Black-tailed godwits, Leighton Moss

Wednesday, 24 April 2024

Martin Mere

Linnet, New Lane 

It was a bright, sunny day just right for a roundabout walk around Martin Mere. A slight hiccup at Wigan where the train had to be rebooted to get one of the engines running had me arriving at New Lane ten minutes late but no matter, it had got me there. The sun was bright and a cool North wind told me I'd made the right choice of jacket and the walking was going to be good.

By New Lane Station 

House sparrows chased each other round the hedgerow by the station while blackbirds, robins, chiffchaffs, blackcaps, woodpigeons, wrens and a whitethroat sang from the hedgerows by the line. It was to be another day of busy songscapes. Black-headed gulls flew hither and thither, oystercatchers split their time between a newly ploughed field and the water treatment works and every so often mallard threesomes would fly by.

Walking by the railway line, the field of fennel on the left 

There wasn't a lot of ground cover left: the stubble had been ploughed, the carrots were scant inches tall and the fennel had been cut back nearly to ground level. Which made it all the more frustrating to struggle so much finding the linnets I could hear tweeting at each other. It felt odd walking through huge clouds of midges and not having swallows and martins overhead hoovering them up but the northerly winds of the past couple of weeks have set things back a bit. Looking back I find I blame North winds and bad weather in Spain for my poor showing in the April passage migration every year.

Meadow between the railway line and Martin Mere 

There were two pairs of stonechats on the meadows on the other side of the line, one pair in brambles by the line and the usual pair on the collapsed shed who had hungry mouths to feed. The linnets took pity on an old man and sat in the trees so I could see them properly. Now I'd passed all the midge clouds a couple of swallows flew overhead.

Stonechats, New Lane

I joined the path round the outside of the reedbed walk, much to the irritation of a pheasant which made a noisy exit and a Cetti's warbler which gave an alarm call I've only ever heard a couple of times. My usual experience is that Cetti's either quietly disappear or knock you off your feet with a song. A chiffchaff dithered between giving an alarm call and singing and eventually opted for the latter, sounding not quite right in the process.

By the reedbed walk

In the shelter of the hedgerows it was becoming a mild Spring lunchtime. The chiffchaffs outnumbered the willow warblers ten to one. More Cetti's warblers sang in the hedgerows than in the reeds. They were accompanied by robins, blackcaps, wrens, great tits, blackbirds, dunnocks, chaffinches and a couple of whitethroats. Did I say it was a busy songscape? Blue tits, reed buntings and long-tailed tits quietly went about their business in the hawthorns, unlike the three buzzards soaring overhead which let everyone know they were around.

It felt strange walking this path and not getting my feet wet, the relatively dry spell and drying winds had done their work. The sun brought out the butterflies, the open patches of meadow were busy with orange tips and peacocks.

Marsh harrier, Martin Mere 

The hedgerow on the left gave way to reedbed margins and a couple of reed warblers joined the fray. Coots and mallards could be heard by pools, Canada geese cruised about noisily and whooper swans could be heard in the distance. A couple of female marsh harriers soared low overhead.

Marsh harrier, Martin Mere 

The path I was dreading, the one along the fence to the road, was passable without even getting my boots muddy despite the pair of mallards swimming in one of the potholes. I tried not to disturb them but made a bad fist of not disturbing the pheasants, shelducks and woodpigeons in the field.

Nesting black-headed gulls, Martin Mere 

I went straight to the Discovery Hide and squinted through the glare of a high key sunny afternoon. I miss the Swan Link Hide which might have been dangerously rickety but at least didn't face into the sun. Mallards dozed on the bank while pigeons courted and black-headed gulls squabbled. More black-headed gulls dozed on nests on the rafts and islands or drifted on the mere picking at midges. A few shelducks and tufted ducks cruised about, a few pairs of shovelers loafed on an island over by the far bank. 

