Showing posts with label Butterflies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butterflies. Show all posts

Tuesday 7 August 2018

Overnighter at Spurn - new visitor centre, thousands of waders, terns and the summer heat!

New visitor centre, Spurn Point. (pic credit - Sally Henderson)
A trip out and overnight stay at Spurn Point last week was bang on for early returning waders and a good opportunity to check out the new visitor centre and other recent changes at this fantastic YWT nature reserve.

Spurn was as good as ever and we bagged a great haul of birds but have to say I was a bit miffed to have my stay at the campsite questioned just because I was displaying YWT car stickers! The much publicized dispute between local birders and the YWT over the citing of the new visitor centre continues to rumble on then! Both sides have a point and its easy enough to check out the issues on social media so not something I want to dwell on here, escept to say that as visiting birders we dont need 'awkward' situations on campsites. The sooner the whole thing is resolved the better!

Rant over and these are my personal views as a lifelong visiting birder to Spurn. Lets get back to celebrating the wildlife this place has to offer yeah?

This time of year and right through the autumn this has to be one of the best places in the UK to observe wading birds as they return from up north after breeding. Common and rare they all put in an appearance at Spurn - 3,000 Knot and twice as many Dunlin were the big numbers when we were there with big flocks of Golden, Ringed & Grey Plover, Sanderling, Turnstone, Curlew, Redshank, smaller numbers of Black & Bar Tailed Godwits, Avocet, Greenshank, Ruff & Whimbrel. Green, Common and Curlew Sandpiper around too plus the odd Wood Sandpiper - not many UK waders I haven't mentioned there!

Most photogenic were the mass flocks of Knot and Dunlin feeding at high tide around Kilnsea Wetlands and Beacon Ponds and when a passing Peregrine put them all up it made for a wonderful spectacle.
Dunlin flock, Beacon Ponds, Spurn, 03/08/18

Knot & Dunlin, Beacon Ponds, Spurn, 03/08/18

Knot flock, Beacon Ponds, Spurn, 03/08/18

Knot, Beacon Ponds, Spurn, 03/08/18

Best thing about waders at this time of the year is that they're nearly all still in breeding plumage and Knot in particular look great when the light catches their orange bellies, look at these beauties!
Knot, Beacon Ponds, Spurn, 03/08/18

 Just as impressive a lone Black Tailed Godwit in the flock that I managed to isolate ...
Black Tailed Godwit, Beacon Ponds, Spurn, 03/08/18
 Spending an hour or so with the Spurn Observatory 'counters' at the seawatch hide was a good insight into the dedication of these guys as they called out a steady southerly passage of waders, terns, Swifts and assorted hirundines ... "15 Swichers south" (Sandwich Terns), "6 Oycs south" (Oystercatchers) - love some these local colloquialisms! Reassuring too to hear their occassional misidentifications between passing Sanderling and Dunlin because we'd been doing that all day!

To be fair the light was 'glary' and when there's flock after flock, often mixed, it can be tricky. These are Sanderling with at least one in almost full summer plumage.
Sanderling south, Spurn, 02/08/18


"Swicher south" (Juv Sandwich Tern), Spurn, 03/08/18

Avocet (juv), Kilnsea Wetlands, 03/08/18
Poor views of both Wood Sandpiper and Curlew Sandpiper at Kilnsea Wetlands prevented any decent photo opps but to be honest it was the extreme heat in this crazy summer we're having that really prevented me from trying harder! This juvenile Avocet was easy enough though...right in front of the hide at Kilnsea, likewise a flock of returning Whimbrel from the camp site  ... what a luxury to be sat down and reclining, cold beer in one hand, camera in the other whilst scanning the skies for for passage birds!

Whimbrel south, Spurn, 02/08/18

Decent numbers of passing Common Swifts, Swallows and Sand Martins were a nice compliment to the more obvious southerly drift of waders and there was also a small influx of skulking Pied Flycatchers on the 2nd day we were there. Yellow Wagtails were present in good numbers, especially around our campsite, mainly juvs and probable local breeding birds but I also saw several south over the seashore.


