Viewing entries tagged
Lapwing

Comment

WELCOME BACK TO THE FELL!

A ‘grey male’ Hen Harrier powers north across the fell in the late afternoon sunshine CLICK ON IMAGE FOR LIGHTBOX

WHAT A WELCOME BACK TO GANNOW FELL! A lovely walk in the evening sunhine with Phil in ‘High Altitude Ribchester’ was further lit up by a grey male Hen Harrier (we didn’t see it well enough to rule out a 3CY bird - thanks to my ID guru Pete Morris). It appeared over the main bog and simply flew north towards Bowland without changing course. Although they do not breed far away Hen Harriers are rare on Longridge Fell and never seem to hang around even though it looks like they ought to! Also here raven, stonechat and Red Grouse were all new for the year. This is the highest I’ve been in the valley so far but it is still less than 3 miles from home. It was also lovely to hear both skylark and curlew singing here too this afternoon and some of the grouse were quite bold, with inflated red combs and lots of clucking display flights. As I got out of the car back at home a pair of curlews flew over there too, I am lucky to live somewhere this happens!

I wasn’t expecting this male Red Grouse to fly onto a wall in front of me! Err Willow Ptarmigan. No chance of me getting used to that name!

My morning walk around the village was also quite productive after a cold start. There was a definite push of gulls upstream with 33 Common Gulls being the most I’ve seen here in a morning. Black-headed Gulls exceeded 500 and there were a few Lesser Black-backed Gulls, newly returned from points south. A couple of Mediterranean Gulls flew east among the Black-headeds. Their call reminds me of Frankie Howerd ‘s ‘Ooh’ as in ‘Ooh Matron!’ . Curlews were in double figures again with several singing in the fields around the village and lapwings were also very active, songflighting along the lane to Lower Barn Farm. It is so uplifting to have them back again! Groups of insanely noisy oystercatchers chased each other at the river, where there are now three pairs of Stock Doves which appear to all be squabbling over squatting rights to the stone barn of Waterside Farm. There was still a small flock of Fieldfares along the lane today but no Redwings again, they pushed off in the cold weather and have not returned. There may stil be a few hanging on in the woods but I didn’t see any. The day-roosting Tawny Owl I have been watching lately was back on its usual perch deep in ivy and a few other interesting birds like bullfinch and Little Grebe helped me over the 50 species mark. February now stands at 75, the highest total of any month so far, partly thanks to Phil’s Black-tailed Godwit in the week!

The regular Tawny Owl could be bothered to look at me today! Well, squint at least.

A (Northern) Lapwing in display flight, with club-shaped wings spread and whirring through the air. We’ere lucky to still be able to hear its lovely song in Rib!

One of today’s Med Gulls, its black hood still far from complete.

Comment

Comment

RIBCHESTER LIST DC

Northern Lapwings were a feature of the New Year weekend, brought to the riverbank by the recent snow

BACK TO THE BEGINNING ON THE RIVERBANK was much more fun than I was expecting. The weather has been transformed by a big area of high pressure, which has blocked the endless series of depressions and with it came snow, frost and ice. Wonderful stuff and just what was needed to cause birds to get on the move again. Things had slowed down in December and this weekend saw an influx of birds to the riverbank. It was also a great way to take my mind off the equally endless mental depression owing to Covid-19-related news. There is nothing like the natural world to put a smile on your face! New Year’s Day always marks the start of a new year list for birders and at 58, it took me two days to see more than half of the number of species I saw in all of last year (50 is usually my benchmark daily total in January but a good day could see 60).

The biggest feature of the weekend was bad weather-driven lapwings, with a tally of 131 on New Year’s Day and 91 on the 2nd, many of them were heading east for some reason, into even worse weather. Up to 25 Common Oystercatchers were gathered at Red Bank and up to 7 Common Snipe were on the riverbank itself, no doubt driven from frozen fields higher in the valley. A flock of 7 Eurasian Teal at Red Bank and 3 Eurasian Skylarks over our watchpoint behind the allotments were also bad weather related. A male bullfinch in the middle of village was unusual, a flock of 7 Redwings was in my street itself and a Treecreeper in Peter’s garden was his first there for 20 years apparently! However, the highlight of the weekend was a first winter Peregrine along the power lines, they are expert at using the pylons as cover and it sneaked out of the back a couple of times, so I have to resort to a collage again to show its markings. The absence of slurry on the meadows meant there were only a few gulls around this weekend, so starling became the commonest bird on the patch, followed by Mallard and lapwing! Great Black-backed even tied with Herring Gull at 9 a piece on the 2nd, I haven’t seen this happen before. One Little Egret clings on but we couldn’t manage a kingfisher at all this weekend.

Ice, snow and a little cloud usually means a nice sunrise on the riverbank.

Blue Pendle from Red Bank

Blue Red Bank. The once lovely woodland here is slowly dying/slipping into the Ribble.

Powerline Peregrines always slip out the back

Peregrine collage

Young Common Gulls are cool-looking birds

Well at least the tightly-cropped hedgerows can be used to create interesting effects

Treecreeper in the village on 1 January, rusty tinge to the flanks, long hind claw, uneven step in the primary bar, well what else?

Comment