Black-tailed godwits, Leighton Moss

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Dovestone Reservoir

Mallards and ducklings

I had no intention of going for a walk round Dovestone Reservoir.

Something happens every year and it comes as a surprise every year. I've been wondering what's been up with me this week, until this morning when I went out into the back garden to see if we have a winner in the First Rose of the Year stakes (we do, it's "A Touch of Blue" and it's still only April). My eyes started to feel scratchy and the penny dropped. The pollen count is moderate but the grass-cutting count is high and the hay fever season is upon us once again. Like the first rose, it gets earlier every year. With me the first onset manifests as a feeling that all my strings have been cut and it never dawns on me it's hay fever until the itchy symptoms hit. You'd think I'd know by now. Having established I hadn't got the dreaded lurgi or Murgatroyd's twinges I could just ignore it and get on with things. I didn't have the energy for Plan A or Plan B for today so I got a pot of tea down me, got the lunchtime train into town and headed East, because I am very conscious nearly all this month's birdwatching has been westbound.

Reports early in the morning of a singing wood warbler that came and went quickly at Birchwood reminded me that there's sometimes a chance of finding one singing at Binn Green, by Dovestone Reservoir, and if I was tremendously lucky there might also be a ring ousel passing through. The odds were very long but a dawdle up Holmfirth Road in the sunshine had an appeal. I checked the bus times, I could get off the train at Mossley, get the 350 to The Clarence at the bottom of Holmfirth Road and save myself the walk across Greenfield. And so I did. It took about ten minutes longer but I had more energy to put into having a bit of an explore.

By Holmfirth Road 

The walk up Holmfirth Road was very pleasant indeed. The gradient creeps up on you, I tend not to realise until I notice I'm looking into tree canopies by the roadside. Along the way robins, wrens and blackcaps kept a constant chorus with solos by chaffinches, nuthatches and a coal tit. Woodpigeons clattered about in the trees, blue tits and great tits fidgeted through the undergrowth and the sheep in the fields were accompanied by jackdaws and the occasional mistle thrush. 

Looking over to Chew Valley
The sliver of blue is Dovestone Reservoir 

Dovestone Edge 

Dovestone Reservoir 

Rising higher, chiffchaffs and goldfinches, then willow warblers joined the chorus. Pairs of stock doves joined the woodpigeons and jackdaws in the fields, and some of the jackdaws had youngsters in tow. The wind was brisk, the orange tips and brimstones flying low to the grass to avoid the fate of the leaves whizzing and tumbling down the road. Stopping to admire the view and take photographs included the very real risk of being brained by pine cones.

As Dovestones Reservoir came properly into view so did the handful of Canada geese cruising about at the car park end.

Nicely weathered millstone grit atop Alderman's Hill

Approaching Binn Green I kept scanning the hilltops, just in case any ring ousels or wheatears wanted to make an appearance. They didn't, but don't look, don't see. The woodland was almost invisibly busy: the songscape was rich in robins, chiffchaffs, willow warblers, wrens and chaffinches; every so often I'd see a blue tit or great tit fidget through the conifers and a small flock of goldfinches fussed about the treetops. I almost missed the handful of siskins, their contact calls almost drowned out by a sudden rush of traffic noise.

Bilberry

Binn Green 

I pottered about the rocks at Binn Green admiring the view, listening to the birds, accidentally upsetting meadow pipits, and trying to use trees and rocks as windbreaks and finding it a lost cause. Trying to take photos of the scenery and the bilberries in flower whilst being buffeted by the wind was a challenge to put it mildly. Some hardy souls were walking the tops of Dovestone Edge opposite, I wondered if they might be slightly potty.

Halfway down the steps

I dropped down into relative shelter and found myself walking down the steps to the bottom. I wondered if this was wise, especially when the knees wondered how I was getting back up again. I wasn't going back up the steps, that was for sure. I'd have to walk up the service road back to Holmfirth Road. While I was here I thought I'd walk down to the dam between Yeoman Hey and Dovestone reservoirs and have a nosy.

Yeoman Hey Reservoir 

The wind was very bracing and bursts of white horses skimmed across the reservoirs. A house martin shot headlong into the wind and flew up the valley, the first of a small and fitful passage of house martins and sand martins heading for the wilds of Yorkshire. A couple of drake mallards cruised along the bankside on Yeoman Hey while a very busy pied wagtail fussed about the bottom of the dam, flitting from side to side. At first I thought he was servicing a nestful of mouths on one or other side but in the end I had to conclude he had the fidgets. As did a common sandpiper which tired of rummaging about the bankside and flew over the dam to bob about on the banks of Dovestone Reservoir.

Dovestone Reservoir 

I was going to turn round and walk back so I walked over the dam to the other side to admire the scenery and took the path that runs alongside Dovestone Reservoir to the car park. Like you do.

Reed bunting

There was barely a cloud in the sky, the sun was bright, the light electric, the scenery splendid and the wind at my back. I half-expected Lilian Gish to pass by in a flurry of sticks and leaves. I stopped by one of the long drains feeding the reservoir, just in case a dipper or grey wagtail might be taking advantage of the facilities. Robins and reed buntings caught insects on the pavings and pairs of goldfinches flew in for a drink. A very skittish grey wagtail was working the outflow at the end.

Dovestone Edge and inlet drain

Black-headed gulls and jackdaws passed overhead. Great tits, robins and willow warblers sang from the small plantations along the bank. Greenfinches and bullfinches called softly before disappearing into the trees as I passed, blackbirds and wrens struck poses and sang their defiance. Every so often I'd bump into a pheasant, more often I heard cocks in the background calling rivals into battle.

Dovestone Reservoir 

Walking by the reservoir 

Chew Valley 

Any thoughts that it might be less windy as I descended towards the car park and the dam were knocked on the head as I reached the mouth of the Chew Valley. The path turns 90°, instead of having the wind on my back blowing down from Yeoman Hey I had a much stronger wind blowing in my face from up tops. Any frivolous ideas that I might take the path and go up a bit into the valley swiftly put themselves back in the box.

A pair of mallards and their ducklings rummaged about the jackdaws in a field by the path. More mallards lounged on the bank by the car park and swallows whizzed about the dam. They looked and behaved like fixtures rather than the passing martins.

Walking back to Holmfirth Road
The topmost line of trees is the road. 

I walked up the lane and rejoined the songscape on Holmfirth Road which was as loud and busy as it was on my way up. I stopped to take a photo and was startled by a sharp tap on the top of my head as an oak tree jettisoned a leafy stick. "Berk!" said the sheep from across the road. They were probably right.


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