Category: High Tide

High Tide on the Wirral 25th February 2020

February was the wettest on record with flooding in lots of areas of the country. Although Manchester got it relatively well, it did put a damper on the birding for most of the month. Additionally, Anne still had a cast on her broken wrist and I still had a bad leg. This meant that we only had two birding days out in all of February. Both were for high tides but this one, on the 25th, was nowhere near as dramatic as that of the 11th. It was compensated for by some nice bird of prey sightings though.

The high tide was 9.3 metres at 12:15pm but there was nowhere near the amount of wind as on the 11th. At Hoylake the sea was always a way out and there seemed to be very few birds on the shore. There were Grey Plover, Knot and Dunlin, but all in smaller numbers than usual. It was bitterly cold and I was glad when we headed off for Parkgate.

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High Tide on the Wirral 11th February 2020

With poor weather expected, the high tide of 10 metres at 12:35pm, on the Wirral, posed problems for most of the birding group and only two of us dared the predicted high winds. Ironically, we often say that a high tide is disappointing because there was not enough wind blowing the water towards land to make it a “spectacular” but, when such conditions are predicted, we often decide that we will not go birding because of those very same conditions. On the other hand the weather was very dramatic so perhaps those that did not go were right all along. It depends on your view.

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High Tide : Hoylake, Riverbank Road and Burton Mere Wetlands 29th October 2019

The last Tuesdayof the month for the birding group was a trip to the Wirral starting at Hoylake at 10 am for an 11:35am high tide of 9.89 metres. It wasn’t particularly high but there haven’t been that many recently, so we were looking forward to and – for once – it was a lovely, wind-free and sunny day.

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Hoylake, Parkgate and Burton High Tide 1st September 2019

There haven’t been many high high-tides on the Wirral recently so with a poor weather forecast for home and a better one for the Wirral we headed up there. It was a Sunday and we had forgotten that it was the “Wader Festival” as well so there were plenty of people at tall the sites. High tide was 9.89metres at 1:28pm.

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Overnight Stay at Parkgate for High Tide on the Wirral 21-22 February 2019

Short-eared Owl, Parkgate

Short-eared Owl, Parkgate

We have been planning an overnight visit to Parkgate so we could get the chance to see the birds of prey coming into the overnight roost at Neston. WIth a high tide of 10.12 metres at 12:20pm we thought that if we stayed over we could get two high tides at Parkgate and the evening roost so this is what we decided to do, staying at the Ship Hotel overnight.

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Birding Group visit to Hoylake, New Bighton and Parkgate : 19th February 2019


The birding group visit for 19th February was to Hoylake and New Brighton for the high-ish tide of 9.6 metres at 10:48pm but this left us time to add on a visit to Parkgate after those two places and this gave us probably the best one hour of raptor watching we have ever had.

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Tour of The Wirral : 8th January 2019

A moderately high-ish tide of 9.06 metres at 12:25 pm took us up to the Wirral again. We were obviously going to be a bit early if we left at our usual 9am, so we left at 9.15 and thought it was worth trying New Brighton Marine Lake to see if we could find any Purple Sandpipers. The only problem with that was we were not sure if the tide would be enough for waders to be roosting on the pontoon.

We got there about 10:15 am and it was clear that even at that time the water was quite advanced there and, whilst not all the way up to the sea wall, it wasn’t too far from being in. In any case it was not too early for the waders to be roosting and we found large numbers of Redshank, Dunlin and Turnstones on the pontoon and, among them, three Purple Sandpipers.
After a cup of tea and a bacon sandwich, we moved on to Moels and it was about mid-day when we got there and the tide was well in there so we walked down the prom a bit and ended up at the lifeboat station. It seemed clear that the water was not going to be coming very far in there but it was enough to get reasonably good views of the usual waders – large numbers of Oystercatchers, good numbers of Dunlin and some Knot and Sanderling and even a Grey Plover. There were, of course Redshanks and the usual flotilla of Shelduck and numerous Cormorants.

