14/09/2014

Scoping out new territory

Steart has still got me buzzing at the moment.  Its all this flooding and new hide business thats doing it.

I plodded along the river Parrett admiring the weak hot chocolate colour of the incoming water.

The usual flocks of gulls milled about and a few Little Egrets were hunting intently along the slippery shore.

I took a left and had a wander along the new pathways.  Its all very civil (ideal for EFRS bikes actually).

Suddenly a streak of white flashed right in front of my nose.  A Wheatear.  These are great little birds.  I carefully stalked him and managed this.






Only then did I realise there was more than one.  A flock!



I'm all ears! (sorry)

These fellas were quite friendly and seemed quite unconcerned by my prescence.  I wanted to get REALLY close.  I sat down and looked as unnassuming as possible.  I dont really have a scary, mean persona so I figured that the Wheatears might just ignore me.  It was going well.  They were looking about and even catching some critters on the ground.

Then something bad happened.  A dog plus accompanying handlers came trotting down the path.  I acted quickly.  I fired off a load of shots and got this one.

and one more for luck.



Unfortunately the light was terrible but then you cant have everything.  Sure enough the dog came snuffling along.  The Wheatears flew to the other other side of Steart.

"They are Wheatears?" one of them said cheerily

"They WERE".  It was a short conversation.

Disclaimer: I have nothing against dogs or their owners.  But I do have a problem with inconsiderate people.

I had a look in one of the hides.  Bit posh and very modern.  All fresh and new.

I looked out toward the flooded plain.  A very distant bird of prey was flying low and fast over the flooded field.  It rose sharply before descending and repeating the process.  I am not sure what it was if I'm honest.  Right at that moment I yearned for a scope.  I sold mine a few weeks ago due to excess weight (the scope, not me). 

But that was then and this is now.  I need a scope!!!

The next few evenings will no doubt involve numerous visits to a well known online auction site...

Luckily a GWE did just about come within Bin range.





Outside the hide I met the most stupid caterpillar in the world.



Dont stand here!!!!!

In the air there was lots going on with 5 Kestrels flying about.  One of them starting picking on a Buzzard

He slapped him all over the place.


As I was watching the Buzzard getting a good hiding.  I noticed another dark shape. Angular and fast.  Peregrine.  My viewing experience was hampered by me deciding to video the aformentioned bird.  The focus wasnt up to the task and the video is essentailly a black fluffy blob flying against a greyish background.  It wont be narrated by David Attenborough any time soon.

My 4th bird of prey was a female Sparrowhawk flying low across the marshes, with a steady flap, flap, glide motion.  Excellent!

Time was getting on so I marched back resisting the temptation to go on  a well known internet auction site (phones, the bane of humanity).

Back near the car I thought I had found a real life Star Wars Wookie...

Just after this picture he went mental and wanted to kill me.  I beat a hasty retreat.

After seeing a Wookie I encountered a dragon


An interesting day all-in-all.  Just not enough scope...



07/09/2014

Surf and Turf

Last outing was a dual solo effort with us both going our separate ways. Today it was back to a twin seater flight. Well we both went to Steart in the car! A four seater to be precise but never mind.
We're impressed with what's happening at Steart. We still haven't done the full extent but we're getting the idea. Jutting out into Bridgwater bay there is both the shore line and Parrett estuary to get your teeth into. This began at Combwich a lovely little village with a nice air of isolation about it. The area between Bridgwater and the coast does seem to be largely forgotten compared to the M5 side with all its built up industry and housing estates. Like it!

James started proceedings with macro bee action



James: Andrew headed straight to the water and was in his element.  Shooting at gulls, Herons and Redshank.

  I snuck through the undergrowth searching for some mini beast action.


James getting that Bee picture

Not having a lens small enough I turned my sub machine gun set up to more distant things.

Grey Heron in the Estuary

The Estuary

Charlie Chaplin!
(Someone will know why)

I then turned my attention to some textures in the mud banks

LOOK AT THE TEXTURE JUST LOOK AT THAT TEXTURE!!

erm some more textures

And so the long march began. We headed out of Combwich along the path following the river. Its still not completed and after about a mile we came across sign saying the path was closed. We weren't going to let that stop us. We can slip around that and see how we go surely! Nope its well and truly blocked. We turned and trudged back to the carpark. A bit of a frustrating disappointment.

What we saw along the way however was not so disappointing. As we walked we kept seeing 2 or 3 Kestrels. We came to the conclusion that they were the same ones time and again. Quartering around in a sedate fashion with no hunting action we reckoned they were young fledglings. Lots of flight interaction.

Kestrels

Looking through the many many Black Headed Gulls we noticed another Raptor like bird. Sure enough it was a Peregrine I mean Hobby or was it a Kestrel - Oh what ever!!. Again it didn't look like it was particularly hungry. Sailing along the still air. 

Oh - Its a Hobby!

Here is a Peregrine Juvenile Kestrel (Thanks once again Nick)

The air that day was perfectly still, absolutely no wind whatsoever and a bright if hazy sunlight. Quit a few buzzards quartering high above. Then we noticed something. One of the Buzzards was very different to the other 3 with it. Very pale to the point of being white. Our blood raced with excitement. Honey Buzzard?



Buzzards

Buzzards

Buzzards


That Honey Buzzard

The more we looked at the small images on the back of the cameras the more we were intrigued. Googling made it even worse. Did we have yet another A lister scoop?? We spent the next few hours discussing it intensely. Final verdict? Its one of those very pale variations you sometimes get. Somerset and the South West has a high proportion of Buzzard variants compared to elsewhere apparently. Buzzards can be very variable anyway and this one is an extreme example. We have never seen a Honey Buzzard for real but research does show that the head in particular looks different to a Common Buzzard. Narrow with eyes flush to the head as opposed to the sunken forward facing eyes and stocky head of a Common Buzzard. The tail is too short as well. The pics above with the 'standard' Buzzard are a good comparison. Oh well!!

