Showing posts with label Stonechat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stonechat. Show all posts

Sunday, January 3, 2010

January 2010 - Old Moor RSPB





Friday 1st: A new year, and what better way to clear the head, than go out for a bracing walk in the freezing cold. At the reserve, all the lakes were frozen solid except for a few small ice-free patches on the largest - the Mere. Getting there at 10:20am, I had a good start and it turned-out to be a cracking day!



Seeking Yellowhammers, I was advised to go to the "play-area" by the Warden, where some had been seen...and sure enough, I saw my FIRST Yellowhammer, a male perched in the hawthorn shrubs a short distance away. A male Greenfinch was perched close by - one of few as the majority of Greenfinches I saw that morning were females! By the "Tree Sparrow farm", a small patch of ground with thistles appeared to be crawling with Goldfinches...I've never seen so many in one place and there were many more! Over at the hide I was presented with the spectacle of passerines of Greenfinch (many more females than males), Goldfinch, Chaffinch, all of which, I lost count as they were in abundance! Along with the former were a couple of Tree Sparrows, 4 Reed Buntings, a Robin, one Dunnock, a Moorhen, several Blackbirds - both male and female, a Stonechat and perched in the hawthorns another 2 YELLOWHAMMERS! There were so many birds that who knows what I didn't see! I'd spent an hour and a half just at this one spot...a great start to the day.






At the Mere, a lake where most waterfowl tend to congregate, I was surprised to see that most of it was still frozen and that only 4 small patches were ice-free where ducks and gulls of various species were unusually crammed together "beak-by-bill"! What I did notice too was that there were no Geese or Swans of any description present. The sight of hundreds of Wigeon and Pochard roaming across the grassland on the far side of the lake, nibbling at the grass made for a fascinating sight. But the highlight was the 7 GOOSANDERS (4 male & 3 female) amongst the various waterfowl packed together in an ice-free area. This is a FIRST for me! The male is easily distinguished from the female by its black head and white body, click RSPB info on Goosanders, whereas the female has a brown head and grey body. Both have bright red legs. Although the Goosanders were amongst all the other waterfowl, I had my scope and saw some good views. The two images below are stills taken from a video.



I then paid a visit to the Wath Ings hide were the lake was totally ice-bound. Nothing at all about except for the Kestrel perched on the bird house alongside the hide. There were also some unusal Sheep grazing closeby. See the image below.






Time was now getting late, the tempreture had dropped noticably and I was hungry and ready for a hot cup of tea. So, walking back to the Visitor Center, I made a short detour towards the Reedbed Hide where I saw and videoed a rather obliging Stonechat (the second of the day) on the fence. To round off the day, while have a cuppa in the cafe and peering through the window down onto the feeders, I got a very good showing of a female Bulfinch together with Blue and Great Tits. So, although it was a very cold day, it was also a very full and fruitful day for bird watching.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

December 2009 - Lakeside: Stonechat

Monday 21st: Snow fell again yesterday on top of the snow that has already frozen. Finished work at lunchtime until New Year's Eve so what better way to spend the afternoon than visit the Lakeside in search of the elusive Siberian Chiffchaff.

It always seems a degree colder down by the water and today was no exception...it was FREEZING! Plenty of waterfowl about on the lake:Pochards, Coots, Canada Geese (of which there were many), Mallards, Tufted Ducks and 30+ Mute Swans. Below is a video taken with my camera of a family of Mute Swans; the cob and pen together with four cygnets. This appears to be the only Mute Swan family that is still together.









Well I tramped all over the snowy island and around the lake looking for the Chiffchaff but I guess it has departed the area. Well that's the name of the game, you win some...you loose some! But slogging through the snow, I came upon a rather flighty Stonechat as can be seen from the videos below. I followed it all over the island until it finally flew northwards, away from the lake. It's a pity I just had my camera to take video and not the camcorder.













On my way back to the car, I saw this female Reed Bunting feeding on tiny crumbs of bread dropped in the snow by people feeding the ducks. How it can see white bread crumbs on the snow is one of life's great mysteries.