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| Dutton's Pond |
I made sure I wasn't needed for an early morning errand and with a sigh of relief I caught up with my sleep, sleeping through what had looked likely to be a very pleasant morning. Twilight descended at lunchtime. I got the 256 into Flixton and had a wander round Wellacre Country Park anyway.
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| Wellacre Wood |
Wellacre Wood would have been quiet but the titmice were getting one last feed in before bedtime so the great tits and blue tits chiacked me on my way. A couple of parakeets made a racket as they went to roost in the trees behind the school. I'm still a bit boggled by having local parakeets.
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| Walking down to Dutton's Pond |
I decided to take the path to Dutton's Pond rather than go over to Jack Lane. Heaven knows what that path would be like. Small groups of carrion crows and magpies rummaged about in the fields, I wasn't sure whether the woodpigeon and magpie on the dung heap were looking for food or warming their feet. Black-headed gulls drifted overhead but didn't seem to have any consistent direction in mind. None seemed to be going to roost at Irlam Locks.
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| Wellacre Country Park |
The approach to Dutton's Pond came as a surprise. No matter how often I do this walk I have it in my head that the path goes straight ahead and turn right for the pond and every time I'm suddenly wondering what that pond is on the left side of the path. The curve of the path isn't so gentle as to explain the mistake. Old men forget. The reeds in the centre of the pond have been cut back a lot so the area keeps its value as shelter for young fish and doesn't become another island. Consequently there were a lot of moorhens out in the open, usually there's just two or three to be seen.
A quick look at Green Hill found me a mixed tit flock, or rather they found me. I got razzed by long-tailed tits then they bounced off with the blue tits and great tits into the brambles. Some of the woodpigeons sang in the treetops. A few goldfinches and chaffinches twittered about in the trees but it was otherwise fairly quiet.
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| Walking down to Jack Lane |
Turning back and wandering along the path by the railway embankment towards Jack Lane I wasn't sure if there were two mixed tit flocks or one very extended one. The family group of over a dozen long-tailed tits in the bushes near Dutton's Pond made themselves very conspicuous, the blue tits and great tits bounced through the hedgerows in silence and were easily missed. All the time I was distracted by the crunch, crunch, crunch of squirrels eating hawthorn berries, and blackbirds and redwings flitting between bushes.
The sun was nearly down when I got to Jack Lane Nature Reserve and the titmice and robins were settling to roost in the reeds. Somewhere in the depths a water rail squealed like a distressed piglet but otherwise even the magpies and woodpigeons settling into the trees were quiet. As I reached Jack Lane a flock of about thirty starlings flew in and disappeared into the reeds.
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| Jack Lane Nature Reserve |
Walking down Jack Lane I looked over towards Irlam Locks where another couple of dozen starlings were sitting on the electricity pylons. I could see no sign of gulls but about fifty magpies were bouncing round the water treatment works and the fields by Irlam Road. I wasn't tempted to walk round for a closer look at them, I turned the other way down Irlam Road and got the bus home.






















































