Showing posts with label Little Gull. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Gull. Show all posts

Monday, 7 September 2020

Semi-palmated Sandpiper at Hayle

Saturday 5th September was a free day and with a Semi-palmated Sandpiper having been found at Hayle a few days previously I decided to go and have a look for it. I last saw a Semi-palmated Sandpiper in 1986 at Minsmere in Suffolk where I had some very close views of a bird with a limp feeding right in front of the East Hide, I even managed to see its webbed toes, and I was very hopeful of catching up with another bird after a 34 year gap.

It was a beautiful September day with mostly sunny skies but a chilly breeze and I arrived at The Carnsew Pool in Hayle at just after 10:00am. A gaggle of Birders were stood along the footpath near the Tempest Factory where the Sandpiper was mostly being reported from and when I reached them the good news was that the bird was still present but the bad news was that it had flown off.

It was quickly refound though just down river from our position and after a short walk along The Carnsew Pool footpath I was having some very close views of it as it roosted amongst the rocks and seaweed with Dunlin and Turnstone just a few metres away from the footpath. And that is where it stayed for the next 3 hours, occasionally waking up for a quick preen and stretch before going back to sleep or moving position slightly when Dunlin or Turnstone came too close.

 Semi-palmated Sandpiper and Dunlin

 Semi-palmated Sandpiper and Dunlin 

Semi-palmated Sandpiper and Dunlin 

A Peregrine zoomed through spooking all the birds feeding out along the estuary on the dropping tide but the Sandpiper stayed put, crouching down low to the ground before returning to sleep and it was also interesting to see it wake up when mobile phones went off, waders alarm called or dog walkers used their dog whistles.

 Semi-palmated Sandpiper and Dunlin 

 Semi-palmated Sandpiper and Dunlin 

 Semi-palmated Sandpiper and Dunlin

Semi-palmated Sandpiper 

It was a very smart looking bird and the views were great especially through my telescope but it was often partially obscured by the seaweed and rocks and mostly slept with its bill tucked under its wings. It was very easy to overlook and its noticeably smaller size compared to the nearby Dunlin was the easiest way to initially pick it out but I never managed to get a view of its webbed toes this time.

I was more excited by a juvenile Little Gull which was feeding on The Carnsew Pool, a very smart looking bird if a little distant but again some nice views were had with my telescope. I guess I am just not a proper Twitcher at heart.

Juvenile Little Gull with Black-headed Gull

Other birds seen were a Knot, 5 Bar-tailed Godwit, 7 Whimbrel, Ringed Plover, a Greenshank, Curlew, Oystercatcher, Grey Heron, Little Egret and Wigeon and with the Semi-Palmated Sandpiper not seeming to be wanting to wake up anytime soon I left for home a little earlier than planned but it had been a very enjoyable trip.


Friday, 3 May 2019

Marsh and Moor and Coast

Despite Storm Hannah barrelling across the UK overnight on Friday 26th April I decided to head off to Exminster Marsh anyway on Saturday 27th in sunny skies but with continuing strong winds. I caught a later train than planned and being a Saturday it was exceptionally busy but I arrived off the bus at The Swans Nest at Exminster at around 11:20am without any mishaps or delays.

It was very windy and I wasn't sure if I would see my target birds (sedge warbler and reed warbler) but I could hear both species singing away deep in cover as soon as I began my walk along the road to the car park. I did eventually manage brief sightings of 2 sedge warblers and 2 reed warblers on my walk around the marsh with many more heard only and I also heard a whitethroat, a Cettis warbler, blackcap and chiffchaff.

A few sand martins were buzzing around with just 2 swallows and amongst the Canada geese and shelduck out on the marsh I picked out a few teal, 2 male and a female shoveler and a male wigeon. The highlight though was a cattle egret feeding close to the road with little egrets amongst some cows, looking quite smart as it develops into summer plumage and my first sighting of one on Exminster Marsh.

 Cattle Egret, Exminster Marsh

 Cattle Egret

Cattle Egret

I carried on to Powderham Marsh, seeing female orange tips and a green veiled white in more sheltered spots along the way, and from the viewing platform there were many Canada geese including a pair with 5 very yellow and fluffy goslings. Lapwings were noisily displaying and a few small chicks were also seen running around, and other waders noted were 2 oystercatcher, a flighty flock of around 80 black-tailed godwits in mixed summer and winter plumage and 4 little ringed plover.

