Summary May 2013

Summary May 2013

On the 8th May we saw four House Martins (the first for the year for us) starting to nest under the eaves of one of the new flat blocks opposite the Thai restaurant. We saw one nest but at least two other birds were also to-ing and fro-ing so I expected to see more nests later in the week but there was still just the one the next time I looked. They used to nest above Thai Spice.

Garden

May still did not mark Spring or Summer and the weather remained uncertain and was often cold. We have several Blackbirds and a Robin and a Dunnock are regular visitors. We sometimes have a couple of Starlings but the number of Tits and especially Goldfinches is way down. It is hard to conclude anything else than that the birds suffered very badly with a long cold winter that doesn’t seem to have turned into Spring yet ! The only exception to this is the is Woodpigeon and Collared Dove that are still all too common in the Garden. We did see two Mistle Thrushes over the garden which seemed odd this late in the year. Towards the end of the month they actually came into the garden and were feeding from the ground feeder. For some reason we have been having visits from a couple of House Sparrows from across the ginnel which isn’t that usual despite their close proximity. We found a dead Great Tit near one of our bird baths so it looks like another cat attack. Around the third week of the month we started to see a few Swifts flying around overhead but, again, not as plentiful as previous years.

 

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Visit To Burton Mere Wetland, Iner Marsh Farm and Parkgate 30th May 2013

Visit To Burton Mere Wetland, Iner Marsh Farm and Parkgate 30th May 2013

On the 30th May we spent the day out at Burton Mere Wetland, Inner Marsh Farm and Parkgate. We started out at the reception hide where we could see a decent number of Avocet. Unfortunately the young had been badly predated by Carrion Crows so there were fewer than might be expected. We did see a couple paddling around though. As we were scanning the site we saw a Crow fly past the hide with a chick in its bill but this was probably a Lapwing chick. Anyway we watched the somewhat grizzly fate of this chick as the Crow landed in the field over to the left of the lagoon and proceeded to devour it bit by bit ! A little bit of drama common when many species of birds have to find food for themselves and their young. Continue reading

Birding Group Visit To Neumann’s Flash and Haydn’s Pool 21st May 2013

Birding Group Visit To Neumann’s Flash and Haydn’s Pool 21st May 2013

The birding group visit to Neumann’s Flash and environs was notable for the fact that, apart from the three of us, there were only two others, Richard and David Hulse, in attendance whichwas a shame but it was an interesting dynamic being such as small group and we could not have picked a better day for. Although the weather wasn’t brialliant, it wasn’t too cold and it was dry and their were some signs of blue in the sky. Moreover, the birds seem to have fed up of waiting for Spring and they were in full voice all together. As we took the long path to the right side of the Flash there was a constant sound of Blackbirds, Song Thrushes and Chiffchaff’s singing and calling. For once it felt like it might be Spring after all. Continue reading

Visit to Brockholes Nature Reserve 17th May 2013

Visit to Brockholes Nature Reserve 17th May 2013

The weather forecast looked like giving us one day this week where it probably wouldn’t rain so we decided to go out for the day and since Anne had not yet been to Brockholes nature reserve near Preston, we thought we should go there. The last time I was there was with the birding group and that was in winter so I was interested to see what it would be like in spring. Previously we started out from the visitor centre and walked up to the river and managed to see a Kingfisher so we hoped we would be lucky again. Continue reading

Birding Group Visit To Macclesfield Forest 14th May 2013

Birding Group Visit To Macclesfield Forest 14th May 2013

Despite the weather forecast being a bit iffy, we went out to Macclesfield Forest and the weather was kind to us remaining dry and sunny if a bit windy. We parked up at the bottom of the woods next to the reservoir and walked up into the woods. The first impression was of Song Thrushes singing everywhere – though, strangely, we did not manage to any. Chiffchaffs were plentiful but it was for Redstarts and Pied Flycatchers we were hoping to see. Continue reading

Birding Group Visit to Staley Brushes 7th May 2013

Birding Group Visit to Staley Brushes 7th May 2013

This was our first visit to Staley Brushes with the birding group; previously we have either been on holiday or it has been raining so the venue was changed at the last minute. We had no such problem today as it was a lovely sunny and warm day – perfect for a walk up on to the moors. We had hoped for a range of birds but, we suspect due to the late Spring we have had, it seems that the birds are still displaying and not feeding nestlings. One of the species we hoped to see was Cuckoo which has been seen here before, presumably laying their eggs in the nests of the many Meadow Pipits we did see. Continue reading

Summary April 2013

Summary April 2013

Garden

Although April started out still cold, there were some signs in the first week of the possibility of Spring happening. It has at least been dry for a couple of weeks so the surrounding countryside is getting a chance to soak up the record rainfalls of March. Disturbingly there have been a few newspaper reports of migratory birds arriving in Britain to find that there are no insects around to eat yet. Eleven Stone Curlews were found dead in Norfolk and the conclusion byt he RSPB was that, since they were all severely underweight, they had died of starvation – possibly during the recent snows.

In the garden the Blackbirds are ever present and challenging each other. Robin and Dunnock are flitting about and sometimes singing. The plague that is Woodpigeon and Collared Dove has resumed and some snails have started to appear. We have had to put more wire netting back up at the bottom of the garden to try to discourage the cats – now five of them – that like to chase birds in our garden. As many as four male Blackbirds have been competing for our garden whilst a single female busies herself eating.

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Visit to WWT Slimbridge 30th April 2013

Visit to WWT Slimbridge 30th April 2013

We had stopped off at Slimbridge to break up our journey back from Somerset to Manchester and again we stayed at the Tudor Arms Hotel in Slimbridge. This afforded us a chance to go to WWT Slimbridge once again before we had to go home. We started off by going up the observation tower at the visitor centre which was just as well because it was the last chance we had to see the Cranes. We could see three of them on Rushy Pen but we didn’t see much of them before they all flew off in the direction of the Severn estuary. Be that as it may we still had a fine morning. Continue reading

Visit to RSPB Shapwick Heath 29th April 2013

Visit to RSPB Shapwick Heath 29th April 2013

Flushed with our glorious sighting of three Bitterns at the Ham Wall end of Ashcott Road, we crossed over the car park and onto the Shapwick Heath reserve. We walked up to the pools on Meare Heath and there were a couple of people who had been standing for quite a while hoping to see a Great White Egret that had apparently been seen well earlier in the day. We had a bit of a look but as there wasn’t much on the water and so sight of the Egret we thought we would ead up to the hides at the bridge. As it happens, the bridge was closed ff for some repair work so we did not cross over the water to the woodland hide and instead turned left down to the hide that overlooks “Noah’s Water” Again there were Whitethroat around and Swallows above. Continue reading

Visit to RSPB Ham Wall 29th April 2013

Visit to RSPB Ham Wall 29th April 2013

We had a day off birding on the 28th as we went walking with the friends we were staying with. Even then we did see a Willow Warbler and a Rock Pipit. We left our friends on the 29th but we decided that we could afford another couple of hours visiting the RSPB reserve at Ham Wall and the adjoining Natural England reserve at Shapwick Heath. We hoped to see the Black-winged Stilts for a second time but when we got to the “second platform” they were nowhere to be seen. Still there were plenty of Gadwall and the flock of Black-tailed Godwits we had seen up at Shapwick Heath seemed to have moved over to the marshes here. We did see a drake Garganey however which was the first for us for the year. Continue reading