Tuesday 29 October 2019

Beachy (29 October)

Tuesday 29 October. A morning at Beachy visiting Shooter's Bottom, Old Trapping Area, Cliff Path, Birling and Bell Tout. I recorded 920 Wood Pigeons and 3 Stock Doves NE, single Great Spotted and Green Woodpeckers, 3 Ravens, 7 Swallows and a House Martin E, 4 Long-tailed Tits, 5 Chiffchaffs, 3 Goldcrests, a juvenile Ring Ouzel, an impressive 33 Mistle Thrushes (flocks of 8, 10 & 15 low E over the cliff edge), 18 Robins, 3 Black Redstarts, 3 Stonechats, a Redpoll (heard only) and 105 Goldfinches E. A couple of others saw a ring-tailed Hen Harrier but I was too far east at the time, but in any event would probably have been looking the wrong way ...
Ring Ouzel at Shooter's Bottom, Beachy Head
part of a flock of about 600 Jackdaws opposite Bell Tout Wood

Monday 28 October.
Megan and I took Cookie up to Cissbury where we saw 3 Stock Doves, 2 Jays, 12 Fieldfares, 2 Mistle Thrushes and 20 Goldfinches.

Saturday 26 October 2019

Cuckmere (26 October) & travel to and from Shetland

Saturday 26 October. Megan, Nessa and I took Cookie up to Mill Hill which was very quiet in a strong SW wind, a Kestrel being the only species noted. Megan and I then had our flu jabs before I took Cookie to the Cuckmere to look for the Grey Phalarope which had been found a week earlier. This wasn't quite my first opportunity to look for it but I'd only returned from visiting Dave Cooper and Brenda Kay the previous morning and after 48 hours of travelling (overnight ferry, a day in Aberdeen and overnight bus) didn't feel up to it. We walked from Chyngton Farm and dropped into the Cuckmere to see it extensively flooded. Nothing was obvious amongst the roosting gulls but 11 Rock Pipits along the river bank seemed a decent count. I wondered how many were Scandinavians hiding in winter plumage. The Grey Phalarope was on the pools near the entrance to Foxhole Farm but was very flighty, probably not helped by the Beachy Head Marathon going on right next to it. We watched its quick circuit a couple of times and I took some photos although it didn't stay still for a moment and the light wasn't great. A Swallow flew over and in a field by the car two adult Mediterranean Gulls were present in a small roost.
Grey Phalarope in the Cuckmere




  


Mediterranean Gulls in the Cuckmere


Wednesday 23 October-Friday 25 October. Dave dropped me at Belmont where I just caught an early ferry to Gutcher. I had over an hour wait for the bus across Yell and it was raining so I tried hitching when the next ferry came and a couple from Unst were kind enough to pick me up and take me all the way to Lerwick on their shopping run. I checked into the ferry terminal, left my bag and wandered around Lerwick. So much cover in the gardens, especially compared to Unst. There were a few gulls in the harbour and I saw 19 Eider and 2 Black Guillemots in the sound. The MV Hjaltland departed on time at 17:30 and arrived in Aberdeen at 07:00 on Thursday morning. As it turned out I could have caught the 07:35 bus to London but I'd not wanted to risk the ferry being late had booked the next, at 18:20. Unfortunately Northlink wouldn't allow me to leave my bag in their left luggage, there was none at the Bus Station and the railway's had closed 10 days earlier. The Tourist Office didn't know of anywhere, and weren't offering so I was stuck with my bag all day which ruled out revisiting Girdle Ness. I slowly walked around a sculpture trail, with plenty of stops, and had lunch and read a book in a churchyard. I bought a paperback in an Oxfam bookshop and when asked if I wanted a bag replied I'd far to many as it was and recounted the unleft luggage tail. The guy there offered to keep my bag until they closed which gave me the opportunity to visit the Maritime Museum. My bus left on time, was changed at Hamilton (for some unspecified problem) and I arrived at Victoria a few minutes late. There was an early Brighton bus which I was allowed on and I was back home two hours earlier than expected at 11:00. The journey home from Unst had taken 49 hours and cost £38.

