Friday, 28 January 2022

Crisp winter days and some cracking good New Year's birds.

 A new year, fresh challenges and many promises to self - most of which I hope to achieve whilst realising that such is my want, many I wont! However and most importantly, I'm happy enough - still doing my usual thing (strolling around birding and taking pictures mainly!), and fit and healthy enough, although at 62, whilst I don't feel particularly old, becoming more and more aware that in the eyes of all the young bucks I am that grumpy old git walking around aimlessly with a pair of binoculars around his neck. It's a bit like the pandemic turning into an endemic - I must learn to live with it!

So last year I somehow manged to amass 207 bird species; very good for me, and nearly all in Yorkshire & North Lincs. Several 'twitches' in that lot of course and I fully intend to twitch again this year. So far I've managed to fail to see a Dusky Warbler at Wheldrake Ings, Bittern at North Cave Wetlands and Baikal Teal at Hornsea Mere, but success 2nd time around with the Great Grey Shrike at Wistow Clough and Richard's Pipit on Filey Brigg. I found a Water Pipit in the Lower Derwent Valley and whilst at Hornsea Mere got both Slavonian & Black Necked Grebe, a Long Tailed Duck and 4 Scaup.

Of that healthy bunch my stand out bird so far this January has been the Great Grey Shrike. I couldn't have picked a better day for my second attempt to track down this most impressive bird, cold yes, but one of those bright and sunny winter days without a breath of wind. I watched it for a good hour or so as it flew around hedges and perched up on favoured treetops. 

Great Grey Shrike, Wistow Clough
Great Grey Shrike, Wistow Clough, nr Cawood. 17/01/2022

Even with a telescope, the problem with spotting birds at Hornsea Mere is its sheer size. It's the largest freshwater lake in Yorkshire and invariably most of the good stuff will be on the opposite side! The 4 Scaup came closest but the Long Tailed Duck was just a dot but at least I managed a record shot. No chance with the Black Necked and Slavonian Grebe but at least I saw them both.

Long Tailed Duck, Hornsea Mere
Long Tailed Duck, Hornsea Mere. 10/01/2022


Scaup, Hornsea Mere
Scaup, Hornsea Mere. 10/01/2022

I knew about all of the above birds so it was just a case of going to find them but the thrill of finding your own good bird is something else, so I was a happy bunny indeed to find a Water Pipit on floodwater adjacent to the Pocklington Canal. 

Water Pipit, Pocklington Canal
Water Pipit, Pocklington Canal, 03/01/2022

Filey Brigg
Filey Brigg, 19/01/2022
Scarce as they are, especially around the York area, I suspect that more Water Pipits are missed than seen given the amount of favourable habitat throughout the Lower Derwent Valley. Richard's Pipits are even scarcer and although a photograph was never on the cards I was pleased to catch a brief glimpse of the elusive one that has been present at Filey for the past few weeks. No luck with Grey Phalarope though - been 2 reported from here recently, but 13 Purple Sandpiper was a first for the year and it was good to see a few other shorebirds in great light.




Oystercatcher, Filey Brigg
Oystercatcher, Filey Brigg, 19/01/2022

Shag, Filey Brigg
Shag, prattling about on the sea, Filey Brigg, 19/01/2022

Sanderling, Filey Brigg
Sanderling, Filey Brigg, 19/01/2022


Out and about elsewhere so far this January, I've got around some of my familiar haunts around the Lower Derwent ValleyNorth Cave Wetlands and York, plus a couple of visits to the hills of North Yorkshire. 

A walk from Cockmoor Hall to the Wykeham raptor viewpoint was undertaken in the hope of seeing a Goshawk. It was another crisp sunny day, perfect I thought for raptors, and having seen nothing of note on the walk I was still hopeful .. certainly looked promising.

Raptor viewpoint, Wykeham
Approaching the Raptor viewpoint, Wykeham, 14/01/2022

Cheeky Robin, Wykeham
Robin, Filey Wykeham, 14/01/2022

Not a sausage, not even a Buzzard! I gave it an hour, photographed a cheeky Robin that was after scraps from my lunch, then gave up and not for the first time I left Wykeham 'hawkless'. Lovely walk though and I was happily compensated by some great views of 3 Crossbills 'gipp gipping' away in the top of a fir tree and coming down to drink from a thawed out pond in a timber yard.



