Tuesday, 28 April 2015

April offers some great opportunities

The month has been an exciting one as the great migration of birds began, after some good sightings the weather took a turn for the worse and things stalled for a while. We have had some lovely sunny walks near home and a visit to Dumfriesshire , added to our usual trips to reserves and an ever growing list of recommended wildlife sights it has been hectic at times!

It has also seen me make my debut as a fully fledged RSPB volunteer for the pergrine watch at Malham Cove, a place I would have in any list of favourite places to visit, from my youth the fascinating limestone landscape and the intricacy of the drystone walls have been a delight to the eye.

Wandering by the canal one day this fine little wren was gathering nest material...

This walk also allows me to check my local little owl site, and they rarely fail to appear...

We had a day at Malham to allow the freedom to wander around a little and hopefully get some photographs of the peregrine falcons.

In the beck by the cove grey wagtails were fluttering about...

I managed a flight shot of a peregrine...followed by another on a well used perching branch...


The warm weather continued and we enjoyed a lovely sunny walk on Barden Moor, probably where I learnt how to watch wildlife from close quarters as a young child. Red grouse can be notoriously difficult to get close to, more often disturbed and flying away with their cackling call, with a little know how and patience you can get amazingly close.

It is the season of procreation for the common toad, not all wildlife chooses to mate in the middle of a path!

We had an amazing sight of buzzard, kestrel and hen harrier while enjoying our lunch, the camera was unfortunately not to hand!

Another little owl spotted on the way home...

I had a couple of hours at Rodley Nature Reserve while my car was being serviced...

A great crested grebe came in close...

Later that day I went to Barden Moor in the evening to see if the short eared owls were about, poor light but they appeared. Good job as friends Graham and Sandra Anderson were meeting me there en route back to Wales from a holiday in Scotland! Not great light but super birds to watch...


Time to head north of the border ourselves as we visited RSPB Mersehead again, what a treat we had.

Blue tit...


Yellowhammer..

Grey heron..

Wren...

Willow warbler...

We were booked in at Caerlaverock WWT for an evening badger watch, the sun set as we arrived...

A badger duly appeared a couple of hours later, photographs at 1/8th of a second are never going to be great!

We had a bed and breakfast for the night and then enjoyed a few hours on the reserve...

The whooper swans would be leaving soon..

A chance conversation the day before disclosed a good site for red squirrels without too much diversion from our homeward route.

After a little waiting time the subjects appeared as promised...delightful.




Back home and I am at Malham again, one of the peregrines has brought a meal back and rather than share it with its partner it took it to a small ledge and fed itself.

A wander through a local woodland and I spot a nuthatch posing nicely...

Another stint with the short eared owls, my best shot yet...

Watching the red grouse closely paid dividends...

A happy accident a couple of days later, as I was focusing on a robin it took off giving me this splendid shot...

I managed to get a good peregrine feather spread shot on another Malham trip as visitors...

Wandering in Wharfedale to see how the dippers are doing...

Female pied flycatcher newly arrived back from Africa...

Nuthatch in the dark woods...

Male pied flycatcher

Sand martin in flight

It has been a tremendous month overall, the weather has been pretty kind and the paths are firm and dry which is great for all of us who enjoy life in the countryside.

Many thanks to all who read the blog, don't forget if you do comment they come to me first for moderation.

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

The highlights of March 2015

Apologies for the lack of updates recently, times have been busy which is good because boredom is never constructive. The weather has not been too kind despite some encouraging signs in the days before Spring finally arrived, the outings we have managed have brought some intense flurries of excitement further re-inforcing my view that research eventually pays off.

Good friends John and Karen joined us for a long weekend in Dumfriesshire, a well planned trip that allowed us two full days and two half days of wildlife watching around the Kirkcudbright and Dumfries areas. Our cottage was very near to Kirkcudbright, about two and a half to three hours drive from our respective homes.

We arranged to meet at Mersehead RSPB reserve for the afternoon prior to heading to the cottage, it is a well managed and compact reserve with plenty to see.

The barnacle geese that winter in the Solway Firth will be leaving soon, these were just on a fly around...

Roe deer were grazing around the reserve edges...

A distant merlin was one benefit of multiple pairs of eyes...

Plenty of yellowhammer around too...

Not great light for photography but a lovely few hours..

The following day we visited Ken-Dee Marshes reserve, quite a lengthy walk to reach the two hides but a walk we gladly undertook twice as we returned to the cars for lunch!!

A buzzard was spotted taking a lazy break...

After a brief sighting of a red squirrel a lengthy perusal of the shrubbery revealed another animal of similar colouring but much larger...a fox..


From the hides we saw nuthatch

Bullfinch..

Blue tit

And the relatively scarce willow tit

Back in the cottage garden, a surprise as a red legged partridge was feeding...

A return to Mersehead for a full day brought some splendid rewards, again not great light for photographs unfortunately...

The barnacle geese seemed to getting ready for migration as they were very unsettled and took off often only to circle and land again,

We saw chaffinch and yellowhammer discussing dining priorities :-)

and the now not too common tree sparrow...



Male and female stonechats in the distance...

The pathway back to the cars was well worth a slow walk and careful inspection as the UK's smallest bird the goldcrest could be watched..

On the way eastwards before the southerly leg we stopped at Caerlaverock Wildlife and Wetlands centre for a few hours.

Similar to the barnacle geese, the whooper swans here will soon be away to Iceland or Greenland.


Another notable sighting here was the not rare but elusive treecreeper caught in the open...


A pair of little egrets were caught in deep discussion...

A fabulous short break during which we counted over eighty different species seen including many ducks which were just not as good in the photographs as I like to show.

Back home and I love this time of year if only because wrens suddenly become more visible!

Wandering by the river Wharfe one morning and I get a glimpse of a green woodpecker

Grey wagtails delight with their fluttering flight and delicate colours..
I love to walk this stretch of river just for the dippers

This one is gathering nest material and I now have three nest sites in the locality to sit near and observe if I am in the area.

My local raptor watch has been a great place to gain knowledge of birds of prey but often just through the telescope or binoculars, occasionally birds come close and I was grateful to have the camera to hand as a buzzard came in fairly close.

Curlews called and wheeled all around us..

...and a sparrowhawk came within a reasonable distance...

We ventured out on the moor one sunny afternoon and had red grouse all around us, always a delight.

I was fortunate to watch a kestrel approaching, it gave me just enough time to ready the camera for a shot of this beautiful male..
Another trip to Rodley Nature Reserve was fruitful with plenty of sightings...

The diminutive wings demonstrate quite well why the little grebe does not fly huge distances!

A goldeneye duck...

Our first chiffchaff of the year...



and of course the beautiful kingfishers, another superb day there.

Another nearby lake was visited later in the day and we had a lovely view of a great crested grebe...

One of the species I have yearned to see recently is the short eared owl, these beauties have inhabited my local moors in the past but exhaustive searches and watches have found no sign in the last couple of years.

A brief sighting by a trusted mate was enough to persuade me to spend a few hours looking for a precise location. Here we get back to my luck/instinct/knowledge question and my answer would be a combination of all three, probably!

Anyway...after not too long a wait I had my reward...

First one owl then a pair displaying and flying high then plummeting together, absolute wildlife magic...



These are days to treasure and hold in the memory...

A further visit and careful vigilance brought a shot of one resting, a sign of their vigilance is the eyes locked on to me as soon as peered over a handy wall.

A very exciting and fulfilling few weeks, the wonders of Spring!

Many thanks to all who read, don't forget if you do comment they come to me first for moderation.