It was clea that there were many other birds just at the water’s edge but the water wasn’t going to come in much further despite a big onshore wind.

We decided to go to Parkgate but stopped off at West Kirby Marine Lake to see if there was anything on the lake. It was very quiet though there were a few waders on the rocks and a few distant Brent Geese.

Down at Parkgate it seem that they had already had three Short-eared Owls but we had missed them. I did think I might have got a distant one but it was too far away to be sure. There were plenty of Marsh Harriers – now to common to attract much attention – and we got a Peregrine and a Kestrel as well. There were large numbers of Lapwing again and plenty of Pink-footed Geese but they were often invisible until a bird of prey came near and they all rose up out of the marsh as if from nowhere. We got a pair of Great Egrets as well as many Little Egrets.
We stayed for a while but no Owls showed for us so we headed off for Burton Mere Wetlands. We got the usual birds from the reception hide but the highlights were a first winter Mediterranean Gull (really quite obvious when pointed out to us!) and I got the most fleeting of glimpses of two Bearded Tits from the main screen where there isn’t usually much to be seen. This was a pretty good year tick already, especially as I didn’t see any last year, but, of course, I look forward to closer and longer views later in the year.

The day ended with some good year ticks among the expected ones and a total of fifty-one species seen.
This is likely to be our last birding day out before our Lanzarote Holiday where we can look forward to some quite different birds.

 

Bird Sightings : New Brighton Marine Lake : 8th January 2019

Mute Swan 3
Common Redshank 150
Ruddy Turnstone 50
Dunlin 100
Purple Sandpiper 3
Black-headed Gull 20
Herring Gull 30
Common Starling 20

Bird Sightings : Hoylake : 8th January 2019

Common Shelduck 40
Great Cormorant 80
Eurasian Oystercatcher 200
Grey Plover 1
Common Redshank 40
Eurasian Curlew 60
Red Knot 20
Sanderling 4
Dunlin 100
Black-headed Gull 30
Herring Gull 40
Lesser Black-backed Gull 4
Great Black-backed Gull 4

Bird Sightings : West Kirby Marine Lake : 8th January 2019

Brent Goose 3
Great Cormorant 30
Common Redshank 50
Ruddy Turnstone 20
Dunlin 30

Bird Sightings : Parkgate : 8th January 2019

Pink-footed Goose 30
Mallard 20
Grey Heron 1
Great Egret 2
Little Egret 12
Eurasian Marsh Harrier 3
Northern Lapwing 1000
Common Redshank 6
Common Kestrel 1
Peregrine Falcon 1
Carrion Crow 20
Meadow Pipit 20

Bird Sightings : Burton Mere Wetlands – Reception Hide : 8th January 2019

Greylag Goose 40
Gadwall 10
Tufted Duck 1
Mediterranean Gull 1
Bearded Tit 2
Great Tit 12
Eurasian Blue Tit 20
Eurasian Nuthatch 1
Eurasian Blackbird 2
Dunnock 1
Common Chaffinch 20
European Goldfinch 8

Bird Sightings : Burton Mere Wetlands – Environs : 8th January 2019

Pink-footed Goose 30
Canada Goose 100
Mute Swan 40
Common Shelduck 20
Eurasian Wigeon 140
Northern Shoveler 10
Common Teal 200
Grey Heron 1
Common Moorhen 20
Common Coot 20
Black-tailed Godwit 4

Bird Sightings : Burton Mere Wetlands – Marsh Covert Hide : 8th January 2019

Northern Pintail 1
Common Buzzard 2
Eurasian Magpie 2

Birding Group Visit to Hoylake 25th September 2018


Another Wirral visit was on for the second Bird Group outing of the term, this time to Hoylake on the 25th September. The high tide here was 9.03m at 12:15pm – not so high but someone put it on the schedule.

 

Wirral High Tide 11th September 2018



 

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High Tide on the Wirral : Burton and Hoylake – 14th August 2018

After a long break away from birding, taking in all of July and the first half of August, we at last managed a day out to the Wirral for a high tide. We got a good range of birds including two year ticks and even a life tick!

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