Yellow Wagtail (juv) & Goldfinch (juv), Spurn, 02/08/18


Yellow Wagtail (juv), Bluebell campsite, Spurn, 02/08/18
Lesser Whitethroat, Beacon Lane, Spurn, 03/08/18



With temperatures approaching 30c mid morning the hedgerows and reedbeds were unsurprisingly quiet but warblers were there alright with both Common and Lesser Whitethroat, Willow Warblers, Sedge and Reed Warblers all quietly going about their business.

Butterflies aplenty, almost clouds of them, was a very welcome sight with many Whites, Brimstones, Meadow Browns, Ringlets, Commas, Blues, and Small Heaths I wouldn't have been unsurprised at a Clouded Yellow but several Painted Ladies were a good second best!

Painted Lady, Spurn, 03/08/18
Emporer Dragonfly, Spurn Obs centre pond, 03/08/18
Lots of dragonflies floating around the patch too including this superb female Emporer ovipositing in the pond at the new Spurn Obs centre where I have to say the birding platform there is top class and provides superbs views across the reserve.


Little Tern, Spurn, 03/08/18

Last but not least here's a breeding success of sorts. The small colony of Little Terns has decreased year on year here, mainly due to disturbance and irresponsible dog walkers but at least one pair raised a youngster this year. I saw 20+ here a decade ago, 5 this year as I strolled along the beach adjacent to Beacon Ponds.

 
Little Tern, adult and Juv, Spurn, 03/08/18
All in all a very productive and enjoyable overnighter and with the autumn approaching I'm sure it'll be the first of several visits.

Monday 18 September 2017

A reminder of Summer, Duke of Burgundy butterflies, uncommon wild flowers, wild camping and a Greenish Warbler 'lifer'

Can't remember such a personally 'low key' summer as this for many a year and although I've never felt much 'get up and go' when it comes around to July & August (too much cricket on the radio for one thing!), this year my get up and go just got up and went! Not helped at all by the fact that my passport to midweek breaks away in the UK - the camper I bought last year, turned into a right money pit and certified vehicle from hell!👹...Completely lost faith in the old thing in the end and sold her for a song. Its a Hymer for me next methinks, a bit pricey but completely reliable I'm told and that's what we want.

Giant Bellflower, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17


Anyway, net result is that I haven't been out of Yorkshire since Mull in the spring so not a great deal to crow about (hence the lack of blog posts recently), so just local bits and bobs. A lot of wild flowers and butterfly pics that I've only just got around to sorting (how slack am I?!😞)....Ah but we keep on snapping away, so as the first autumn storms begin to blow in, here's a little reminder of sunnier, warmer days....










Clustered Bellflower, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17













 2 Bellflower species at one site, both new to me and had to get the id book out for both and then on the way out of the reserve and kind of growing by the roadside I see this strange plant which at the time I took for some kind of hybrid Sunflower / garden escape. Turns out to be Elecampane and it is indeed a member of the Sunflower family, and a well known remedial herb. Quite unusual for the Yorkshire Wolds I think.

Elecampane, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17

Selfheal, Bolton Percy Station, 30/06/17


Another medicinal plant and another reserve I hadn't visited, the rather more common Selfheal at Bolton Percy Station, along with Musk Mallow and then a few other pretty blooms that caught my eye in the summer that's now well on the way out ...



Musk Mallow, Bolton Percy Station, 30/06/17








Yellow Loosestrife, Askham Bog, 25/06/17

Bethany, Newton Dale, NY Moors, 18/07/17



Pyramidal Orchid, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17


Marjoram, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17
Common Cranesbill, Fangfoss Park, 07/07/17


Bloody Cranesbill, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17
Marbled White, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17
Gorgeous colour on that Bloody Cranesbill at Rifle Butts Quarry, a great little YWT reserve that I hadn't been to before. At the same reserve and at nearby Kiplingcoates Chalk Quarry I was treated to some delightful views of Marbled White butterflies, most I've ever seen in one day with 15- 20 all told. Some pics here along with a few other choice butterflies..
Kiplingcoates chalk quarry, 05/07/17