Mallard, Martin Mere 

It took me a while to spot the pair of Mediterranean gulls swimming amongst the black-headed gulls. I was taken by how fast they swam compared to the black-headed gulls, one glance away and they'd be somewhere else entirely.

Black-headed gulls and Mediterranean gull (back), Martin Mere 

Half a dozen whooper swans loafed on the far bank while Canada geese and greylags quarreled noisily around them. A dozen or so grazing pink-footed geese kept well away from the fuss. For a long time I didn't notice the couple of cattle egrets with the grazing longhorns. Over on the distant fields little egrets, lapwings and woodpigeons flew to and fro. Something disturbed one group of lapwings and they, in turn, disturbed a heron and a great white egret.

Longhorn cattle, cattle egret and black-headed gulls, Martin Mere 

The tree-lined walk to the Kingfisher Hide (I can't remember its new name) was relatively quiet. Goldfinches twittered and sang and a song thrush sang from a treetop. The titmice, robins and chaffinches quietly fossicked about in the undergrowth and the bird feeding station was deserted.

Singing linnet by the Kingfisher Hide 

A pair of long-tailed tits were hunting spiders in the eaves of the Kingfisher Hide. Outside the brambles were busy with linnets and a couple sang from the shrubs nearby.

From the Kingfisher Hide 

There were more goldfinches and titmice on the walk down to the Ron Barker Hide. The hide was almost deserted, I was on my own upstairs and could hear a couple of people downstairs. The water levels were down a bit on the marshes so the islands weren't inundated. Black-headed gulls and shelducks drifted about on the pool to the left. On the right avocets and black-tailed godwits fed in the water and teal dozed on the bank. Greylags and a couple of pairs of gadwall drifted about in the drain between the pools. 

Longhorn cattle and cattle egret by the Ron Barker Hide 

There were more greylags with the Canada geese and pink-feet grazing on the marsh. Another cattle egret accompanied the longhorns by the hide. A few swallows passed by and didn't stop. A very dark, gull-like wader flew by and, mercifully, turned slightly so I could see its bill and confirm it was a whimbrel.

On my way back I had my usual look round for roosting tawny owls in the ivies and had my usual luck in not finding any. Once a year I do which makes it worth the effort.

The pedestrian exit from Martin Mere

Tarlscough Lane 

It was a bright, sunny walk back and the cool breeze had lessened. Farmers were busy ploughing and sowing fields that were sodden mudscapes a few weeks ago, their tractors haunted by small groups of black-headed gulls, rooks and jackdaws. Goldfinches and corn buntings sang in the hedgerows while house sparrows and greenfinches fussed about. Out in the fields woodpigeons and starlings combed the already ploughed fields. I thought I could hear yellow wagtails but had no joy finding them. It was worth the while looking as I found pairs of grey partridges skulking in field margins.

I didn't have long to wait for the train back to Manchester. This one had to be rebooted at Appley Bridge but I still — just — got my train home which wasn't cancelled this time. 

I found out later that I'd just missed three cranes flying over the Ron Barker Hide, I'd have missed them anyway had I heard and gone back, they were flying at a rate of knots and were over the Fylde an hour later and were later seen near Leighton Moss. There's a lot of blink and you'll miss it to the Spring migration.

Walking up to the Ron Barker Hide 

Tuesday, 23 April 2024

Chelford

Lapwing Hall Pool 

A dry, cool day was forecast so after a lie-in after a bad night's sleep I got the midday train to Chelford and pottered over to Lapwing Hall Pool to see what was about. To be honest, I was rather hoping some tree sparrows might be about because I'm getting a bit over-conscious of their absence from the year list. Usually I'd have picked them up early in the year at Martin Mere or the Burscough area or bumped into some on one or other of the mosses but no joy so far and it's been making me fret.