Viking influence on Lerwick street names
argentatus Herring Gulls in Lerwick
MV Hjaltland in Lerwick
Trumpet Leaf on the roof garden at St Nicholas Centre, part of the Aberdeen Sculpture & CuriosTrail  

Moon Table on the roof garden at St Nicholas Centre, part of the Aberdeen Sculpture & CuriosTrail
Poised, Marischal Square, one of the stars of the Aberdeen Sculpture & CuriosTrail
Robert the Bruce outside Marischal College, still on the Aberdeen Sculpture & CuriosTrail
The Well of Spa, gifted to the City in 1635 according to the Aberdeen Sculpture & CuriosTrail guide
Aberdeen street art that surprisingly didn't feature on the trail
my favourite, another that didn't make the cut
Aberdeen Harbour from the Maritime Museum

MV Hjaltland
model of MV St Clair III in the Maritime Museum, the Shetland ferry in the 1970s when I first visited
Saturday 05 October-Wednesday 23 October. Birding with Dave Cooper on Unst (and two unsuccessful trips to Feltar). Will be blogged when photos sorted although they are probably not worth waiting for. Full accounts for this period with much better photos are already on Dave's Birding North Unst blog http://eastsussexbirding.blogspot.com/2019/10/23rd-october-2019-unst-sw4-light-rain.html and earlier.

Thursday 03 October-Saturday 05 October. Buses to Brighton, Victoria Coach Station and overnight to Aberdeen arriving at noon. Checked onto Northlink Ferry terminal and left my bag (not an option on the return). Walked to Girdle Ness seeing a male Pheasant cross the road in Baxter Street on the way. Offshore at least 400 Kittiwakes and 40 Gannets flew north and a few Razorbills and Guillemots were seen on the sea. There I flushed a Common Snipe, saw a Blue Tit and 4 Rock Pipits on the walk back and an Eider in the harbour. After a comfortable overnight crossing n MV Hjaltland I arrived in Lerwick and caught the bus to Toft, ferry to Ulsta, minibus across Yell to Gutcher (I was the only passenger, often there weren't any) and ferry to Belmont where I was met by Dave Cooper. Transport from Shoreham to Unst had cost me £45 but taken 42 hours. 
Aberdeen Harbour
MV Hjaltland rear left


Aberdeen from the Torry Battery
Rock Pipit
Shags
Cormorants
repairs to Toft Pier



Wednesday 23 October 2019

Unst, part 3 of 3 (17-23 October)

Thursday 17 October. Dave and I started at Skaw and walked the North Cliffs checking the Geos. I found it hard work (as usual) and although there seemed to be more birds about they were all fairly ordinary. A circuit around Norwick was similar - it probably wasn't that bad but I was pretty down from yesterday's rubythroat dip - and we returned to Millfield for toast. Dave suggested spending the afternoon walking the cliffs at Lamba Ness. It seemed like a good idea as it was somewhere we had not been for a few days. We drove a little way down the approach track and Dave dropped me by the small quarry before parking a bit further on. I followed some dry stone walls and abandoned crofts to the coast, meeting him where the ditch/burn he'd followed down from the road came out. We followed the coast around the North Cliffs towards Lamba Ness. This proved a wise choice as mid afternoon Dave, who was a few paces ahead of me as we approached the 'causeway', flushed a white-rumped redpoll feeding with some Snow Buntings near the cliff edge. Views were very suggestive of Arctic Redpoll and from the outset Dave considered it a very strong hornemanni contender. I was out of my depth having previously only seen one in Suffolk but when flying it gave a short buzzing call which was quite unlike any redpoll either of us had heard before - on one memorable occasion it flew right over my head calling as it did. Dave sent Brydon a quick photo and described the call. Reassuringly Brydon had only heard similar from Hornemann's and thought the image very convincing too. The bird was quite mobile and twice we lost it for 20 minutes or so. We tried to record it but it only called once more and we were not quick enough. On one occasion it was feeding near two Siskins which looked puny in comparison. We followed it along the cliff edge near to the point at Lamba Ness where we lost it once more. By now the light was fading and we headed back to the car somewhat elated. The chance of finding one's own rarities is what birding on Unst is all about and by plugging away and not giving up we'd been successful, even if Dave had done all the heavy lifting. Birds seen included a Long-tailed Duck, Great Skua, 2 Merlins, 7 each of Chiffchaff and Blackcap, 20 Goldcrests, 3 Ring Ouzels, 5 Fieldfare, 150 Redwing, 23 Song and a Mistle Thrush, 24 Robins, Redstart, 2 Tree Sparrows, 50 Brambling, 20 Twite, the Hornemann's Arctic and 6 Mealy Redpolls, 4 Siskins and LaplandReed and 39 Snow Buntings.
male Redstart on walls near Lamba Ness
Goldcrest at Lamba Ness
initial views of Hornemann's Arctic Redpoll at Lamba Ness
with Snow Bunting
Hornemann's Arctic Redpoll on Lamba Ness. Its clear-cut peachy face and white body were perhaps its most obvious features, at least from a distance
showing its deep bill, clean flanks and with a bit of imagination unstreaked rump


pinched in bill











with much smaller Siskin


Hornemann's Arctic Redpoll at Lamba Ness (photo: Dave Cooper). Not a bird to mess with! 
Hornemann's Arctic Redpoll at Lamba Ness (photo: Dave Cooper)
Brambling and Lapland Bunting at Lamba Ness
Lapland Bunting on Lamba Ness








