After a serene crossing to Uberlingen, I was immediately impressed by the place and in particular by the town gardens, where the bright flowers and the cacti really caught my eye - and I'm not generally the sort of person to go overboard about formal gardens.
The cacti at Uberlingen |
The last day of the holiday was in one way the best in that it was the only day I actually made a couple of totally new sightings.
The first was going through the Eriskircher Ried, which seemed to have much more going on than the other wetlands I visited and seems to be a hot spot for orioles. I noticed a lot of squawking coming from some deciduous trees and after some difficulty got a brief but definite view of a woodpecker that looked 'different'. I'm pretty sure it was a grey woodpecker and my suspicion was substantiated by an old chap I bumped into who confirmed they are in the area.
I also got a view of one of the many hyperactive nuthatches and concluded they are slightly more slimly built that the UK variety and have a thinner headstripe, or so I thought. There was also a good view through the binoculars of a jay carrying an acorn it its beak. At first sight I thought it might have been a bird of prey but these remained few and far between barring the odd red kite... except for one buzzard I briefly observed overhead.
Mediterranean Gulls |
Then right at the end of day I stopped at Lochau on the way back to Bregenz, finding a seat at a pleasant looking estuary. There were a few birds about but notably some small gulls that flew up the estuary to pick bits of weed from the surface of the stream. I don't normally have much regard for gulls but these seemed more dove-like apart from some minor bits of squabbling. I was able to identify them as mediterranean gulls. In German they are known as Lachmowe which, interestingly, gets translated on internet dictionaries as black-headed gull. It's only by crosschecking the latin names that you can clearly see that this is an error.
But in a way the star bird performance happened slightly earlier when I was resting at Lindau and a cheeky sparrow took a fancy to my plum tart. I enticed it onto the table but couldn't persuade it to eat from my hand.
Cheeky sparrow |
After my arrival home I was pleased to note that a red admiral landed on the last remaining sprig of buddleia on 21st September, the latest I have yet achieved.