Holmes Chapel Road 

Walking down Knutsford Road it was nice to hear a yellowhammer singing in the trees behind the houses, they've been few and far between this year. Jackdaws and woodpigeons flew about, carrion crows fossicked in fields and robins and blackbirds sang. I turned onto Holmes Chapel Road where the blackcaps and robins were singing above the noise of the traffic and blue tits and long-tailed tits flitted about the hedgerows. Out on the parklands jackdaws and carrion crows fussed about the sheep and great tits got very proprietorial about their sweet chestnut trees.

Lapwing Lane 

I turned onto Lapwing Lane where the chiffchaffs were singing loudly in the trees and titmice flitted very quietly about. A raven — a beardless youth — cronked as it flew overhead, dwarfing a couple of carrion crows it passed by.

I could hear sparrows in the hedges by the entrance to Lapwing Hall Pool but I wasn't convinced they were tree sparrows and they weren't for showing themselves. Unlike the chiffchaffs, willow warblers and goldfinches. In the end I gave up trying to photograph any of the birds; they were too distant, too flighty or fan-dancing with the leaves. It's already getting quite difficult to see through the tree canopies and it soon struck me that if the birds kept quiet I'd be having a thin time of it.

Lapwing Hall Pool 

Out on the pool the crowd scenes of Winter were over. Mute swans, coots and tufted ducks were thinly peppered about. Rather to my surprise dead centre was a male goldeneye. There's always someone misses the last bus home.

By Congleton Lane 

After the rubbish I've been walking on lately the slightly muddy path alongside Congleton Lane held no terrors. A soaring buzzard overhead annoyed the carrion crows and jackdaws in the trees by the lane. Robins, wrens, great tits, blackcaps and chiffchaffs sang in the scrub by the path. I wasn't expecting the Cetti's warbler singing in the pine tree. Birds do as they please, they don't pay a lot of attention to what the books say they do.

The Mosses 

The Mosses were noisy with the songs of robins, wrens, blackbirds, blackcaps, chiffchaffs and a very persistent nuthatch. A pair of treecreepers flitted over to a birch tree by the path, disappeared round the other side of the trunk and never reappeared. I've no idea where they vanished off to.

The Mosses

Acre Nook Quarry was peppered with coots, tufted ducks and mallards. Handfuls of gadwall and Canada geese lurked by the far bank and a lone greylag cruised by. Pairs of great crested grebes were dotted about, most of them doing a lot of head-shaking and one pair had a brief assay at a penguin dance. I'd been hearing oystercatchers but it took a while to find the four birds on the far bank, catching a drake shoveler in the corner of my eye as I did so. Further beyond half a dozen immature herring gulls loafed on a floating branch and a couple of pairs of mute swans cruised about. There were a few more tufties and one caught my eye as being different, it wasn't until it had swum halfway across the quarry before I could see it was another goldeneye. Another birdwatcher joined me. "Have you got the mandarin?" he asked me. I hadn't, it was by the bank below the oystercatchers.

Acre Nook Quarry 

I wished him luck and toddled on up Lapwing Lane. There were yet more robins and chiffchaffs, a great spotted woodpecker drummed, a couple of willow warblers sang in the tall trees and mistle thrushes fossicked about a cottage garden. Goldfinches and greenfinches flitted about in the hedgerows and a couple of house sparrows were in and out of the bushes by a garden gate. It looked like I was going to draw another blank on tree sparrows. It was disappointing but I couldn't complain after a very nice couple of hours' birdwatching. And then a small brown head bobbed out of a severely-pruned hedgerow maple. To say I was relieved to see my first tree sparrow of the year would be an understatement.

Lapwing Lane 

Three buzzards sparred overhead as I walked on to Holmes Chapel Road and there were yet more chiffchaffs, great tits and jackdaws. I got back to the station with ten minutes to spare for the train back to Manchester. It will surprise the regular reader not one bit to find my train home from Manchester had been cancelled.

No idea which Moss this is but I was very taken by the dark spikes of densely-packed leaves.


