Comment

HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM PENDLE

A frozen Pendle summit.

HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM PENDLE! I'd been hoping to do more hiking on Pendle but the wettest December on record meant there were no dry weekends when I could actually see the top through a veil of cloud. It really is grim in rain and not worth the effort. At last on a grey and frosty morning with a light dusting of snow on the hill it was good to get 2016 started. This is going to be a very significant year. I thought I would be first up this year but another figure in the distance was already closing in on the summit... John Metcalf of course and he'd already seen a Snow Bunting and some goldies before it was even properly light! An unkindness of at least 10 Common Ravens was playing in the wind on the edge of the Big End and a couple of Red Grouse flew up on my way to the summit. We searched a large area of the grassy slopes and hilltop all the the way to the scout cairn and back, checking the Snow Buntings' favourite areas. Golden Plovers were much in evidence today with many small groups all over the summit. It was difficult to estimate their numbers but we had at least 70 in the air together at one time. A large female sparrowhawk dashed across the hillside in search of a meal and two Snow Buntings flew over calling, ironically when we had stopped for a break at the stone shelter. There were a few more Red Grouse and a flock of around 35 Pink-footed Geese headed west (they are already on the move). On the way back towards the landslide trail another Snow Bunting flew over towards Ogden Clough but despite a lot of searching I couldn't find it again, maybe it didn't land? It is impossible to know whether birds here are simply passing by or just moving to another part of the hill. A good walk today, training for Ladakh next month.

It is always fun to list the first birds of the year and despite my efforts to get Snow Bunting as high up the list as possible I couldn't help seeing some birds in the dark on the way to the Barley Lane end. I wandered around East Lancs for the rest of the day and even managed to add a new bird to my ELOC recording area list, Jack Snipe, thanks to Mark Breaks. Not just one but two of them. Cheers Mark! We also had two sightings of Hen Harrier (both ringtails, conceivably the same bird) but obviously I can't say where. My total was a lot lower than the Breaks's 85 new ELOC New Year's Day record today but it was good to be out and about again.

ELOC year list: 1. Carrion Crow 2. Common Blackbird 3. European Robin 4. Common Pheasant 5. Common Starling 6. Blue Tit 7. Great Tit 8. Common Raven 9. Red Grouse 10. European Golden Plover 11. Snow Bunting 12. Eurasian Sparrowhawk 13. Pink-footed Goose 14. Common Magpie 15. European Goldfinch 16. Eurasian Siskin 17. Rook 18. Western Jackdaw 19. Peregrine Falcon 20. Feral Pigeon (Rock Dove) 21. Black-headed Gull 22. Mallard 23. Mandarin 24. Eurasian Coot 25. Common Moorhen 26. Great Crested Grebe 27. Tufted Duck 28. Redwing 29. Goosander 30. Pied Wagtail 31. House Sparrow 32. Common Buzzard 33. Eurasian Wren 34. European Greenfinch 35. Great Black-backed Gull 36. Song Thrush 37. Common Kestrel 38. Hen Harrier 39. Herring Gull 40. Mistle Thrush 41. Chaffinch 42. Goldcrest 43. Coal Tit 44. Common Snipe 45. Jack Snipe 46. Stock Dove 47. Long-tailed Tit 48. Common Gull 49. Great Cormorant 50. Eurasian Wigeon 51. Northern Shoveler 52. Common Teal 53. Common Goldeneye 54. Common Pochard 55. Canada Goose 56. Greylag Goose 57. Barnacle Goose 58. Great Spotted Woodpecker 59. Grey Heron

'girls be looking like damn he fly', Mandarin at Barrow Lower Lodge.

Comment

Comment

MIDWINTER PENDLE SNOW BUNTINGS

Snow Bunting, Pendle Hill Summit.

TEN SNOW BUNTINGS WAS THE HIGHLIGHT of a hike up Pendle Hill today. An extensive search of the summit also produced 16 European Golden Plovers, 3 Common Snipe and a Red Grouse, not a bad midwinter walk up there. I remember seeing only Red Grouse on several occasions at this time of year. The Snow Buntings were of the nominate form nivalis so are probably from the continent rather than to the northwest of us. As usual they were flighty and generally unapproachable. Thanks to Neil Mitchell who had already tracked them down to one of their favourite spots. This was the first of many walks up Pendle over the next couple of months!

Pendle Summit is pretty much water-logged at the moment.

Comment

Comment

BROOKE BOND IBERIAN LYNX!

This is 'Guadiato' a male lynx known from the Cordoba area - he wandered c.70km to get to Puerto Bajo!

ADDING IBERIAN LYNX TO MY COLLECTION OF 'TEA CARD STYLE' PHOTOS wasn’t something I’d imagined would ever be possible. Thanks to my friends at Wildwatching Spain I was able to rattle off hundreds of frames of this beautiful creature from a photo hide on the pretty Puerto Bajo estate in the Sierra de Andújar of Andalucia. I was lucky to have five sightings in three days, four from the hide, three of them very good indeed (a male and a female) and another male along the well-known public road south of the Embasle de Jandular. The first was so good that my shutter finger was still shaking after it! It takes a lot to get me that excited these days! The Sierra de Andújar is another lovely corner of Spain, just northeast of Cordoba, with a rolling landscape covered in Mediterranean scrub and Cork Oak/Strawberry Tree woodland. There is also a good population of rabbits here, the favourite prey of the lynx, thanks to a massive conservation effort, which now seems to be paying dividends in bringing this wonderful creature back from the brink of extinction. As everywhere in rural Spain, the food here is fantastic as well. It’s simple but I love waking up to a breakfast with toast, olive oil, the best in the world, pressed in the last month, fresh tomato spread and this year’s freshly squeezed orange juice. Shhhh it’s almost as good as the lynx! Thanks to Iñaki Reyero, Juan Carlos Poveda Vera and Fernando Prieto.

Guadiato takes a look at the photo hide, wondering what all the shutter noise is?

He pauses to look back over his shoulder as he crosses a country road.

In lovely early morning light the next day.

Iberian Lynxes are truly magnificent animals!

This is the adult female of the estate, 'Gema', only a little more slightly built than Guadiato.

She is also hunting for rabbits.

Gema checks out a rabbity old log.

Comment

Comment

CRAG MARTIN AT CHESTERFIELD

Eurasian Crag Martin, Church of St Mary and All Saints, Chesterfield. What time is it?

I'VE NEVER BEEN TO CHESTERFIELD. I only saw it on football results before. It's not the kind of place you go to for any other reason. It's not on the way to anywhere but it is now on the UK's birding map! Rocket and I dragged ourselves there this afternoon to see the Eurasian Crag Martin, which has taken up temporary residence at the crooked spired church of St Mary and All Saints in the town centre. What odds on predicting this one? Another event in our ornithological history!

Comment