left Grange-over-sands I noticed that a pond which usually has a few mallards and moorhens pottering about also had a great white egret doing an impersonation of one of those plastic herons that used to be so popular. Fifty-odd jackdaws bustled over the flooded fields of Meathop and dozens of teals dabbled in the creeks.
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| Chaffinch |
Leighton Moss was very wet. New arrivals were warned that there was a lot of splashing about to get to Lilian's Hide, the Skytower and the Causeway Hide and the other hides were inaccessible. And so it came to pass. I stopped off first at the Hideout to get my eye in and in the hopes there might be a marsh tit or two amongst the crowds. Chaffinches and coal tits were making most of the running on the feeders, a few great tits, blue tits and greenfinches got their turns and every so often a few goldfinches would bustle in, make a fuss and bustle out again. Robins and dunnocks fidgeted about and a couple of hen pheasants tidied up below the feeders. I didn't get to find a marsh tit but a female blackcap was a nice consolation prize.
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| Robin |
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| A bit damp |
The path by the Skytower was very damp and it was immediately obvious why the path into the reedbeds was out of bounds. Half a dozen mallards obligingly showed me the shallow bits of the path to Lilian's Hide while a Cetti's warbler exploded into song from the drowned willows alongside.
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| Gadwalls |
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| At Lilian's Hide |
The water by Lilian's Hide was high and the pool was busy with ducks. Shovelers, teals and gadwalls dozed on the remaining islands, a couple of snipe keeping them company. More gadwalls swam with a raft of coots and tufted ducks or cruised about in amorous groups involving lots of soft quacking and vigorous head-bobbing. Mute swans drifted by the reeds, a heron and a greylag sat on the far bank and cormorants dried their wings in the trees over by the Griesdale Hide. I stayed a while in the hide enjoying the birds in the strong, low light.
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| Tufted ducks, coots, gadwalls, heron and greylag |
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| The gadwalls were getting frisky |
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| Coots |
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| Shovelers and teal |
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| Teal |
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| Snipe and gadwall |
I checked the time and decided to go for the train back home. It had been a short visit and I didn't venture far but there'd been plenty enough to see while I was here. On the way back I confirmed that there were wigeon on the coastal pools and we passed a flock of a couple of hundred pink-footed geese on Carnforth Marsh. I'd had a leisurely dawdle of a day out but still somehow totted up fifty-six species of birds along the way.
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| Shoveler |