Friday 18 October. We visited Skaw, Lamba (where we couldn't find yesterday's Hornemann's Arctic Redpoll), Norwick, Haroldswick and Burrafirth and were heading back for tea when Dave suggested checking North Dale as we had half an hour of light left. It turned out to be an inspired choice ... A Waxwing was briefly sat on one of the low pine trees where we parked then flew off behind Saxa Vord. Walking up to North Dale we saw a grey shrike sat in the middle of the road. It was distant but it soon became apparent it had a large white wing patch and long wings - a Lesser Grey Shrike and a first-winter as it lacked a black forehead so definitely not Brydon's adult we'd seen at Halligarth a week earlier. Another day that had been an effort but where persistence eventually paid off. I was now definitely sold on Unst. Other birds seen included the Velvet Scoter (now in Norwick Bay), 2 Long-tailed DucksBlack Guillemot, Short-eared Owl (sadly a rescued road-casualty), a Swallow, 4 Chiffchaffs, 6 Blackcaps, just 2 Goldcrests, 4 Fieldfares, 80 Redwing, 15 Song and 3 Mistle Thrushes, 16 Robins, a Black Redstart, 3 Tree Sparrows, 140 Brambling, 25 Twite, 9 Mealy Redpolls, 2 Siskins and 18 Snow Buntings.

Snow Bunting at Skaw
Mistle Thrush at Lamba Ness
Siskin at Lamba Ness
Tree Sparrow at Vaylie
Black Redstart in Haroldswick

Burrafirth Burn, devoid of birds
first-winter Lesser Grey Shrike at North Dale showing extensive white in the wing but no dark forehead
just too far away for my camera
long wings

  

Lesser Grey Shrike at North Dale (photo: Dave Cooper). By now the light was fading fast but with the help of a fence post to rest his camera on Dave managed a shot showing the white tips to the flight feathers.
Saturday 19 October. We returned to North Dale but the wind had picked up overnight and the whole area was windswept. We had a good look for the Lesser Grey Shrike in adjacent valleys but without success. We tried Skaw which was quiet and were at Norwick when Brydon let Dave know that he and Mike had found an Olive-backed Pipit by the School at Baltasound. We drove straight there and after several frustrating flight views had a decent view in the pines. We followed Robbie back to his house to look for a Hawfinch that was coming to his feeders but it flew off just as we were arriving. A cup of tea and chat made the visit worthwhile. We returned to Millfield for toast, Dave seeing a juvenile Glaucous Gull from the kitchen window, my 100th species seen on Unst in the two weeks I'd been on the island. We returned to Lamba Ness where another 2 Glaucous Gulls were roosting, although not anywhere that was approachable. One was a very tatty, almost tail-less near adult and the other a very dark bodied first-winter. We finished the day at Haroldswick where the Black-throated Diver was still present in the bay and Burrafirth. Other birds seen during the day included Long-tailed DuckGreat Skua, a Swallow, 2 Chiffchaffs, 2 Blackcaps, 2 Fieldfares, 50 Redwing, 60 Brambling, 10 Mealy Redpolls and 7 Snow Buntings.
Olive-backed Pipit (photo: Dave Cooper). A nice bright bird and a good find for Brydon and Mike
near adult Glaucous Gull at Lamba Ness, in heavy moult



first-winter Glaucous Gull at Lamba Ness
with Great Black-backed and argentatus Herring Gulls

