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LONG-TOED STINT

Long-toed Stint, Khawr ad Dahariz, Oman, November 2014

ON THE EVENING OF SATURDAY 28 AUGUST 1982 I got a call from birding friend Dave Rosair that he had just seen a ‘nice White-rumped Sandpiper’ at Back Saltholme Pool on Teeside. This was very unwelcome news, for several reasons. First, Back Saltholme had become something of a local patch for me, I used to walk there from Billingham station, climbing over pipes across the dykes between the fields but more importantly I had not seen a White-rumped Sandpiper at all yet and I was due to make my first visit to Spurn Point the next day, a long-awaited stay at the bird observatory there. I spoke to one of the finders, John Dunnett, that evening and he mentioned that he was concerned about the bird’s leg colour and that it was either the first White-rumped Sandpiper with yellow legs or it was a Long-toed Stint! However, one of the old timers, Edgar Gatenby, had said that it had a white rump so what else could it be? At least it is obviously ‘only a white-rump’ I thought and even at this early stage as a schoolchild I knew there would be plenty more chances for that one so I stuck to my planned trip to Spurn, by public transport. This included hitching a lift from Patrington, where the bus route ended and over the next couple of days I enjoyed plenty of common migrants, my first Barred Warblers and a hoopoe. However, things took a turn for the worse with the arrival of John Hewitt, fresh from ‘the Long-toed Stint on Teeside’. Worse still, there was now also a Little Whimbrel in South Wales, another once-in-a-lifetime bird, or so I thought at the time. I decided to cut short my stay at Spurn and take the train back to Teeside, along with Paul Holt, who was camping at Spurn at the time. ‘You’re a bloody fool’ said Barry Banson, who used to call the log at the obs and could always be counted on for an insult or two but of course we went anyway. Unfortunately we arrived on Teeside on 2nd September, one day late - the stint was last seen on 1st. To add insult to injury, some years later a small Pectoral Sandpiper at Saltholme Pool was claimed as a Long-toed Stint, drawing me back there again, twice before it was finally correctly identified. The Salthouse Little Whimbrel in 1985 relieved some of the disappointment of August ‘82 but it has taken me over 32 years to catch up with Long-toed Stint. Khawr ad Dahariz or ‘East Khawr’ is one of my favourite sites in Oman and although the encroachment of Salalah is making it look a little more like Teeside with every visit, to finally see one at last was a very special moment, in perfect, early morning light, at close range and with no-one else around. Magic!

Long-toed Stint, Khawr ad Dahariz, Oman, November 2014


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PALLID SCOPS OWL

Pallid Scops Owl, Al Hajar Mountains, Oman, October 2014

PALLID SCOPS OWL TORMENTED ME FOR YEARS! Back in May 1986 I was ordered back to my hotel at gunpoint in Turkey, while looking for the famous birds in Birecik tea garden, and told to leave town the next day. PKK Kurdish terrorists were active here at the time and the police were not keen on letting me and my friends stay around. Then followed many years of seeing nice photos taken in southern Israel combined with a failure to catch up with any of them. Happily I now see this bird every year and sometimes twice a year, in both Oman and Gujarat in northwest India. I even see them when I am looking for other things! This one was a particularly nice obliging bird, having perched in an unobscured spot in a large ancient acacia. I had been playing a tape of Omani Owl, which has Pallid Scops Owl calling in the background, just before dawn when this bird responded. I left it until daylight to start searching and was very happy to set eyes on it! There is nothing like a day roosting view of an owl!

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INLAND DOTTEREL, NOBODY MOVE!

Inland Dotterel, Erldunda NT - one of the most wanted birds of Australia's vast outback

INLAND DOTTEREL WAS ONE OF MANY EXOTIC SPECIES THAT LEAPT OFF THE PAGE of the historic book 'Shorebirds' when it was first published back in 1986. I was still a teenager at the time and didn't really expect I would ever see one, however, a lot of things have changed since those days. On the recent BirdQuest Northern Australia tour we had walked several kilometres searching for this bird, across the rolling gibber plains near Erldunda, when Janó said the magic words 'Inland Dotterel, nobody move!' and there about twenty metres ahead of us was one of the most beautiful shorebirds on the planet. I have a special affection for dotterels of any kind having spent so many hours with them but this is really special. Fortunately this bird was (apparently) a little less wary than usual and allowed us to approach it reasonably closely. One of the main tour highlights for me this was a very exciting moment! Like so many birds, never as good as the first time. Formerly called 'Australian Dotterel' I think its present name is much more fitting, although 'Outback Dotterel' would have been even nicer! Nothing is known about its present status partly owing to its vast range but it is always one of the trickier birds to find. Other sought-after outback birds also in this area included Chiming Wedgebill and Orange Chat.

Gibber plains near Erldunda

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MASKED SHRIKE

Masked Shrike at Kilnsea, Spurn

THE UK'S THIRD MASKED SHRIKE happily stayed long enough for Mark Varley and me to cross the Pennines again to Spurn. We spent a couple of hours trying to make the most of some very harsh reflected light on the bird, which was busily feeding on the third day of its stay. However, later in the afternoon it approached to within a few metres at times catching craneflies (you can see a cranefly leg still stuck to the feathers on its head!) on the edge of the grassy field in the lee of its favoured roadside hedge but always ‘against the light’. Long after the crowds had gone home, there were fewer than 10 people still here on a sunny afternoon, including artist Darren Woodhead, who did some really lovely watercolour field sketches of it. Thanks to the Friends of Spurn for organising a great viewing area and especially to Mark for doing the driving today! We even had time to enjoy a couple of Jack Snipe in front of the canal scrape hide as well as some great fish and chips in Patrington on the way home. A classic!
 

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