Showing posts with label Spotted Redshank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spotted Redshank. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 January 2017

My kind of birding or, the blog still lives

January 2nd 2017 - Topsham


OK, it's been a while. Several reasons come to mind but mostly it's just idleness and bloody-mindedness. Early in the autumn I decided the theme for the season was going to be 'patch loyalty'. I'd turn my nose up at all the fancy vagrating exotica turning up elsewhere and spend my time in and around Topsham; yeah, I know I twitched the LG Shrike in September but that was only 40 miles away and it was a shrike, plus my plan hadn't fully developed by then. So I daily scanned The Rec for rare gulls, stood by suitable bushes at BGM and Highfield Farm listening for the calls of lost Siberian passerines, and checked the pools for transatlantic waders. The result - zero. Nothing to trouble the BBRC (or even the DBRC for that matter). I could have become discouraged; maybe it was the patch, maybe it was me. But The Rec has had some great birds in the past and I've even found some of them myself. This is where bloody-mindedness comes in to its own, persistence in the absence of encouragement or, no birds yet - keep plugging away. At this point I should be able to report a major rarity find but as you'll know that hasn't happened just yet. Still, a new year and all that; January and February to come and still the chance of a decent gull, we've turned the corner on winter and spring's now in sight. I decided to refresh my birding batteries, join the crowd for a day and spend a few hours just pottering around Topsham on my bike for some New Year's Day birding - I know it was the 2nd but the 1st was a shocker so I postponed. Maybe it was the weather, sunny though not warm, maybe it was bumping in to old birding mates, but more than anything it was the birds - nothing rare, just variety, a bit of spectacle and some real quality. I had a really great day; I also took a few photos.

First the Yellow-browed Warbler found by The Rec's other regular 'patcher' Martin Elcoate. Always a pleasure to spend time with one of these, I just wish they'd sit still a bit more often.

Yellow-browed Warbler - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017
 Tracking the bird and focusing through the branches was a little difficult at times.

Yellow-browed Warbler - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017

Yellow-browed Warbler - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017
 Showing the faint pale crown stripe.

Yellow-browed Warbler - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017
The tail feathers appear to be worn and pointed indicating, not surprisingly, a 1st winter bird.

Yellow-browed Warbler - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017
Constantly searching for, and finding, food - overwintering caterpillars presumably.

Bowling Green Marsh and the VP were, as expected, heaving with people, Avocets and ducks so after an hour scanning the estuary for a few year ticks I went on to Goosemoor. The long-staying Spotted Redshank gave its usual close views as it swam and probed for worms (ragworm?) as soon as the falling tide allowed.

Spotted Redshank - Topsham Goosemoor 2/1/2017

Spotted Redshank - Topsham Goosemoor 2/1/2017

Spotted Redshank - Topsham Goosemoor 2/1/2017

Spotted Redshank - Topsham Goosemoor 2/1/2017
  And possibly even more elegant, a fine Greenshank.

 Greenshank - Topsham Goosemoor 2/1/2017

Greenshank - Topsham Goosemoor 2/1/2017

Greenshank - Topsham Goosemoor 2/1/2017
I dropped back in on The Rec later for the low tide gulls and another seesion with the Yellow-browed Warbler. The gulls failed to deliver but the YBW continued to perform and our wintering Goldeneye and Long-tailed Duck looked good enough to photograph, so I did.

Goldeneye - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017

Long-tailed Duck - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017

Long-tailed Duck - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017

Long-tailed Duck - Topsham Rec 2/1/2017
A few final thoughts: is Topsham really the best place in the world? Why does birding these days feel like an episode of  'Last of the Summer Wine', and why is every other birder I know called Dave?

Thursday, 26 September 2013

Why can't all waders be this tame?

25th September 2013 - Topsham


I use a modest 300mm f4 lens, usually with a 1.4x teleconverter, so in order to get anything more than 'record shots' I need to be fairly close to the bird. Like paparazzi-shy celebrities the birds usually don't want to co-operate; I've had a flock of gulls - the same birds that would cheerfully steal an ice cream from your hand - take off when they notice my lens pointing at them. But of all the waders using the Exe, from Dunlin to Curlew, it's consistently the juvenile Black-tailed Godwits that are the most confiding. Any Common Sandpiper, Redshank or Greenshank on my side of the river will fly it if even thinks I'm going to head its way. The Godwits just look up, then carry on feeding, often walking towards me. I've probably got more decent photos of Blackwits than any other wader; here's a few from the Recreation Ground, all cropped but halved in size.

Black-tailed Godwit juvenile - Topsham 25/9/2013
The first two photos (above and below) show a bird which is still mostly in juvenile plumage, just one of the longer scapulars has been replaced by a plain grey adult type feather.

Black-tailed Godwit juvenile - Topsham 25/9/2013
Here's another bird (below) still wearing almost a full set of juvenile feathers, it's hard to judge but there might be a few new scapulars appearing.

Black-tailed Godwit juvenile - Topsham 25/9/2013
This one (next two photos) is more advanced in its moult, showing a lot of new plain adult type scapulars and patches of new grey feathers on the breast sides and flanks.

Black-tailed Godwit juvenile moulting to 1st winter - Topsham 25/9/2013
Black-tailed Godwit juvenile moulting to 1st winter - Topsham 25/9/2013
To be honest, it's not just Godwits; I did manage to approach a Spotted Redshank quite closely earlier in the day. It would have been sharper - the light wasn't that low - but the early mist on the river killed all contrast, a bit like shooting through a dirty window.

Spotted Redshank juvenile - Topsham 25/9/2013