Showing posts with label Landscapes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Landscapes. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 December 2021

A couple of new Yorkshire destinations visited, Caukleys Bank & Spaldington Common.

Looking NW from the back of Garrowby Hill, 08/11/2021

 After nearly 10 years since I lost a smartphone whilst doing some voluntary work at Wheldrake Ings I've finally been persuaded to buy another😁📱 - a Samsung S10e. It's not about to change my life and I'm not gonna wax lyrical about it, but as these things go it's great. I'm re-discovering the joy of apps at the age of 62 and have found that I haven't taken a landscape picture with my SLR camera for a whole month such is the picture quality on this thing!


Looking NW from the back of Garrowby Hill, 08/11/2021

Brambling, Garrowby Hill, 08/11/2021

Those two were the first pics I took with it whilst I was walking down the back of Garrowby Hill - the village you can see in the mid distance is Kirby Underdale. It was a little patch of the Wolds I hadn't been to before - not many birds but a lovely walk. I flushed a Woodcock from the public footpath at the top of the hill, counted 9 Buzzards in the sky and had 2 Bramblings 'toing and froing' from some dead sunflower heads. 

Brambling, Garrowby Hill, 08/11/2021

A few days before, at the beginning of the November, I was out at the coast hoping for some late passage migrants and struck gold with a Short Eared Owl, 3 Snow Buntings and a Woodcock at Barmston, and a further 2 Woodcock (1 in off the sea at South Landing, and another flying over a road in Bridlington), and then the next day I saw the Taiga Flycatcher & Red-flanked Bluetail at South Landing ( see post here)

Pink Footed Geese, Barmston, 04/11/2021
The Short Eared Owl was from the sandy cliff tops just north of the caravan park - it flew along the beach for a bit and then dived back into the cliff spooking 3 Snow Buntings in the process - that's one way of getting another bird for the year list! A Woodcock flushed from the same cliff tops and a big skein of Pink Footed Geese flying in off the sea added to the sense of incoming birds.







If I hadn't been so stressed after a confrontation with a couple of hare coursers that had me both fuming and fearful, I would have tried for some pics of the Owl & Snow Buntings but I was in a rush, I'd taken some pictures of the enraged dumbwits and they knew where my car was! 

I made it safely out of Barmston that day but 2 transit vans heading into the village as I was exiting had me thinking I'd got away with it!

Thankfully the rest of my trips out in November were drama free. I visited a couple more places I hadn't been to before. Mid month I did a circuit around the ancient field systems around Spaldington Common nr Howden and was pleasantly surprised with the amount of birds that were around. A couple of small flocks of Siskin, Nuthatch, a Sparrowhawk chasing a Redwing and about a  hundred Lesser Black Backed Gulls in amongst many more Black Headed Gulls being the highlights.

Featherbed Lane, Spaldington Common, 19/11/2021

Siskin, Spaldington Common, 19/11/2021

Roe Deer, Spaldington Common, 19/11/2021

Nunnington Church, 22/11/2021

Always great to visit new places on your doorstep and a few days later I went up to Nunnington and Caukleys Bank, just north of the Howardian Hills in Ryedale and then to nearby Slingsby Carr. Nothing to write home about in terms of birds but got some more nice landscapes.


Looking south towards Slingsby Heights from Caukleys Bank, 22/11/2021

Caukleys Bank, 22/11/2021

Floodbank at Slingsby Carr, 22/11/2021

Hay bails, Terrington Moor, 25/11/2021

A walk around Terrington Moor was similarly quiet on the bird front but again, lovely walking weather and some nice vistas.


Looking south from Terrington Moor, 25/11/2021

Terrington Moor, 25/11/2021

Towards the end of the month I ventured down to the Humber and a walk around the fields and estuary side between Broomfleet and Faxfleet. I like it down here, apart from the odd dog walker it's always so undisturbed and, as is the case with most estuaries the world over, there's always something going on!

Weighton Lock, 26/11/2022


I noted some of the usual suspects as far as Humber birds are concerned - Curlew, Wigeon, Teal, Shelduck, Dunlin, Marsh Harrier and a couple of Bearded Tits but the most entertaining were a highly mobile flock of about 260 Golden Plover in the adjacent fields. 
Golden Plover, Faxfleet, 26/11/2022


Reeds in the sunlight, Broomfleet, 26/11/2022

A few days later whilst out recruiting for YWT at Askham Bog I had a surprise visitor on the boardwalk in the shape of a Bank Vole that was scurrying about near my table!

Bank Vole, Askham Bog, 28/11/2022

Never fails to amaze me what you can see when you're more or less rooted to one spot all day!




Sunday, 26 April 2020

Nature walks during Lock Down part 2

And so it goes on and still we wait and wonder when life can return to some kind of normality. We all hope and pray that our loved ones remain well and most of all, we want a vaccine, but that's a way off and so for now, here in the UK, its pretty much as you were. I continue to exercise my right to daily walks, I've bought a bike, bit slack around the 1 hour advice but I keep my distance and keep myself to myself, I'm a gang of one and apart from missing seeing my kids, friends and missing work, quite content.

April started on a real high note for me. Once a week I pop round to drop off provisions for my mum and more often than not call in to nearby Strensall Common for a walk and a look see. On one such occasion, quite by chance I lifted the bins to what I first thought was a crow flapping across the common near to the firing ranges - it was only a ringtail Hen Harrier!