Crossbill, Wykeham
Crossbill, Wykeham, 14/01/2022

Crossbill, Wykeham
Crossbill, Wykeham, 14/01/2022

The sun was shining again when I decided to do a 5 mile circular walk in the Howardian Hills around Terrington and the Wiganthorpe estate. I've been transferring all of my old bird records from notebooks onto a database recently, and bearing in mind we're talking records from nearly half a century ago (now I really do feel old!), it's triggered many a memory. Back in the 80s Terrington Pond was a regular 'pop in' when out birding in these beautiful hills that I still explore today, but to my utter astonishment I realised that I hadn't gazed upon this particular spot for decades! So it was nostalgia that prompted this walk as it passed right by the place. Stupidly forgot to take a picture but it was looking good - mainly frozen over but 33 Teal hugging the thawed out margins were nice to see, as where 2 Marsh Tits by the side of Rose Cottage Farm. I broke out the packed lunch at the top a hill near Swinsy Carr with great views of Slingsby Heights and Thurtle Wood to the east, and disturbed 2 Buzzards that flapped around quite close giving me some great pics of our most common raptor.

Looking east from Wiganthorpe towards Slingsby Heights, 13/01/2022

Common Buzzard, Wiganthorpe, 13/01/2022

A further trip up to the Howardian Hills, this time around Scackleton, Grimston and Yearsley Moors later on this month was marred by a group of rowdy pheasant shooters around Oulston Reservoir, but Brambling, Goldcrest, Redpoll and Nuthatch were welcome additions to the year list. Lots of Fieldfares about (including a flock of about 320 in one field alone), 2 Marsh Tits and a single Willow Tit taking bird seed from one of the entrances to Yearsley Moor the other highlights.

Willow Tit, Yearsley Moor, 26/01/2022

Elsewhere, both North Cave Wetlands and Wheldrake Ings have been superb this month for massed flocks of thousands of ducks, geese and other over-wintering birds such as Golden Plover of which I approximated about 850 on one my visits to Wheldrake. 

Golden Plover, Wheldrake Ings, 07/01/2022

Wintering ducks, mainly Wigeon & Teal, Wheldrake Ings, 07/01/2022

Lapwings, North Cave Wetlands, 11/01/2022

As far as smaller birds are concerned I've had some impressive counts of Fieldfares in various fields round and about including appx 440 nr Terrington on the 13th and have been thoroughly entertained by a regular flock of anywhere between 50 & 100 Siskins at Askham Bog whilst out recruiting for YWT

Siskin, Askham Bog, 26/01/2022

Siskin, Askham Bog, 26/01/2022

Fieldfare, Wheldrake Ings, 07/01/2022

It hasn't been a particularly harsh winter so far this year but there have been some impressively frosty mornings around my way and as I've alluded to above, a fair few bright and sunny days to gladden the heart and I can sense the first stirrings of spring. Hazel Catkins have begun to appear and I had my first snatch of  Chaffinch song on the 23rd January at my campsite at Fangfoss. Yesterday at Askham Bog one of several Coal Tits was singing too and presented nicely for the camera. I don't think I've fully appreciated the subtleties of this tiny tit's colouring before - look at that gorgeous sandy orange on its flanks!

Coal Tit, Askham Bog, 26/01/2022

Today during a walk around Strensall Common that yielded no real surprises I saw this Great Spotted Woodpecker busily pecking away at a dead silver birch and it reminded of 2 I heard 'drumming' in the grounds of Sledmere House last week. Both in the same general vicinity and I was struck by the different timbre of each - that's how I knew there were two, probably my earliest record of this early sign of spring.

Great Spotted Woodpecker, 27/01/2022

I'm still finding that my smartphone is more than adequate for landscapes (as long as I don't zoom in too much) and though not ready to give up on my shorter lens SLR set up just yet , I remain very impressed with my S10e's picture quality - and so lightweight! Here's a few from my January ramblings - 

Sunset over North Cave Wetlands, 11/01/2022

Spittal Beck, Nr Fangfoss, 18/01/2022


Pocklington Canal at Storwood, 03/01/2022

Yearsley Moor, 26/01/2022

Oulston Reservoir, 26/01/2022

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!