Black-tailed Godwits, Powderham Marsh

 Orange Tip

Orange Tip

3 Egyptian geese were found amongst the Canada geese before 2 flew off towards Turf and the single bird left went to sleep amongst the grass and also seen were teal, 2 pairs of tufted ducks and 2 male and a female shoveler (possibly the birds seen earlier on Exminster Marsh).

A nice surprise though was a little gull feeding along the waters edge and occassionally flying around , a sub adult bird in summer plumage but with a white speckled black head. It had been reported on the bird sites a few days previously but reports had dried up and I assumed it had moved on so I was very pleased to see it although it was quite distant. It appeared a bit weak and wobbly on its feet as it fed along the waters edge but flew strongly and I guess its wobbly gait was due to the continuing strong winds.

 Little Gull

Duchess of Sutherland

Monday 29th April and it was time for my annual Dartmoor bird day with Mavis, a little earlier than usual but we still had a great day despite the grey skies and drizzly mizzle. We parked up at Bennets Cross and walked down to Golden Dagger in Soussons and as we began our walk we could hear skylarks singing away and a distant cuckoo calling. Willow warblers were very vocal and showy too and we eventually found the calling cuckoo perched in a tree being mobbed by a small bird (probably a pipit) but it remained very distant.

A pair of stonechat, a male reed bunting, 2 songflighting tree pipits, a kestrel, a buzzard, swallows overhead, 2 mistle thrush, 3 male whinchats and 3 redpolls continually flying around calling were also seen with a green woodpecker also heard yaffling despite the wet conditions but the undoubted highlight was a reeling grasshopper warbler. We picked it up giving brief and quiet reels at first before it reeled loudly and strongly and then appeared on top of a bramble bush allowing some close and good views for around 15 minutes before it went quiet and disappeared from view.


 Grasshopper Warbler , Soussons

 Grasshopper Warbler

Grasshopper Warbler 

I wasn't expecting to see any green tiger beetles in the cool and wet weather but we did manage to find one which allowed very close views as it enjoyed the warmth of my hand and showed off it's absolutely gruesome set of jaws.

 Green Tiger Beetle

 Green Tiger Beetle

Green Tiger Beetle

After some lunch at Warren House Inn we drove round to Challacombe Farm for the second part of our walk and fortunately the mizzle had stopped but the skies remained grey. 4 Tamworth piglets running around at the farm kept us company as we walked around and we managed to see swallows, a grey wagtail, 2 songflighting redpolls, a song thrush, more willow warblers and a singing male redstart which was very mobile and elusive.

Redstart, Challacombe Farm

We eventually heard a cuckoo calling and managed to find it perched in the top of a dead tree where we managed to get some very good views before it flew off into cover.

 Cuckoo

 Cuckoo

 Cuckoo

Cuckoo

We had a look in the fields by the roadside as we began our drive back home and we managed to eventually find a male whinchat along with a pair of linnets and 2 pairs of wheatears, a nice end to a very enjoyable day out.

 Wheatear

Whinchat

Tuesday April 30th and a dry morning with sunny spells saw me heading out to Wembury for a quick walk before yet another dreaded night shift. It was fairly quiet and not too busy and along the beach I found a lone winter plumaged bar-tailed godwit, a curlew and 7 noisy whimbrels with the oystercatchers. A cirl bunting was heard singing with blackcaps and chiffchaffs and there seemed to be whitethroats singing everywhere. I finally managed to see my first Wembury swallows of the year with a group of 8 coming in off the sea and heading off straight inland followed by a trickle of 1 or 2 birds in off the sea on the rest of my walk.

Stonechat, Wembury

The toilet block held a green carpet and a double-striped pug which I caught and released outside.

 Green Carpet

Double-striped Pug

A few orange tips and green-veined whites were seen along with a single speckled wood plus 2 common lizards and bloody-nose beetle larva before it was time to head back home.

Bee Sp.?

Bee Sp.




Tuesday, 4 April 2017

Even more Cattle Egrets and the Wrong Gull on a trip to Cornwall

Sunday 2nd April and it was a gorgeous sunny Spring day and I had 2 choices - head east to the River Exe (for the 3rd week in a row) or west to Hayle and Penzance. I didn't relish the thought of a long train journey but in the end I decided on west anyway due to the lure of a near adult ring billed gull being reported at Hayle.