Monday, 22 April 2024

Pennington Flash

Stock dove

It was a grey, cool day and some rain was promised for the afternoon so I didn't fancy a stroll anyway too open and Pennington Flash beckoned. Some of the paths may be ropey but the bus stops are fairly close, there's plenty of tree cover and I could always sit in a hide for the very wet bits. Which is precisely what happened.

Bradshaw Leach Meadow 

Ignoring the crap paths (literally, for one stretch what wasn't muddy puddle was horse manure), the walk in from St Helens Road was picturesque and the robins, wrens and woodpigeons kept the soundscape going whenever the great tits needed a breather. Magpies and blackbirds bounced about in the trees and a pair of mallards quacked from somewhere deep in the undergrowth.

Mute swans and Canada geese 

It was another very quiet of people visit. A couple of mallards dozed on the car park. The Muscovy ducks were notably absent. A few Canada geese and mute swans mooched around. Even fewer coots and tufted ducks bobbed about near the banks.

Tufted ducks 

Out on the flash a few great crested grebes drifted apparently aimlessly. A small raft of large gulls was made up of a dozen or so lesser black-backs, a dozen or so herring gulls and a couple of great black-backs. As the threat of drizzle turned to rain half a dozen swallows came in to hawk over the water. One of the distant blobs wasn't a grebe nor yet was it a coot. It was only as I was approaching the Horrocks Hide that I could get a good enough view to confirm it as a male common scoter.

The spit at the Horrocks Hide 

A bit more of the spit had emerged from the Winter high waters and it was covered in Canada geese, woodpigeons and stock doves. A couple of cormorants and half a dozen goosanders loafed at the tip of the spit but the usual crowd of large gulls was missing. As were any waders. I'd hoped there might be a ringed plover or even a little ringed plover scuttling about but there weren't even any lapwings or the car park oystercatcher. A noisy crowd of black-headed gulls crowded about the nesting rafts on the bight beyond the spit and a dozen tufted ducks cruised the channel. The pairs of gadwall and teal dabbling in the small creeks took a bit more finding. A particularly vocal pair of ravens flew over the flash and headed for Plank Lane.

The pool opposite the Tom Edmondson Hide 

The walk down to the Tom Edmondson Hide was accompanied by chiffchaffs, willow warblers, great tits and wrens. Canada geese sat on nests in side pools. Two reed warblers had a singing duel in the reeds either side of the path by the hide and struggled to make themselves heard over the great tits, blackbirds and the usual Cetti's warbler.

The pool at the hide was relatively quiet: pairs of gadwall and mallards bobbed about in the rain, dabchicks hunted minnows and herons flew overhead and into the trees but seemed to be roosting rather than nesting.

Walking to Ramsdales 

The islands on the pool at Ramsdales were liberally peppered with nesting black-headed gulls and Canada geese. A couple of lapwings stood well apart from each other, each king of the castle on their own island. I couldn't find any other waders which is unusual here this time of year. A pair of shovelers dozed on one of the islands, shipping their moorings and heading for cover under the willow trees when the rain got heavy.

Three-cornered leek

Pengy's pool was very quiet, just half a dozen tufties, a pair of coots and a pair of gadwall. The feeders by the hide had been replenished and the reed buntings were busily taking advantage.

Reed bunting
Still not sure if this is a particularly well-marked female or a young male hanging onto his first-Winter plumage.

By the Bunting Hide 

The Bunting Hide was busy with great tits, robins and squirrels with occasional cameo appearances by stock doves and chaffinches. 

Secret squirrel 

I walked down to the Charlie Owen Hide, passing a pair of mistle thrushes on the grass and a lot of song thrushes and blackbirds in the trees. 

The island on the pool at the hide was just enough above water to fit two black-headed gulls and a coot so long as they didn't fall out with one another which, inevitably, they did. A few more coots and tufties drifted about, a couple of gadwalls lurked in the reeds and a heron stalked midwater.

