Showing posts with label Redshank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Redshank. Show all posts

Friday 6 May 2022

Every breeding bird counts! Yorkshire birds on show as they gear up for the mating game

 Well the Spring is well underway at last and despite not being on top form I seem to have done a half decent job of getting around my local sites. As is sadly becoming the norm at this time of the year, there's lots of chat amongst birders I speak to about the lack of Swallows coming back, and this year was no different with Sand Martins too noticeably absent until well into April for me, and I'm sure I'll be having similar conversations soon about returning Swifts

It's difficult to be optimistic sometimes, but I try to celebrate what and when I can, 'every breeding bird counts' as they say, and today I was watching reassuringly large flocks of House Martins, Sand Martins and Swallows over Wheldrake Ings this evening. 

At the same location a week or so earlier this pair of Redshank were certainly getting in the mood and I was lucky enough to get some half decent shots of the the proceedings from start to finish.

Redshank, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022

Redshank, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022


Redshank, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022


Redshank, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022

Redshank, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022

Redshank, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022

On my local patch at Fangfoss Park I get Grey Wagtail most months of the year, but rarely 2 together, so a pair the other week in one of the drains around here was encouraging indeed. And in the same location a few days later a pair of Great Spotted Woodpeckers  were larkin about in the nearby trees.

Grey Wagtail (female), Fangfoss Park, 13/04/2022

Grey Wagtail (male), Fangfoss Park, 13/04/2022

Great Spotted Woodpecker, Fangfoss Park, 01/05/2022


A trip up to the North Yorks Moors to see my mate Rob produced my first returning Wheatears around the slopes of Saltersgate and although more likely to be passing through than breeding, some distant views of a couple of Ring Ouzels strutting about in a sheep field. Redstarts do breed locally around there though and it was good to see a couple of those too. And Stonechats are in that select band of small birds that seem to be doing well with several sites in the York area with good populations as well as the many pairs on the moors. 

Northern Wheatear, Saltergate, 22/04/2022


Stonechat, Fen Bog, 22/04/2022


Willow Warblers have arrived in force with Common Whitethroat not far behind and I've been seeing a couple of Little Egrets, another bird that's doing well of course, hanging around the Spittal Beck nr Fangfoss - only a matter of time before they breed somewhere locally.

Little Egret, Fangfoss, 18/04/2022



Willow Warbler, South Wood, Hovingham, 22/04/2022


Common Whitethroat, Fangfoss, 03/05/2022


Garganey, scarce breeders in the UK, thankfully keep returning to the Lower Derwent Valley and always a thrill to see even if it is usually from afar!

Drake Garganey, Lower Derwent Valley, 02/05/2022


Corn Buntings have been declining as a breeding bird in the UK for years and never a common sight anywhere in Yorkshire, but again the Lower Derwent Valley is a bit of a stronghold for them, and I also regularly spot them in the fields around Holme on Spalding Moor and Everingham. Just great to hear that jangly call, like a someone rattling a bunch of keys, on a still April evening.

Corn Bunting, Lower Derwent Valley, 15/04/2022

Even scarcer these days, sadly our dwindling populations of Willow Tit look to be in real trouble. Long gone are the days when it was not uncommon to see these birds on a regular basis in suitable habitat of wet woodland / willow carrs. Askham Bog used to be an absolute banker for seeing them during the annual bird race in the York area but now you're lucky to see just the one. Not seen 2 together there for over a year and I should know, I'm there nearly every weekend recruiting for YWT. I see and hear one every now and again but not since this one in early March. I really fear for their status as a local breeder.

Willow Tit, Askham Bog, 06/03/2022


There's many that'll tell you that the diminishing number of small birds is because there's so many birds of prey about these days, in fact I've met several game keepers who swear by their breeches that this is the truth - complete bollocks of course, there's actually no credible evidence to support that barnstorming theory. Habitat loss on the other hand, both here and where our summer birds winter, is clear for all to see, just look around! 