a very dark bodied bird, and all the more impressive because of it
Great Black-backed and argentatus Herring Gulls
rough seas off Lamba Ness north cliffs
Burrafirth, rough here too
Sunday 20 October. We headed for Lamba Ness for a seawatch checking a small gull roost on the track there. No Glaucous Gulls this time but an impressive argentatus Herring Gull with a seemingly familiar red colour ring. Here we messed up, trying to photograph it through the front windscreen rather than my attempting to read it through a telescope. By the time I thought to do so it had flown. Dave's photos revealed the first two characters (NJ) but the last two were indecipherable. If it was a North Thames bird, the commonest gull rings I see in Sussex, the third would be a number (it looked more like an L) and the last a T. The colour-ring website provided no further clues. Frustrated at having let it slip away
we continued to Lamba Ness finding shelter behind one of the derelict buildings from the cold moderate NNE wind. In a couple of hours we saw 2 Long-tailed Ducks, a first-winter Glaucous Gull, 150 Kittiwakes and 3 Blue and an estimated 5000 Fulmars flying north. An impressive first experience of a late autumn seawatch, although Dave had told me NW winds are best at this time of year, a bit of a surprise. We warmed up a bit walking around Skaw seeing little. A Woodcock was the highlight at Vaylie (my first on Unst) then we had a drive down south. With my time on Unst starting to slip away I took photos of all the tourist sites on the way to and from Sandwick where we saw 3 Great Northern Divers in the bay. Other birds seen during the day included the Velvet Scoter (back at Haroldswick), 20 Goldeneye, 3 Chiffchaffs, 4 Fieldfares, 40 Redwing, 2 Tree Sparrows (at Millfield), 55 Brambling, 20 Twite and 6 Mealy Redpolls.  
argentatus Herring Gull NJxx on the track to Lamba Ness
not much better without camera shake
Blue Fulmar flying north at Lamba Ness (photo: Dave Cooper). Impressive birds.
Viking Boat at Haroldswick



Unst's famous bus stop on the road to Baltasound and Unstfest Puffin
Herring Gulls at Easter Loch, despite its dark head the middle bird had the paler mantle and smaller size of a more familiar argenteus, the only one I noted on Unst if it was
remains of a Viking settlement at Sandwick
imagination needed
Lund Standing Stone
life-sized model of the White Wife of Watlee who supposedly appears to single men driving alone on this remote stretch of road, presumably after closing time
Monday 21 October. We spent the day visiting Skaw, Norwick, Burrafirth and Haroldswick. Despite the wind having gone around to the SW the birds had a decidedly wintry feel to them with the Velvet Scoter, 5 Goldeneye, a first-winter Glaucous Gull (at Burrafirth), 2 Merlins, single Common and Siberian Chiffchaffs, a Blackcap, Fieldfare, 30 Redwing, 9 Brambling, 25 Twite, 11 Mealy Redpolls and 25 Snow Buntings.
the female Velvet Scoter had returned to Norwick Bay


Tuesday 22 October. My last full day and with the wind finally in the NW we drove straight to Lamba Ness for a seawatch. We watched for three hours, sheltered infront of the last building. Northerly passage was impressive and I recorded male Long-tailed Duck, first-winter Glaucous Gull, 14 Great Skuas, 13 Little Auks (I failed to get onto a further 6), 11 Guillemots, 2 Razorbills, 2 Black Guillemots, a Puffin, 25,000 Fulmars, 68 Blue Fulmars (Dave saw 94!!), 250+ Kittiwakes, a Sooty Shearwater and 500+ Gannets. We returned to Vaylie then covered sites around Haroldswick. After returning for toast we tried Skaw and finished at Lamba Ness. Dave was hoping for another 6 Blue Fulmars but the wind had shifted and little was going past. Walking to the end of Lamba Ness we flushed a small short-tailed bunting shaped passerine from a damp area of shortish grass. It was silent and landed just out of sight on the cliff edge. We approached, perhaps too casually, and it flew further along the cliff edge and appeared to stop in a small gully. We were more cautious in our approach fully expecting to see it on the opposite side of the gully but it had vanished. We doubled back checking the cliffs and tried the area where we'd originally flushed it. Nothing. We tried further along the cliff but it had vanished. Frustrating as we had a pretty good idea what it had been. Continuing to Lamba Ness it was clear that the wind had shifted and little was going past. Dave would have to wait for a 100 Blue Fulmar day, although my 68 was close to his previous best. Other birds seen included Blackcap, 4 Fieldfares, 25 Redwing (including a dark bird in Norwick that looked good for Icelandic), a Redstart, 36 Brambling, single Lapland and Snow Buntings but no Twite or Mealy Redpolls.

Little Auks passing Lamba Ness (photo: Dave Cooper)
Lapland Bunting at Skaw

Skaw from Lamba Ness
Wednesday 23 October. We visited Skaw, Lamba and Vaylie seeing a Chiffchaff, Fieldfare, 15 Redwing, 16 Brambling and a Snow Bunting but no sign of yesterday's 'little' bunting. It was soon time to head south to Belmont and I said goodbye to Brenda. We had time to check Easter and Belmont Lochs seeing 5 Goldeneye on the former and just one Long-tailed Duck on the latter. Dave then dropped me at the ferry. I'd thoroughly enjoyed my time on Unst (Fetlar less so) and had been very well looked after by Brenda and Dave. Birding with Dave again after more than three years had been really excellent but the change in the weather and my being unable to shake off a persistent cough as well as missing Megan made me feel that I was leaving at about the right time, not that I was looking forward to the two day journey home.