I literally dropped my binocs in favour of the camera and although it was always flying away managed a couple of creditable pics given that my hands were probably shaking! My second HH record for Strensall and one of only a handful of Yorkshire sightings. I followed it of course but the bird was well gone but what a great bird to have and so lucky to have been there at that exact moment.

Got this Fox in my sights as I was trailing around looking for the HH again, no doubt enjoying the relative lack of people on the common.


Stonechat, Strensall Common, 16/04/20
Also on Strensall Common recently I've flushed Woodlark from a couple of locations where I've not seen them before (again maybe due to lack of disturbance), at least 2 pairs of Curlew and more Stonechats than ever before. No Wheatears though which has been disappointing since they've been seen at several locations around York.








Leys Wood & Grimston Brow, 06/04/20
Its been a pleasurable challenge picking out nearby destinations on the map that I've either been to before and want to revisit or have never been to. Birdsall Brow, Grimston Brow and Duggleby Wold in the Yorkshire Wolds all come under the latter and all great places to escape from the madding crowd!







Cinqefoil Hill, Duggleby Wold, 13/04/20

Looking north towards Malton from the top of Birdsall Brow, 20/04/20

Looking north west towards Norton & Malton from Duggleby Wold high top, 13/04/20

Parched earth nr Pocklington Canal, 23/04/20
 This time of year I'd normally be abroad in Spain and I'm missing it but what with the weather being so, well ... continental, sometimes its possible to imagine that your in a different country ...











Stensall Common, 21/04/20
Foggathorpe, 18/04/20
Dream on boyo, foreign travel the way I like to do it is out for the foreseeable!

Pocklington Wood, 19/04/20
Good job I have so many easily accessible wild places on my doorstep. Pocklington Woods for example, a mere 10 minute cycle ride away, isn't 'foreign looking' at all, its quintessential old english woodland with as good a Bluebell display as anywhere around here.








Bluebells, Pocklington Wood, 19/04/20

Wild Garlic, Pocklington Wood, 19/04/20

Plenty more of the usual spring wild flowers blooming on the road side verges of course and more butterflies than usual maybe?

Lesser Celandines, Strensall, 16/04/20

Orange Tip, Strensall, 16/04/20

Wood Anemones, Howsham, 03/04/20

Peacock, Mowthorpe, 07/04/20

Ladies Mantle (Cuckoo flower), 10/04/20
Comma, Hovingham, 08/04/20
Forget me nots, Birdsall, 10/04/20



Stitchwort, Howsham, 22/04/20
The most spectacular wild flowers I've seen recently are these Snakes Head Fritillaries, 4 or 5 of them growing in a paddock adjacent to the Pocklington Canal near Bielby. Probably not that wild though - rare in the UK and a favoured garden plant, gorgeous all the same!

Snakes Head Fritillary, Pocklington Canal, 17/04/20

Speaking of gardens, you wouldn't want this many Mares Tails in your borders, never seen so many in my life!

Mares Tails, Foggathorpe, 18/04/20
If you've scrolled down this far well done you, not sure I would have done - one fine day I'll get the hang of short snappy up to date posts, but plainly this is not that day as I've hardly mentioned birds and its Spring goddammit!

To be fair, although I've seen plenty, I haven't got that lucky with the camera apart from that magnificent Hen Harrier. Had my first Sand Martins, Swallows and House Martins during the first week of April - all memorable in their own way but no pics. First Willow Warbler on the 10th, first Cuckoo on the 21st no pic, and so on; not that I'm complaining, these are not times to be complaining about anything in my view, no its just the way it goes sometimes. Had more luck with late winter birds - Fieldfares were passing through and doing theire usual thing of massing in tree tops before flying north
Fieldfares, Jefrey Bog, 05/04/20

Fieldfares passing through and heading north, Duggleby Wold, 13/04/20
I had a very late one (Fieldfare) fly over me 'chagh chaghing' away in a brilliant blue sky near Howsham on the 22nd. The pic isn't worth posting but at more or less the same time one of  Mr Fieldfare's close relatives, common as he is seemed to be saying 'this is how to sing my friend' ...just had to be snapped!
Blackbird singing from on high, Howsham, 22/04/20
Reed Bunting, Foggathorpe, 18/04/20
On my walk around Foggathorpe and whilst next to one of the old fishing ponds there I was curious as to what was causing bits of Bullrush fluff to be floating about on such a still day. Turned out to be a  Reed Bunting pecking away at the mast heads and gathering the stuff - for nest building or food? I suspect the former.
Reed Bunting, Foggathorpe, 18/04/20

Whimbrel calling, Pocklington Canal, 23/04/20
 For keen birders, the annual observation of Whimbrel (for the not so keen think small Curlew) as they pass through the Lower Derwent Valley on their way north to breed will no doubt be less observed, but here is at least one for the record. Over the Pocklington Canal near Storwood lock..


Whimbrel,  Pocklington Canal, 23/04/20

Boxing Hares, Thornton Ings, 10/04/20
 Still awaiting my first Swift of the year and fully expect it to be from my garden or around the church steeple here in Pock, till then, stay safe folks and I leave you with some boxing Hares and a few other random pics ...





















Boxing Hares, Thornton Ings, 10/04/20

Curlew, Melbourne, 01/04/20

Grey Wagtail, Mowthorpe, 07/04/20

Sheriff Hutton castle from Mowthorpe, 07/04/20

Melbourne arm, Pocklington Canal, 10/04/20

Norton from Birdsall Brow, 20/04/20

Exmoor Ponies on Skipwith Common, 24/04/20

Strensall Common, 21/04/20