Thursday, 30 April 2015

A tale of two Allens

Last week I had a trip to Allen Banks with my family and a walk along to Plankey Mill and back which produced most of the expected woodland species, Blackcap, Pied Flycatcher, Redstart, Willow Warbler, Chiffchaff, Dipper, Grey Wagtail and eventually a single Wood Warbler.  Unfortunately due to the poor light I didn't manage any photos worth publishing. 

On the way home we decided to take a detour to Allendale
to look for Black Grouse.  My usual spot only produced Red Grouse and Pheasant, so we headed for another site where I had seen them in the past.  A quick scan produced four Black Cock sitting on a wall and a rather beaten up looking bird sheltering behind the wall preening. 




And to finish a nice day, out came the sun.

With all the hype about the new Nikon P900 bridge camera, I was considering trading my SX50 in for one.  But then yesterday whilst up around Druridge my trusty SX50 produced these shots.





Now I'm back to thinking why do I need to change my camera and have to learn all new techniques again?  So I think I'll just plod on with my SX50, for now. 

Monday, 30 March 2015

Pigeons Beware!!

It's about time that Newcastle joined (what seems like) every other city in the UK by having a breeding pair of Peregrine Falcons in the City Centre.  Newcastle's population of feral pigeons won''t know whats hit them.  Literally!




If the wind hadn't been so bl***y cold today I could have watched these for hours, but I had to leave when I lost all feeling in my hands.  I will have to go back on a less windy day, so I will actually be able to hold the camera still.  Although I am quite pleased with this shot, despite the difficult conditions.

Friday, 9 January 2015

Bright and even more Breezy

Out again this morning and I started at Horton Burn, where it was a bit surreal seeing two Little Egrets flying around a housing estate.  Also seen here was a very nice Kingfisher but it disappeared down the burn as soon as it saw me.  A quick look at West Hartford failed to produce the Great Grey Shrike, but not surprising in that wind.

My next stop was Cambios were after a few brief sightings of the Snow Bunting flock, eventually five or six did settle to feed under the wind turbine.


I then headed to Seaton Sluice where a sift through the Pink-feet flock did eventually turn up the Tundra Bean Goose.  Unfortunately this happened just after Brian Bullough had left after his third failure to find the Bean Goose.  A tip for finding this bird is to look for the most drap looking bird in the flock.  Not a bad couple of days birding, a good start to the 2015 year list.

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Bright and Breezy

I drove up to East Chevington this morning via West Chevington in the hope of a Hen Harrier on route, but had no luck.  On the North pool were Long-tailed Duck, Black-necked Grebe and lots of Goldeneye.  Just as I was about to leave, a flock of geese flew in from the North.  As they were flying in I could see two Bar-headed Geese, a few Pink-footed and a White-fronted Goose in amongst the Grey-lags.  Once they had settled on the pool I could see that the White-front was very small and it had a definite eye ring.  So it was a little disappointing that it was the Lesser White-fronted Goose of uncertain origin rather than a pucker White-front.

I then headed to Widdrington Moor where I spent the next hour with still no signs of the Hen Harrier.  Next stop was Druridge Pools where I picked up the Green-winged Teal almost straight away, doing what they do best, sleeping.  


I had a look at Creswell pond but the water level was very high, so I headed back to Widdrington Moor where the ringtail Harrier was hunting at the North side of the lake.  A nice end to a good mornings birding. 

Wednesday, 19 November 2014

Scopeless in Florida

My family and I spent the last two weeks in October on holiday in Florida at the home of the mouse.  It wasn’t really a birding trip but we did manage to escape the crowds on a few days to visit some of the superb birding hotspots of central Florida.
This was my first time birding in the United States and I achieved 82 lifers.  Being a family holiday and not a birding trip I opted not to take my scope and I never really felt that I needed it.  There was only one day that a scope would have been a help and that was the day we spent at Fort de Soto.  But even then, I may have only added another one or two birds to the list, so not really worth the effort of lugging my scope half way around the world.

We stayed at the Disney resort hotel Art Of Animation. Though this probably wasn’t the best location for birding, a walk around Hourglass Lake did turn up a few good birds including Pied-Billed Grebe, Common Yellowthroat, American Redstart, Tufted Titmouse, Blue Grey Gnatcatcher, Brown Thrasher, Red-Shouldered Hawk and Cooper’s Hawk. 



We also found a gem of a place in the centre of Orlando, Mead Botanical Gardens.  This place showed up on Ebird as a regular spot for Ruby-Throated Hummingbird and within twenty minutes of arriving we had a good but brief view of this cracking little bird.  Other highlights at Mead Gardens were Barred Owl (Thanks to local birder Marcus Sharpe), Yellow-Throated Warbler, Black & White Warbler, Yellow-Rumped Warbler, Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker and Blue-Headed Vireo.  



