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SSHA...SHARP-SHINNED HAWKS!

Sharp-shinned Hawk is a very prominent autumn migrant at Cape May.

SHARP-SHINNED HAWKS STOLE THE SHOW TODAY in the same way that Yellow-rumped Warblers had done the previous day. I saw several hundred of them bombing through the narrow belt of dunes at the point, all re-orientating back north and some pausing to hunt terrified Yellow-rumped Warblers amongst the dune scrub. Several Cooper’s Hawks were with them and TVs and Golden Eagles were still on the move today, although the number of passerines was much reduced. The hawks following their song bird prey south as the big clear-out of the northern forests continues.

 

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CAPE MAY HAWKWATCH

Golden Eagle is another Cape May special and this one delighted the crowds with a fly past of the Hawkwatch Platform 

CAPE MAY IS ALSO FAMOUS FOR ITS HAWK WATCH PLATFORM and the conditions that proved ideal for passerine migration also brought a strong raptor passage. Most of the Broad-winged Hawks had moved through already but there were still a few in the kettles of TVs (Turkey Vultures) along with plenty of accipiters – Sharp-shinned and Cooper’s Hawks. Falcons included a Peregrine amongst the American Kestrels and Merlins. The icing on the cake of a respectable total of 15 raptor species was five sightings of Golden Eagle and a juvenile light morph Swainson’s Hawk, the latter a New Jersey rarity and an unfamiliar plumage for most. One of the young Goldies attempted a crossing of Delaware Bay but soon turned back after the strong northwest wind started to blow it out to sea. A nearby Vesper Sparrow in a wood pile also provided some excitement for local birders. 

TV or Turkey Vulture! 

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CAPE MAY VIZ-MIG SPECTACULAR

Yellow-rumped Warbler was the bird of the day with an incredible 15,000-20,000 migrating at Higbee Dyke alone! 

CAPE MAY IS SYNONYMOUS WITH VISIBLE MIGRATION IN NORTH AMERICA and it did not disappoint on my recent visit to attend the 67th Autumn Birding Festival there. I feel very lucky this autumn with the timing of my visits to migration hotspots and just like Spurn Point the previous week, conditions for visible migration were again very good. First of all a fast moving cold front in late autumn tells insect-eating birds it is time to move south and associated strong northwesterly winds at night push migratory birds to the coast and ultimately down New Jersey’s Cape May Peninsula. As they run out of land at the tip of the peninsula they put down. At first light these birds start to re-orientate by flying back north along the landward side of the peninsula, on the shore of Delaware Bay. It was Richard Crossley and Paul Holt who ‘discovered’ in the 1980s that this movement could be seen from the dyke at Higbee Beach, where they break cover from the wood lots and cross the Cape May canal, which effectively makes the point an island. There was a great bunch of friends gathered here for what turned out to be the biggest day of the autumn so far with somewhere between 15,000-20,000 Yellow-rumped Warblers alone making the ‘morning flight’ north across the canal. The sky was literally covered with birds for the first couple of hours of light. ‘The counter’ Sam picked out Blackpoll and Tennessee Warblers by call and a few others included Black-throated Blue and Northern Parula. Both kinglets were also well represented and the bushes were alive with sparrows, mostly Chipping and White-throated, however, the other most obvious species were Northern Flickers and Sharp-shinned Hawks as well as Rusty Blackbird, with around 50 seen amongst the flocks of red-wingeds passing over. I have never seen anything close to the scale of this movement of passerines in such a short period of time and after a while I stopped using binoculars and just stood and stared at the jaw-dropping spectacle. In the distance, continuous lines of Black Scoters were moving south in Delaware Bay, several Northern Harriers passed by and a ‘Common-Loon-in-the-moon’ caused some laughter.

 

Yet another Yellow-rumped Warbler! Although there were so many of them not all would pose for a photo! 