Marbled White, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17

Marbled White, Kiplingcoates, 05/07/17

Ringlet on Field Scabious, Askham Bog, 25/06/17

Large Skipper on Bloody Cranesbill, Rifle Butts Quarry, 05/07/17

Small Skipper, 03/07/17, Fangfoss Park
Red Admiral, Askham Bog, 20/08/17

Gatekeeper, Askham Bog, 16/07/17

Brimstone on Purple Loosestrife, Askham Bog, 13/08/17

Brimstone, Askham Bog, 13/08/17
Campsite, Sutton Bank, 01/06/17
 Back in June I went overnight camping with a couple of mates nr Sutton Bank. This has become an annual event for me - a spot of wild camping, wildlife watching and midnight music, this year we took in one of the few places in the north of England where you can still see Duke of Burgandy butterflies. All pics courtesy of Jez Ballantyne....


Wood collecting!

Duke of Burgandy, Hawnby, 01/06/17

Duke of Burgandy, Hawnby, 01/06/17
A 'lifer' butterfly for me and I want to see some more so lets hope this little North Yorks stronghold continues to thrive.... oh and the tea room at nearby Hawnby is a little slice of heaven to die for on a sunny afternoon in the NY Moors!

Corn Bunting, Fangfoss Pk, 26/06/17
Very local to me here at Fangfoss I was very pleased to add bird species number 92 to my patch list, a single Corn Bunting perched on telegraph wires just outside the campsite.

Granted they're not the world's most attractive bird but they get scarcer every year and along with Turtle Doves and Yellow Wagtails they seem to be the least able to cope with modern day intensive farming methods.

Not so my local Common Buzzard population, loads of them around here and its rare for me to lift the lens to them anymore but this one was carrying a big Brown Rat back to the nest!




Common Buzzard with Brown Rat, Fangfoss Pk, 21/06/17
Not a heap load of other decent bird records / pics over the summer but with our resident and summer visitors all preoccupied with breeding, feeding and raising young there's always something going on!

Redstart (male) feeding young, Newtondale, 13/06/17
I volunteer to do a Turtle Dove survey every year in the NY Moors and although we drew a complete 'nil point' in our section we did record a successful breeding pair of Redstarts. Rubbish pic, shady light and felt shady intruding in there, but here's the male who was continuously bringing grubs back to a couple of Redstart fledglings.
















Spotted Flycatcher, Strensall  Common, 23/08/7
5 Spotted Flycatchers all together in one little feeding group on Strensall Common was a non too shabby record, wasn't sure if these were early passage or local 'young 'uns' spreading their wings ...nice to see either way.

Spotted Flycatcher, Strensall  Common, 23/08/17
Juv Common Whitethroat, Newtondale, 18/07/17
And here's a few more young birds from earlier in the year that happened to find themselves unwittingly photographed!


Juv Grey Wag being fed by parent, Thornton le Dale, 12/06/17
Same juv G.Wag having a fight with a feather ..aw bless!
Juv Reed Bunting, Thornton Ings, 25/06/17























Juv male Common Kestrel, Fangfoss Park, 18/08/17


This young male Common Kestrel terrorized the living daylights out of the fledgling Barn Swallows that were hopping about in the trees next to my caravan, as well as every other living thing in the field opposite .. here he is on a hay bail after catching a mole.







Juv male Common Kestrel, Fangfoss Park, 18/08/17










Common Swift heading south, Fangfoss Park, 23/08/17

No idea to be honest if this is a youngster or not but a later than normal departure of Common Swifts seems to have been a theme within local birding circles this year. This one was late Aug but I had odd ones up until Sept 7th and other birders around here are still seeing them. Climate change .. blah blah blah!


















Greenish Warbler, Bempton, 01/09/17


All set now for Autumn migration on the east coast; it's already underway after a slow start with a good smattering of good birds turning up on the Yorkshire coast - Red Necked Phalarope, Pectoral Sandpiper, Long Billed Dowitcher, Icterine Warbler, White Winged Black Tern, Wryneck & Rose Coloured Starling at Spurn and Greenish Warbler, Great Shearwater, Barred Warbler and an early Lapland Bunting on the headlands around Flamborough and RSPB Bempton. I made an effort for the Greenish Warbler as I'd never seen one and got a 'so so' pic