The only disappointment of the holiday was that Black Point Wildlife Drive on Merritt Island was closed for maintenance.  We did walk the Scrub Trail and drive Bio Lab Road, though I was expecting to see far more birds than we actually did.
A real highlight of the holiday though was watching Manatees from the watch point at Haulover Canal.  Other highlights from Merritt Island were Florida Scrub Jay at the Scrub Trail and the Canaveral Beach pay booth, Black Racer (snake) and male Painted Bunting at the Visitor Centre and the shear numbers of Belted Kingfishers all around Merritt Island.  Not to mention the none-birding highlight of Merritt Island, ‘Kennedy Space Centre’.  This place turns grown men into excited school boys.





Another couple of superb places that we visited were Circle B Bar Reserve and Fort de Soto.  Circle B Bar is an inland wetland reserve with a good mix of habitats and there seemed to be a constant kettle of Vultures and other Raptors overhead.  There is a good network of paths on the reserve, however it was a little unnerving walking along paths with Alligators in the pools at the side of them.  The highlights here were Short-Tailed Hawk (dark phase), good views of Bald Eagle, Caspian and Royal Tern, Green Heron, Yellow Warbler and Yellow-Throated Warbler. 



Fort de Soto is an island on the Gulf Coast South of St Petersburg.  This place is paradise with its white sandy beaches and palm trees.  I would love to have spent a few days here as one day is just not enough to do it justice.  The highlights were Magnificent Frigatebird, Reddish Egret, American Avocet, Black Skimmer, Groove-Billed Ani, Wilson’s Plover and Hooded Warbler. 




I only had five real targets and after the two weeks I was still missing one of them, Limpkin.
As our flight home wasn't until 19:10 we had a few hours to kill before heading to the airport. I had noticed a few reports on ebird from Kissimmee, so it seemed like a good place to spend a few hours chilling before the long flight home.  As we pulled up at the car park there were four Sandhill Cranes feeding in the front gardens of the houses.  After photographing the Cranes I turned around to walk back to the car and there on the grass behind me was a Limpkin eating an Apple Snail.  'A cracking bird to end our holiday with' I thought, then I spotted a bird flying low over the lake and as soon as I got my bins on it, I could see that it was a Snail Kite. So we moved around the lakeshore to a play park where I got better views of the Kite as my daughter played happily in the park.  Now that WAS a cracking bird to end the holiday with!




 

Here is a full trip list.