I arrived first at Penzance at around 11:15 and on a brief look offshore from the bus station I found the resident male eider close inshore along with a diving Sandwich tern, while further offshore a few gannets were flapping around.

Male Eider, Penzance - record shot into the sun

Another cetacean was washed up on the beach, this time a common dolphin and again tagged by the Cornwall Wildlife Trust. Apparently it has been a bad winter this year for dead porpoises and dolphins being washed up on Cornish beaches but I fortunately haven't come across any at Wembury this year.

Common Dolphin

The walk to Marazion was very warm in the sunshine, not helped by my wearing my winter coat, but I eventually arrived at Long Rock Pool where 2 male tufted duck were seen along with moorhen, a pair of mallard and bathing herring, lesser black backed and great black backed gulls.

Marazion Marsh had more going on with a willow warbler heard singing along with chiffchaffs and Cettis warblers, 2 little egrets, a little grebe, 2 male reed buntings, teal, mallard, moorhen, 2 Canada geese, a greylag goose and a nice singing male stonechat.

Male Stonechat, Marazion

Grey herons were sitting on nests or fishing around the marsh with birds regularly chasing each other around. One nest in the top of the reeds held some small fledglings, I counted 3 small heads but a photographer with a massive camera lens said there were in fact 4 but 1 was being picked on by the other 3 and was looking in a bad way.

Grey Heron with Teal, Marazion

I caught the bus from Long Rock to St.Erth and walked down to the causeway bridge overlooking the Hayle estuary and the tide was right out. Unfortunately the gulls were bathing and resting on the mudflats further downriver than usual and viewing was difficult in the harsh light and heat haze and despite searching I couldn't find the ring billed gull nor the 2 reported Iceland gulls. However I did find a bonus gull, a very smart adult little gull, which flew in over the bridge and headed downriver before flying back over to Ryans Field where it fed over the water for a few minutes and then headed off inland. Its red legs, black underwing and light grey upperwings fringed with white were very noticeable although it had not developed the black hood of summer plumage ( a 1st winter bird has also been reported on the bird sightings pages).

 Little Gull, Ryans Field

 Little Gull

 Little Gull

 Little Gull

 Little Gull

Little Gull - Crop Shot

While scanning through the gulls I picked up a sleeping spoonbill, it awoke briefly and showed a pale yellowish bill so was not the usual resident bird. A short time later I picked up a spoonbill high overhead which soared around for a while before landing in the river channel to feed, being the resident bird with a yellow tipped black bill and a few black feathers in the wing tips.

Spoonbill

Other birds of note were 1 greenshank, 5 winter plumaged bar tailed godwit, 2 summer plumaged black tailed godwit, good numbers still of wigeon, a few teal, oystercatcher, redshank and curlew.

Redshank

A nice surprise were 6 cattle egret on Ryans field, starting to show the buffy crowns of breeding plumage. They appeared quite nervous and unsettled, moving around the field to feed and mostly staying close together and represent my first UK cattle egret sighting outside of Devon!

 Cattle Egret - 5 of the 6

Cattle Egret - 5 of the 6

So not a bad day out although I missed a few birds reported on the day - great skua, hobby, swallow, black throated diver and sand martin at Marazion and the ring billed gull at Hayle - but I had enjoyed my sightings with a bonus view of a faded but intact painted lady butterfly on the grass verge by the causeway bridge at Hayle.




Sunday, 12 March 2017

Cornish Gulling in the Mist

I finally managed to catch the train to Penzance for a days birding on Saturday 11th March and being a Saturday it only cost me £10.40 return. It was a grey and dull day and as the train passed through Hayle it was clear but on arriving in Penzance I was greeted by thick fog, I couldn't even see St. Michaels Mount! All thoughts of searching offshore for divers and sea ducks were abandoned and I decided to give Jubilee Pool a miss too and headed off along the coast path to Marazion.

Mounts Bay from Penzance Bus Station

A quick scan from the sea wall by the bus station failed to find any black redstarts but resting on the rocks on the low tide was a smart male eider, my first of the year.