Top of the food chain, magnificent flying machines and awesome hunters, birds of prey (or 'raptors') are thankfully doing very well in Yorkshire. I'm old enough to remember a time when any sighting of a Common Buzzard outside of the Lake District or Scotland was almost unheard of - now I probably have at least 2 pairs within a square  mile of where I live. Red Kites continue to prosper as do Peregrine Falcons, Hobbies, Kestrels seem to be holding their own up here, and Goshawks are expanding too. Most amazing to me though is the onward progress of the Marsh Harrier. Amazing because in 1971 there was just one confirmed breeding pair in the whole of the UK (at Minsmere) and none in Yorkshire until the mid 90s at Blacktoft Sands. Now there's upwards of 500 pairs in the UK with 10ish pairs at Blacktoft, they bred at North Cave Wetlands last year and probably at Wheldrake Ings and several other Yorkshire sites and have even spread as far north as Scotland. 

In the birding world these days you have to celebrate the success stories because it's all too easy to slip into total pessimism. It's not all bad; and to my mind, if the top of the food chain (ie raptors) are doing ok then it can't be all doom and gloom for our birds. So to round off this post here's a couple each of recent Red Kite & Marsh Harrier pics along with a few more local breeding birds.

Marsh Harrier, Blacktoft Sands, 04/05/2022

Marsh Harrier, Blacktoft Sands, 04/05/2022

Red Kite with a fish, Wheldrake Ings, 06/04/2022

Red Kite with a fish, Wheldrake Ings, 06/04/2022

Treecreeper, Askham Bog, 03/04/2022


Lapwing, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022

Barn Swallow, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022

Sedge Warbler, Wheldrake Ings, 21/04/2022

Skylark, Fangfoss Park, 13/04/2022


Monday 7 March 2022

Baikal Teal and my first Chiffchaff of the year at Pulfin Bog



Baikal Teal (centre), Swine Moor, 01/03/2022
I finally caught up with the Baikal Teal that's been hanging around with Common Teal and Wigeon on flooded areas at Swine Moor, near Beverley. First spotted at Hornsea Mere around New Year it had departed on the day I went, but was picked up again at Tophill Low a few days later until taking up residence at Swine Moor a few of weeks ago.







Good job there were several other birders there otherwise I'd have struggled to spot it, always distant and frustratingly asleep the whole time I was there. So nothing more than a record pic for me but here's the same bird taken by Andy Hood.

Baikal Teal, Swine Moor, 21/02/2022. Andy Hood


Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022

I gave it a good hour but it remained in slumberland so I decided to take a walk up to Pulfin Bog and adjacent High Eske borrow pit. Situated a couple of miles further north up the River Hull from Swine Moor, its a place I've visited several times before and always been mildly fascinated by the place with its tidally influenced 'carr land', reedbeds, ditches and drains. Great for Little Egrets!




Little Egret, River Hull, 01/03/2022


First of the month and the meteorological start of spring, it was indeed a spring like day and I wasn't too unsurprised to see a Chiffchaff along with a group  Long-tailed Tits. Never got close to a shot but the tits were quite obliging.

Long-tailed Tit, Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022

And as I was looking up at trying to locate the Chiffchaff I saw a Bumblebee collecting pollen from emerging Willow blossom. 

Early Bumblebee, Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022

Redshank, Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022
I'm no expert but from what I know there's a small but noticeable tidal influence on the River Hull here and, via channel from the river, both the bog and the adjacent borrow bits are moderately flooded once a day. No wonder its a haven for wetland birds then. I always see a good variety of wildfowl and wading birds there and on afternoon I was there I had good numbers of Goldeneye (12), Wigeon (30) and Teal (50) along with an outstanding count of 96 Redshank, all in one flock and looking stunning in the spring sunshine.


Redshank, Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022

Redshank, Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022

It's a bit out of the way (a mile or so walk up the floodbank alongside the River Hull) but an interesting place at any time of the year. A couple of mates of mine found there way on kayaks🛶🛶 but for the less intrepid here's all you need to know -  Pulfin Bog  - Access and visiting information

River Hull at Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022

Eske Borrow Pits, Pulfin Bog, 01/03/2022