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Birding

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WILD PENDLE

Pendleside, January 2015

FOUR SNOW BUNTINGS WERE THE HIGHLIGHT of a wild and very bleak winter's day on Pendle Hill's summit. Just how I like it! However, they were the only birds up there today in a very strong gusting northwest wind. I could hardly stand up at times and there was zero chance of holding the camera steady enough for a photo, the wind even blew it out of my hands a couple of times! Lower down on the Pendleside slope were three stonechats, a kestrel and a flock of around 50 Fieldfares with a similar number of starlings towards the Barley Road. Well at least a hike up Pendle is good excerise!

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YORKSHIRE BLYTH'S PIPIT

Blyth's Pipit, Wakefield, January 2015

THE WINTERING BLYTH'S PIPIT IN WAKEFIELD HAS BECOME MUCH MORE OBLIGING now that its favourite field has become more flooded and then frozen. It is now feeding quite frequently on the surrounding exposed roadside verges so Alan McBride and I risked a visit to the People's Republic and enjoyed some superb views of this hitherto skulker. The local birders did a great job in encouraging folks to give it some space and stand back from the banks surrounding the field, which is hemmed in by a business park and the pipit duly obliged with a couple of great walk pasts. Very happily there was no need to enter the field or hassle it in any way and it was very instructive to have such a good look at a bird I do not see very often. It called a couple of times as well. Yorkshire is off to a great start this year! 'Great' could have been the word of the day, with the pipit views followed back in East Lancs by a couple of long-stayers - Great Northern Diver at Rishton Reservoir and Great Grey Shrike at Grindleton Forest, although these two could have been a bit closer.

Blyth's Pipit, Wakefield, January 2015

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POOR AUSSIE BUSTARD

Australian Bustard, Victoria River, NT

LYING DEAD IN THE RED DIRT BY THE ROADSIDE, the desperately sad sight of an Australian Bustard wiped out out by a passing vehicle near Victoria River from my recent travels in Northern Territory. Janó had seen a very showy bird near this spot about a fortnight earlier, maybe the same individual? We saw so much roadside wildlife carnage in Australia, which left me thinking, surely you would have to be racing along, completely oblivious or bent on distruction to hit all these creatures? No doubt the unswervable road trains do a lot of it? We drove over 6000km in around two weeks and did not hit anything, although we saw plenty of things in our way in the road from kangaroos to water buffalos. I saw some live bustards later near Katherine but the needless death of this magnificent bird affected me for a while.

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YORKSHIRE LITTLE BUSTARD

Little Bustard, Auburn Farm, Fraisthorpe, East Yorkshire

A NEW YEAR'S DAY LITTLE BUSTARD was a great way to start 2015! A couple of hours driving across the Pennines and then the Yorkshire Wolds in the dark ensured that owls were my first birds of the year though, with a Tawny followed by four Barn Owls before I set eyes on the bustard. Predictably there was a big dawn turn out with lots of southern accents, who couldn't make it to Fraisthorpe on New Year's Eve. There were somewhere around 700 twitchers at any one time with a constant trickle of new arrivals throughout the morning and this event put the tiny hamlet of Fraisthorpe firmly on the birding map, I had not even heard of it before yesterday! Back to the bustard itself, which was rather inactive and didn't fly once during the 6.5 hours I was there, only spreading its wings on one occasion spending most of the time either standing around in its chosen kale field or tucking into the crop and not moving more than about 20m in the whole time I watched it. For anyone wondering, digiscoping was obviously the way to go today, it was a little out of range for most DSLRs.

I also thought of Stuart Warren today, who missed the 1988 New Year's Day Little Bustard in Dorset after his bino eyecups filled with rain water just before it flew off as Dave Russell told me something similar happened to him too, both of them driving home as the only ones in their respective cars who had not ticked it off. There are other stories of guys who were still too drunk to see it as well. Even though I've seen lots of Little Bustards and taken thousands of photos of them, I still find the thought that one made its way to Yorkshire thrilling. Bird migration is a wonderful thing! It is also interesting that 75% of all English records up to 1996 have been between November and February, no doubt birds retreating from hard weather on the continent. It is pretty cold there right now, minus 17 Celsius in Eastern Hungary last night for instance! These twitching events are also great for catching up with old friends, we are all a bit fatter, with more lines on our faces and more grey hairs (as well as less hair) these days. A Lapland Bunting flew over the bustard calling as did a few skylarks on a windy, grey and bitterly cold morning on the Holderness coast. A sparrowhawk and a kestrel also passed overhead but there was not much else happening here today.

New Year's Day Little Bustard watchers, Fraisthorpe

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