Wednesday, 30 November 2016

Wednesday 30th November

Of course I should have realised that the unidentified waders in the last post were in fact turnstones. I'm really not quite sure how I missed that as I've seen them before. Perhaps the photo made them look bigger than I was expecting.

Last week mainly avoided the great outdoors in view of ongoing cold snap, but on Sunday visited Northumberlandia with my sister - a surprisingly barren place for birds in view of the fact that it's been established for a few years. Just two swans on one lake and a couple of crows and seagulls. More exciting was a kestrel hovering over the edge of the huge opencast mine next to it.  It made me remember how rarely we see them now in Dumfries and Galloway.

I have spent some time out looking for waxwings but couldn't find them at the ice bowl or in where sitings had been reported, nor around St Michael's churchyard, where they often attack the yewberries.
Waxwings in Georgetown
Heathhall

Then following a lead on twitter I amended my planned bike ride today and found them just a few minutes away on the main road out of the estate towards the Craigs. They seemed to be still roosting. Also it looked to be a bigger flock than reported elsewhere.  I counted them and there were about thirty.

Had a bit of spare time so took a detour to Caerlaverock WWT and quickly saw a stonechat moving across the road.  I then regretted not having brought a pair of binoculars as there were a couple of birds that were hard to identify at distance, including the statutory barnacle geese (no binoculars needed).

Returning through the same area, I then did spot a kestrel, making it two in four days.  Very pleased after my wistful thoughts about kestrels on Sunday.

Whooper Swans
To top that there were about 100 whooper swans in a field just past the Brow Well riding east - not a totally rare sight, but pleasing nevertheless..

I returned through Heathhall, but two groups of waxwings on the same day was asking too much.

Monday, 21 November 2016

Monday 21st November

Rather slim pickings over the past few weeks, but here's a summary of what has happened.

Last Wednesday, did a windy bike ride to Crocketford and back through the Glenkilns. Three long-tailed tits passed through a tree on the cycle track and a red kite was sailing around just South of Crocketford. On the way back there were good sightings of three more kites and a buzzard.
Squirrel on Guard

Stopped on the hill where red squirrels and tits often come down to feed, but few did.  The one squirrel that did turn up seemed more intent on guarding the feeders than eating itself, though it did take a couple of bits of apple.

The following day, I followed up news that waxwings are in the Dumfries area, but didn't see any in the obvious areas of Dock Park and St Michael's Churchyard though the latter already contained plenty of yewberries and the blackbirds and thrushes were making merry.

On Friday I travelled to Alnwick and paused briefly at Bolam Lake where a couple of male goldeneye were visible.

Unidentified
At the coast over the weekend there was not a whole lot to see.  However the rocks at Alnmouth contained some sanderling and redshank, plus these waders (right) which I haven't been able to identify. I'm wondering if they were juvenile plovers.

Also unidenitifiable were some large brown-looking diving birds that we at first mistook for seals, but they were too far off to even hazard a guess at.

At home my favourite coal tit is still busy and was picking minute grubs out of the pear tree today.

Monday, 7 November 2016

Monday 7th November

Took advantage of a sunny afternoon to walk along the merse from Caerlaverock Nature Reserve to the edge of the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust site before gloomier waether sets in this week.

You wouldn't think there had already been a couple of frosts from the number of insects on the wing, notably a number of whitefly around the car park and path and even a brown dragonfly.

White Mustard?
On the way to the merse I caught site of a bright male bullfinch and shortly after a fleeing jay. Otherwise there wasn't much to be seen on the way there but there was a lot of gorse around and also this stuff.  The nearest suggestion I can get from my Book of Flowers is white mustard.

In the hedgerow bordering the Wetland Trust, I was amused to identify another goldcrest, making it two in two visits. Maybe they are managing a comeback. I'm sure they were very badly hit by the extreme winters of five years ago.

On the way back there was a single buzzard moping in a tree, a quick glimpse of a couple of lapwing sailing over the distant fields, and this little brown item (pictured below).  I'm still waiting for suggestions about it's identity but the yellow beak and lack of white tail outline suggests it might just be a twite.

Twite??