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SPURN CLASSIC OCTOBER FALL

Northern Treecreeper, Warren Cottage, Spurn Point

SPURN WAS SO ALIVE WITH BIRDS TODAY. Joining the Accy boys Dodge and Budgie, Rocket, Gary Waddington and I headed east on the M62 to East Yorkshire. The weather’s timing was almost perfect with a combination of easterly winds for a couple of days, clear skies to the east over Scandinavia to encourage migrants to set off and rain late at night to bring them down on the coast. After a quick stop at a Scottish Restaurant deep inside the People’s Republic we arrived at the Warren, where the stunted trees were alive with Goldcrests, Common Chiffchaffs and robins, a soggy male Brambling was trying to feed on the ground just a couple of metres away and four Common Redpolls were barely further away in the small bushes around the cottage. Overhead hordes of Redwings headed south down the peninsula, along with smaller numbers of Fieldfares, blackbirds and Song Thrushes and a group of five crossbills flew past and north towards Kilnsea. They looked big! Thanks to old friend and Spurn regular Adam Hutt for inviting us to watch a frosty white ‘Northern’ Treecreeper foraging in a sycamore next to the Warren Cottage and at one time on the wall of the cottage itself. He commented on its white claws. This was a new form for me in the UK and it is amazing to think that this little bird had followed the Goldcrests across the North Sea. 

Yellow-browed Warbler, Spurn triangle

With even Rocket now tempted out into the rain we next checked the Canal Scrape where an amazing group of five Jack Snipe were skulking in the cut reeds by the hide – I have never seen a flock of them before. A juvenile Grey Plover made a few brief appearances on the scrape and a female Greater Scaup flew by as we walked along the Humber shore towards Kilnsea. The thrushes kept coming all morning, flying overhead, feeding under any bushes, in the surrounding fields or simply ditching into the marram grass of the sand dunes. Five Ring Ouzels over the course of the day and two or three Great Grey Shrikes provided added interest along with more Bramblings and Common Redpolls. We also saw a few late swallows today. They are long gone from the valley back home now. Continuing towards Kilnsea we noticed a small crowd had gathered and Dodge was quick enough to catch sight of a Dusky Warbler they had been watching. The Johnny-come-latelies had to make do with a Yellow-browed Warbler in the same ditch.

Jonathan 'Budgie' Slater at Spurn Point 

However, soon enough radios crackled with the news of a Dusky Warbler trapped at Kew Villa, which was to be released in the Church Field in 10 minutes. Then we got to see just how many other birders had decided to make the trip to Spurn today, including a couple of coach loads of happy folks. Very kind of the ringers to show the bird, walking it slowly down a long line of twitchers before it was released. As the weather cleared and midday approached there were fewer migrants on the move overhead and we got a chance to look at some other birds like the storm-blown gannets over the Humber and some of them on it. I counted 34 in a single sweep and still 32 about an hour later, mostly juveniles. These strong winds must have been bad news for this year’s youngsters. Lines of Dark-bellied Brent Geese headed upriver along with four eiders. The lads added a Blue Fulmar and a couple of Bonxies during a brief spell of seawatching but things quietened down a little in the afternoon as we searched without luck for a Pallas’s Warbler at post 31, just on the opposite side of the narrow neck, which is now breached and the makeshift road completely washed away. The point is effectively an island already now. A lovely tame Common Redpoll fed on Marram Grass only a few metres away here and clouds of Red Knot on the Humber shore made the walk worthwhile, as did a fine male Black Redstart at the Middle Camp. Having birded both Spurn and Flamborough in fall I much prefer the more open country and big skies of Spurn. 

Common (or Mealy) Redpoll, Narrow Neck, Spurn Point 

A walk up Beacon Lane past the site of last month’s Great Snipe produced little other than a few more tired Common Redpolls, Blackcaps, chiffchaffs and Goldcrests and we headed back towards the Crown and Anchor pub. I stopped to have a chat with Garry Taylor, at Kew Villa, where the garden was full of Goldcrests, chiffchaffs and Bramblings. After some time a Ring Ouzel appeared, its presence betrayed by its harsh tacking call, interesting to hear it here instead of in a valley in Bowland. Just as it was time to leave a young Barred Warbler showed up in a berry-laded hawthorn just above us, thirty-one years after my life bird at Spurn. What a fine way to end a great day! There is nothing like migration on a large scale and I am already wondering how the USA’s equivalent, Cape May is going to compare next week. 

Barred Warbler, Kew Villa, Kilnsea

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