One of the many old ships left to decay

The Parrett Estuary

As you walk you notice quite a few old posts and boats decaying in the mud banks. Signs of industry passed I suppose. What was once a way of life and a means of sustenance then becomes a decay, an eyesore to those that don't need it finally becoming part of the texture of the land. From function to fascination. Like castles that were once a symbol of oppression and now held in the greatest of esteem. Time is a funny morphosis. What will our children make of pylons?

We amused ourselves with the more common birds like a Raven sitting on a pylon opposite. It was quit a way away but we could still hear the eerie, to my ears, cold misty North Wales mountain, calls for quit a way past it. Ravens, like all carrion birds, are cool. Then a flash of feathers caught my eye and the distinctive sight of black and white rushed passed us. A pair of Avocets where flying down to the mouth of the estuary. I managed to get one record shot.

Avocets

We were accompanied along a section of the track by a female Wheatear flitting along the rocks

James: We both struggled with this picture.  The light was rather odd!

The end of the path was well and truly sealed as I mentioned earlier. So near and yet so far to the other side. We had to content ourselves with some Whinchats. Managed to get one of them as it sat on the fence behind the barricades marking the end of the route.

Whinchat in a one sided cage

On our return to Combwich we settled down outside the The Anchor pub for a refreshing and well earned pint to debrief. Three Starlings were sitting on a sign opposite. Managed to get them in three degrees of flight.

The Three Degrees!

After mulling over the Honey Buzzard debarcel we decided to pop round the other side to the Bridgwater Bay. James was reluctant but I think it payed off. After upsetting a fellow birder by disturbing a flock of Dunlin and Ringed Plovers we settled down to watch the said birds in flight. They where in flight a lot since its also a popular dog walker beach. Oh well.

Dunlin flying to the right

Dunlin and a few Ringed Plovers flying to the left

James: Just before the dog walker...




There were a lot of Shelduck far in the distance. It was then that James spotted some birds on the shore a way away. What the are they?? We had no Idea. Stealth like we crept along amongst the dunes to a closer spot. They turned out to be Grey Plovers. Similar to Golden Plovers which we thought they were. Quit a find we think.

Grey Plovers

Grey Plovers

Grey Plovers after a dog wandered too close




James: Andrew using that expensive scope wisely

So that was quite  a day. We weren't expecting quite that many species of interest.  Both Surf birds and turf ones as well!

 We were of course mostly looking for Short Eared Owls. We'll give them a few more weeks shall we? Watch this space

01/09/2014

Fish dinners

So, a shiny new hide at Catcott.  That got me interested! I went in search of it.  How hard can it be to find a big wooden box...?

I wandered along the track.  A pleasant, warm sun beamed overhead.  The warmth was greatly received by absolutely masses of Darters.  There were swarms of them everywhere.  Quite a sight.  Here are a few pictures of them.




They look goofy but I am a big fan of these chaps.



Like a sentinel standing against the skyline the hide loomed large... Except I couldn't get to it!!

I tried a few routes.  Each leading me further away from the intended destination.  Growing increasingly frustrated with my own stupidity I attempted to jump the ditch... It didn't work and I just got soggy shoes.

After a while I chanced upon a bridge.  I shouldn't have been so impatient.

The bridge lead into the spooky forest (as pointed out on the SOS forum).

There is a strange and unsettling feeling to the place (my stomach felt a bit that way after ingesting some of the dirty ditch water from earlier).




There is definitely a ghost in here... (his white sheet will get absolutely filthy though)


Anyway after these ghoulish happenings I made it to the hide.  What a grand beast it is.


Its fantastic.  Great views.  I spied a Marsh Harrier (female) and a large brown bird making a slightly clumsy landing in the reeds.  I reckon it was a Bittern.  A first for me in this area.
The lake was littered with Little Grebes but they were hard to get pictures of.  They are tricky little ducks  This was the best I could do.
Then I noticed something of a commotion.  A Grebe had picked a fight with a gribbly eel.  It writhed and squirmed and the grebe splashed and tussled.  It was all rather uncouth.  The eel was too big for a feathered assailant.  But he didn't seem to care.  I'm not entirely sure what happened in the end.  I think the eel may just have lived to swim another day (although he may well have ended up as a fish dinner).






And while all that was happening Andrew was sunning himself down at Seatown Beach. Shirt off, ice cream and everything but luckily no pics of that thank you. Not a lot to see, I was hoping for Porpoises and stuff like that but nope they were probably all over at Portland Bill showing off. What I did get was a Kestrel which flew back and forth a few times in front of the cliffs.

Kestrel

Kestrel



On the top of the cliffs was a very friendly Rock Pipit which flitted up and down with no care for the walkers and dogs.

There wasn't much else in the way of bird life going on save some of the the usual Gulls, Cormorants and Shags going back and forth so I did a bit of arty stuff with random pics I had taken for just that purpose. It was a beautifully hot and sunny late summers day but these do have a colder atmosphere.




A rather interesting creature which was roaming around with his chums was this beast. Apparently its a Barbados Black Bellied Sheep. Never seen one before but they seemed very happy wandering along the side of the cliffs.

Barbados Black Bellied Sheep

And just for good measure heres a Juvenile Gull looking a bit mean!