Heron, Charlie Owen Hide

I'd had my walk, it was pouring down, I called it quits and walked over to Leigh College for the bus back into Leigh. I had fifty minutes to wait for the 126 back to the Trafford Centre, didn't fancy that so I went home the long way via Warrington. Rather a lot to my surprise my first swift of the year was dodging the rain and chimney pots over Hollins Green as the bus sat at a red light.


Local patch

Mistle thrush

It was a grey, cool yet surprisingly fresh morning so I thought I'd head out for a day's walking. I forgot that the bus times are ±10 minutes and got to the bus stop just in time for the 25 to close its doors and trundle off. Rather than mess about I went for a look around the local patch and then a bob over to the Trafford Centre for a bus beyond.

The soundscape was very full-on. The small birds in the shrubberies that weren't singing had beaks full of scoff and were intent on disappearing without trace into the undergrowth. Out on the field a few magpies bounced about, the usual pair of mistle thrushes fossicked about in the penalty area and the midfield was full of starlings.

Over on the old cornfield there were lots of woodpigeons and magpies in the trees and plenty of blackbirds, wrens and robins in and out of the brambles. We seem to have two chiffchaff territories and four blackcap territories this year, it seems to have been a bit early for whitethroats though I think we'll be lucky to get two territories this year. I almost missed the buzzard, it was sitting in the poplars and made a very quiet exit through the trees.

Herring gull threat display

A few lesser black-backs flew overhead. They're our usual Summer gulls and they nest over in Trafford Park amongst the flat-roofed warehouses and factories. Over the past couple of years there have been increasing numbers of herring gulls staying over and, perhaps, breeding. Three were on the factory roof by the old railway line, a pair being very put out by a singleton. I can't think they'll be trying to nest on this sloping roof, I'll have to keep an eye out for them.

  • Blackbird 15, 5 singing
  • Blackcap 4 singing
  • Blue tits 1 singing 
  • Buzzard 1
  • Carrion crow 2
  • Chaffinch 1 singing 
  • Chiffchaff 2 singing 
  • Dunnock 3, 1 singing 
  • Feral pigeon 2
  • Goldfinch 8, 2 singing 
  • Great tit 6, 5 singing 
  • Greenfinch 3, 1 singing 
  • Herring gull 3
  • House sparrow 2
  • Lesser black-back 4 overhead
  • Magpie 10
  • Mallard 2
  • Mistle thrush 2
  • Robin 8, 4 singing 
  • Song thrush 2 singing 
  • Starling 31
  • Woodpigeon 26, 3 singing 
  • Wren 7 singing

Saturday, 20 April 2024

Carrington Moss

Carrington Moss 

It was a bright sunny day after a clear, cool night and I thought it was high time I took a look at Carrington Moss, I've not been there yet this year. I got the 255 to Carrington and the walk down Isherwood Road didn't seem so very long as it used to, I'm not sure if that's because I'm doing so much walking or because the new housing estate makes the industrial stretch seem shorter. Robins, song thrushes, coal tits and woodpigeons singing in the trees were a good omen.

Carrington Moss 

The fields were still wet and unploughed, the field drains freshly re-excavated. Skylarks sang and carrion crows fossicked about in the wet stubble. Orange tips and brimstones fluttered about the path margins and my first damselfly of the year — a large red — zipped past and vanished almost as quickly as I saw it.

The black-headed gulls colony on the Shell Pool was making a racket. Looking through the fence I could see at least a hundred gulls. How many of them had nests on the go I couldn't say, except that it was more than the dozen sitting birds I could actually see through the trees. A few Canada geese and mallards were trying to sleep despite the noise. Somebody in the hide by the pool was watching a dabchick subdue and swallow a fair-sized minnow. 