Male Eider in the Gloom

I did have a few scans of the sea although visibility was very poor but I did pick up a few disorientated adult gannets close to the beach and 2 great northern divers together just about visible in the murk. A small flock of small waders flew along the beach before alighting in the surf, presumably sanderling but I could pick out no plumage detail on them in the fog. A sad sight was a dead harbour porpoise along the beach, tagged by the Cornwall Wildlife Trust and with an injury to its eye or having been nibbled at by gulls or crows.

 Harbour Porpoise

Harbour Porpoise Teeth

It felt very mild and humid and on nearing Long Rock Pool I could see a line of birders scanning the Pool from the road and on a quick scan around I picked up a sand martin, my first proper spring migrant of the year. I headed up to the road to join the group and I eventually picked up 4 birds swooping around and chittering away but surprisingly easily overlooked in the murk. Even better though were lovely views of a 1st winter little gull flying back and forth over the water and dipping down to pick at small flies on the water surface, a lovely looking bird with red legs and smart black and white plumage. It eventually settled on the water and swam around snatching at flies, looking very monochrome on a very monochrome day.

 Little Gull, Long Rock Pool

 Little Gull

Little Gull

Also seen on the Pool were a pair of teal, a little grebe, 2 male tufted duck, moorhen, a pair of mute swan and lesser black backed gulls, while in the vegetation were long tailed tits, chiffchaffs and Cettis warblers. A brief look at nearby Marazion Marsh revealed a male gadwall, a male shoveler, 2 Canada geese, a little egret, teal, mallard, moorhen, a coot, 5 male and 9 female wigeon, a pair of stonechats, more Cettis warblers, grey herons on nests in the reeds and a brief view of a water rails backside disappearing into the vegetation.

Grey Heron, Marazion Marsh

I decided to cut my losses and caught the bus from Long Rock to St.Erth earlier than planned (£4 for a single ticket for a 4 mile journey!), hoping that it was going to be clear over the Hayle estuary as it was earlier when I passed through but unfortunately it was shrouded in mist too although not as thick as it had been in Penzance.

I scanned across the estuary on the low tide from the causeway bridge and quickly found the regular 1st winter Iceland gull roosting on the mudflats in the gull flock nearest to the bridge despite the poor visibility. It was quite unsettled, constantly getting up off the mud and changing position, probably not helped by the attentions of nearby immature herring gulls which kept hassling it including one bird which kept tugging at its tail feathers.

 Iceland Gull, Hayle Estuary

Iceland Gull - just about to get its tail pulled

I decided to walk to Hayle to buy some lunch and then walk back to the causeway bridge, hoping that the mist might clear a little. It did eventually lift when some rain showers arrived and the temperature noticeably dropped too and at last I could actually see the birds.

On the Carnsew Pool were 4 little grebe and a male red breasted merganser while on the mud were 12 grey plover and a lone 1st winter common gull. Variously plumaged Mediterranean gulls were mobile around the Pool and gave a few high pitched calls.

The resident spoonbill gave some good views again as it busily fed along the waters edge. At one point it walked out of the water and onto the mud to do a very pinky coloured poo before returning to the water to recommence feeding, a behaviour I have seen before in a spoonbill along the River Lynher (and also a white billed diver at Hayle) - I guess you don't defecate where you eat as per the old adage - although the spoonbill had no trouble pooping over the roosting gulls as it flew over the estuary later.

 Spoonbill, Carnsew Pool

 Spoonbill

Spoonbill

Back at the causeway bridge on the incoming tide and as expected there was no sign of the Iceland gull but I did see a greenshank, wigeon, redshank, curlew, 12 bar tailed godwit, a ringed plover, a summer plumaged black tailed godwit, 2 adult and 3 1st winter common gulls, a male and 6 female teal, oystercatcher, a mute swan, grey heron and little egret. The male red breasted merganser seen earlier on the Pool appeared on the river close to the bridge along with the spoonbill out on the mudflats and a rock pipit fed along the causeway wall. Interestingly a few of the roosting gulls were seen to cough up pellets which were immediately investigated by nearby carrion crows.

 Little Egret

Curlew

I kept scanning through the gulls but could find nothing unusual amongst the great black back, lesser black back, herring and black heads but eventually the Iceland gull flew in and gave some great views with its ghostly pale plumage being very obvious amongst the other roosting gulls - and definently an Iceland gull!

 Iceland Gull

 Iceland Gull

 Iceland Gull

Iceland Gull

And so a good day out with some nice views of a good range of birds despite the misty gloom.