Pied-Billed Grebe*                    common
Brown Pelican*                         Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Magnificent Frigatebird*           Fort de Soto
Anhinga*                                   common
Double-Crested Cormorant*     common
Great Blue Heron*                    common
Great Egret                               common
Snowy Egret*                            common
Reddish Egret*                          Fort de Soto
Little Blue Heron*                      common
Tricolored Heron*                      common
Green Heron*                            Circle B Bar
Glossy Ibis                                Circle B Bar
White Ibis*                                everywhere
Wood Stork*                             Mead Gardens, Kissimmee
Canada Goose                         Kissimmee
Wood Duck*                             Mead Gardens
Muscovy Duck*                        Kissimmee
Mallard                                     common
Mottled Duck*                           Disney
Black Vulture*                          common
Turkey Vulture*                        common
Osprey                                     common
Snail Kite*                                Kissimmee
Cooper’s Hawk*                       Disney, Merritt Island, Circle B Bar, Fort de Soto
Northern Harrier*                      Merritt Island, Circle B Bar
Red-Shouldered Hawk*            common
Short-Tailed Hawk*                  Circle B Bar
Red-Tailed Hawk*                    Merritt Island
Bald Eagle*                              widespread
American Kestrel*                    Circle B Bar, Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Wild Turkey*                             roadside 528
Moorhen                                   Circle B Bar, Kissimmee
American Coot*                        Circle B Bar, Kissimmee
Limpkin*                                   Kissimmee
Sandhill Crane*                        Kissimmee, Roadside i95
Black-Bellied Plover                 Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Semipalmated Plover*              Fort de Soto
Wilson’s Plover*                        Fort de Soto
American Oystercatcher*          Fort de Soto
American Avocet*                     Fort de Soto
Greater Yellowlegs                   Merritt Island
Lesser Yellowlegs                     Merritt Island
Willet*                                        Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Turnstone                                  Fort de Soto
Sandling                                    Fort de Soto
Red Knot                                   Fort de Soto
Least Sandpiper*                       Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Short-Billed Dowitcher*              Fort de Soto
Laughing Gull*                            common
Caspian Tern                              Circle B Bar
Royal Tern*                                 Circle B Bar
Sandwich Tern                            Fort de Soto
Forster’s Tern*                            Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Black Skimmer*                           Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Mourning Dove*                          common
Common Ground Dove*             Merritt Island
Collard Dove                               Kissimmee
Monk Parakeet                            Kissimmee
Groove-Billed Ani*                       Fort de Soto
Barred Owl*                                 Mead Gardens
Ruby-Throated Hummingbird*    Mead Gardens
Belted Kingfisher*                        common
Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker*          Mead Gardens, Fort de Soto
Red-Bellied Woodpecker*           Circle B Bar, Mead Gardens, Fort de Soto
Downy Woodpecker*                   Mead Gardens, Fort de Soto
Eastern Wood-Pewee*                Merritt Island
Eastern Phoebe*                          Circle B Bar, Mead Gardens
Loggerhead Shrike*                     Merritt Island, Fort de Soto
Blue-Headed Vireo*                     Mead Gardens
White-Eyed Vireo*                        Merritt Island, Disney
Blue Jay*                                      Merritt Island, Circle B Bar
Florida Scrub Jay*                        Merritt Island
American Crow*                            Disney
Fish Crow*                                    Circle B Bar, Kissimmee
Tree Swallow*                               Merritt Island
Tufted Titmouse*                          Disney, Mead Gardens
Carolina Wren *                            Mead Gardens
House Wren*                                Circle B Bar, Mead Gardens
Ruby-Crowned Kinglet*                 Disney
Blue-Grey Gnatcatcher*                common
Gray Catbird*                                Circle B Bar, Merritt Island
Northern Mockingbird*                   common
Brown Thrasher*                           Disney
European Starling                         Fort de Soto
Yellow Warbler*                            Circle B Bar
Yellow-Rumped Warbler               Merritt Island, Mead Gardens
Palm Warbler*                                everywhere
Pine Warbler*                                Fort de Soto, Disney
Yellow-Throated Warbler*             Circle B Bar, Mead Gardens
Black & White Warbler*                 Mead Gardens, Fort de Soto
American Redstart*                       Disney, Mead Gardens
Common Yellowthroat*                 Disney, Circle B Bar, Merritt Island
Hooded Warbler*                           Fort de Soto
Indigo Bunting*                              Disney
Painted Bunting*                            Merritt Island
Northern Cardinal*                         Disney, Mead Gardens
Red-Winged Blackbird*                 Circle B Bar, Disney
Common Crackle*                         common
Boat-Tailed Crackle*                     common
House Sparrow                             common

Lifers*

We were probably about a week too late arriving to catch any real migration, but 101 species is not bad going considering I only had four birding days and a couple of birding walks around Disney.  Florida is a superb place to visit and I highly recommend it for a birding or none birding holiday.

Monday, 15 September 2014

Still Here!

I am still here, I just haven't had a lot of spare time to update this Blog due to work and family stuff.
I have had a couple of trips to the Lake District, not really birding, however one of the trips was to see a couple of old birds! The two Lancasters looked superb flying down Windermere.




I have managed to get out a few times recently up to Cresswell and Druridge Bay picking up most of the regular passage birds.  I hadn't planned on going birding today but with the weather looking good for migrants I was keeping an eye on Birdguides.  Then when the report of Red-Breasted Flycatcher at Druridge Pools came on it was too much to resist.




The light this morning was dyer so to get any shots of this bird was amazing.





Thursday, 5 June 2014

When in Rome....

I spent a few days at the end of May in Rome with the family.  We don’t usually do cities but Rome was superb!!  Over the two and a half days we were there we walked about twenty miles seeing most of the attractions.  As we had such a busy time fitting in all the amazing things to see in Rome I didn’t have much time to do any birding.  Despite this, we did see some good birds, Blue Rock Thrush, Serin, Firecrest and Sardinian Warbler in the Roman Forum, Hooded Crow, Yellow-Legged Gull, Ring-necked Parakeet and Italian Sparrow everywhere, Monk Parakeet in the Vatican Garden and Short-Toed Treecreeper in Villa Borghese.


Italian Sparrow Villa Borghese


Sardinian Warbler Roman Forum


Yellow-Legged Gull Trevi Fountain 


Hooded Crow Roman Forum


                                     Short-Toed Treecreeper Villa Borghese

Coming from a part of England with strong links to the Emperor Hadrian it was amazing to see buildings that he rebuilt in 126AD and are still standing today, like The Pantheon that originally dates back to the reign of Augustus 27BC-14AD.


The Pantheon


                                                                    Roman Forum

Unfortunately a few of the monuments had scaffolding on them including the Colosseum witch did spoil the effect a little bit, however I did manage to get photos with very little scaffolding showing. 


The Colosseum

                                                                                                           
St Peter's

Rome has to be one of the safest cities in Europe as there are police everywhere. I have never seen so many police as we saw in Rome and they are all armed.