Carrington Moss 

I turned onto the wooded lane between the fields. I noticed another birdwatcher spending a long time at the crossing of the lanes further down then walking slowly across towards the road. I'd be meeting him later. The path had more than its fair  share of deep puddles to avoid but rarely was it bad to walk on. Blackcaps and song thrushes sang in the trees, wrens and robins bounced about in the undergrowth. A raven flew overhead towards the electricity substation with a substantial something in its beak and flew back empty-handed. 

Grey partridges 

Scanning the field on the right I found a couple of carrion crows scratching about. Then something caught my eye, a greyish patch in the stubble was blowing oddly in the wind. It turned out to be the feathers on the back of the neck of one of a pair of grey partridges hunkered down in the stubble. I walked down a bit and scanned over to have another look at them and really struggled to see them even though I knew where they were. It was their orange faces gave them away in the end.

The birdwatcher was still at the crossroads and we let on to each other. He'd found a male ring ousel having a drink on the path to the road and got a couple of photos before it disappeared into the hawthorn hedge. He was sitting tight waiting to see if it would reappear either on the path or on the field by the hedge. I wished him luck and had a quick look at the hawthorn hedge hoping to find some yellowhammers and finding a couple of pairs of goldfinches. And the male ring ousel which poked its head out at the end of the hedge. I took a quick snap and retreated. Had there been nobody else about I would have wandered down and hoped for a better view but I'd seen the bird and didn't want to put the mockers on it for anyone else. I walked back to the crossroads and told the other chap what I'd seen, wished him luck again and headed down the path towards Sinderland Brook. 

Spot the ring ousel

Carrington Moss 

I hadn't gone far when a small flock of finches twittered through the birch trees. At first I thought it was a flock of siskins because a pair of they were the first ones I got a good look at but they were just passing by and heading in a different direction to the rest of the flock which turned out to be a dozen lesser redpolls. They made sure to keep the sun right behind them most of the time before flying off in a panic when a particularly noisy track back rattled past.

Any time you're looking for wheatears passing through on passage check out the corners of the fields where the ploughed up rubbish and excavations from land drains are dumped.

I kept scouring the fields as I walked along, hoping for something yellow flitting about. I'm seeing so few yellowhammers these days that I'm sure it's not my fieldcraft at fault, there's something wrong with the local population. A flash of orange and silver bouncing round a rough corner of field could only be a wheatear. A few more minutes' looking round found two or three more, all rather distant and all rather active.

Helmeted guineafowl, not being added to the year list

At the bottom of the path I turned left by the farm and headed for the old railway line that ran between Cadishead and Altrincham. This takes you alongside Sinderland Brook, past Altrincham Water Treatment Works into Stamford Brook Community Woodland and into Broad Heath. It's a dead straight walk largely overgrown by mature birch scrub and ash trees. 

Walking to Sinderland Brook 

The singing blackbirds, blackcaps, chiffchaffs and willow warblers kept a constant chorus. Most of the small birds flitting between hedgerow and undergrowth were robins or great tits with a few chaffinches and goldfinches to stop it getting predictable. A small, pale object flew across into some birch saplings and I stopped to try and find it. Two partridges that had been hiding in the brambles by the path decided this would be a good time to give me and the long-tailed tit a fright by heaving up and flying into the adjoining field. A male pheasant tried the same trick but much more clumsily a couple of hundred yards further down.

Sinderland Brook 

I checked out the horse paddocks by the water treatment works. A cattle egret had been seen there at the beginning of the week. It hadn't been seen since but I'd have been cross with myself had it turned out I'd walked past it without looking.

Wood anemones, Stamford Brook Community Woodland 

There were yet more chiffchaffs, robins, blackbirds and blackcaps singing in Stamford Brook Community Woodland and plenty of great tits, blue tits and dunnocks rummaging about. I took the path by the edge of the housing estate and was just in time to catch the 247 to Altrincham and thence home after a very good afternoon stroll. A pair of ravens mobbing a buzzard over Altrincham Retail Park was just the icing on the cake.

A bit of the old Cadishead to Altrincham line