I have a photo of the thrush i saw the other day in the running track however I'm unsure as to mistle or song ? Photo was taken today.!!
Is there a facility to post a photo on here to see if anyone is able to identify it ? Ive looked on the web and in various books i have but totally unsure ? I personally think its a Mistle thrush but could be wrong as Im a novice really..
muchas gratias.
There isn't Collette no. Feel free to email it to me though.
I have a photo of the thrush i saw the other day in the running track however I'm unsure as to mistle or song ? Photo was taken today.!!
Is there a facility to post a photo on here to see if anyone is able to identify it ? Ive looked on the web and in various books i have but totally unsure ? I personally think its a Mistle thrush but could be wrong as Im a novice really..
Goldfinches near the running track Mistle thrush inside the track Usual tufted ducks Moorhen Coot Great Crested grebes Mute Swan 4 juveniles Grey Heron Blue tits round lake
-- Edited by Ian McKerchar on Tuesday 20th of March 2012 10:33:13 PM
I saw the Nuthatch today. At the bottom of the path that has the rail up the middle. No sign of Woodpeckers though. Didn't even hear them today which is unusual
Plenty of tits great,blue and long tailed Robin blackbird loads of wrens
good day seeing a bird I've not seen before (in the flesh)
Plenty of Coot 1 Moorhen Tufted Duck - 16 Great Crested Grebe - 2 Mute Swan - 5 including grown young (all on the lake)
In the woods: Great Spotted Woodpecker - 1 F seen, more heard Also Green Woodpecker heard for the first time here, still trying to track it down. Coal Tit also heard. 4 Nuthatches Mistle Thrushes Otherwise not a great selection of passerines, really, bar the usuals, but there were some Goldfinches at the edge of the park in David Lewis rec.
Well today I've been in Blackley Forest hoping to see great spotted woodpecker.. Only to find the tree has fallen down where I've previous seen them nesting.. Very disappointed as this is the only place ive seen them properly..
Then i Went to the lakes in Rhodes off Manchester rd, and saw 2 Crested Grebes on separate ponds so not sure if they were a pair ? Lot's of tufted ducks swans and Canada geese. I did see a pair of what I think we're Yellow Wagtails ?
I no its Boggart hole clough forum but thought I'd share for anyone who's interested,..
Is there anyone out there who's willing to share the usual location of the woodpeckers in the clough.? I've seen them once at the edge of the boating lake just up to the left of the steps that lead down to the path upto Moston.. I'm dying to see them again, but can only hear the tree tapping with no sightings... :0(
-- Edited by Dopeycc on Sunday 11th of March 2012 09:27:25 PM
12 Tufted on the lakes was the one saving grace, but great weather all the same and I'm out tomorrow again
Edit: I live in vague hope I will stumble across the Green Woodpecker reported here, or even the possibly returning Waxwings Bill M saw last February (a year and 2 days ago!)
-- Edited by John Doherty on Sunday 19th of February 2012 02:43:33 PM
Dunnock, Robin, Blackbird, Blue and Great Tit, Goldfinch (loads!) Mistle Thrush, House Sparrow, Magpie, Carrion Crow, Wood Pigeon all seen around the Clough and environs today.
A Nuthatch was heard but not seen.
On the lake there were a couple of Lesser-Black Backed Gulls strutting their stuff with the usual Moorhen, Mallard and Coots. There was about 20 Blackheaded Gull - one of whom had the black head intact! (I made certain it was just a BHG!)
A walk through Queen's Park and Hendham Vale and on through Boggart. Highlights:
Queens Park and the vale -
Greenfinch in the park, never noted them there before. 1 Mistle Thrush (Park) 1 Grey Wagtail as usual (River Irk through Hendham Vale)
Boggart Hole Clough
The very first bird I saw was a Jay. Following that the usual tits - Blue Great and Long Tailed. Great Spotted Woodpecker (heard only on the corner of Angel Hill and the walkway) 1 Sparrowhawk (in tree across field off walkway, seems to be resident and known to dogwalkers) Sizable Goldfinch flock in trees at the edge of the park near Moston Lane
The Lake:
12 Tufted Ducks, Coot, Moorhen, Canada Geese, quite a few Black-headed Gull.
One thing that could put BHC on the birding map is that a dogwalker who knows his birds has heard Green Woodpecker in there, last week. I live in hope myself, one would have to be lucky as the Great Spotted are hard to see there.
Cheers
-- Edited by John Doherty on Monday 16th of January 2012 05:52:19 PM
1 Jay; usual Tits inclusive of Great Blue Long Tailed; minimum 4 Nuthatch where the paths converge, many heard too - I think Boggart is a good site for that bird. A member of the public reported a Sparrowhawk near Angel Hill but I failed to locate it. Heard two separate Woodpeckers - one called very very briefly, the other was up the hill near the Rochdale Road entrance, and I failed to see either.
On the lake - plenty of the usual waterfowl, plus 3 Tufted Duck.
1 Housemartin and 1 Pied Wagtail on David Lewis Rec
Inside the Clough
Loads of Blackcaps heard, and some Chiffchaffs but no sightings. 1 Grey Wagtail, Lots of Wrens and a few Robins, and the usual Blue Tits and Great Tits.
On and near the lake:
1 Heron, 5 Tufted Ducks (4M, 1F), plus one Grey Wagtail stopping briefly lakeside - the one I saw in the woods themselves or not I don't know but I don't think so!
Again legions of Canada geese, few mallards here (in fact, here's the picture: I saw no male mallards at all, and a few hens with grown ducklings) Coot numbers were very good - 8+ adults, including some on nests, and quite a few chicks. No sign of Little or Great Crested Grebes
Great to meet John for the first time and have his excellent company for a couple of hours.
In the woodlands - 2 pairs of breeding Nuthatches, 1 feeding young out of the nest and another taking food to the entrance of a nest hole and calling loudly but not seen entering (trying to entice their young out?). Several singing Blackcaps and also pretty good views of a pair feeding their young. Unseen Stock Dove heard calling, at least 1 Jay, a pair of Bullfinches, 2 Chiffchaff singing, Coal Tits feeding young, as were Great and Blue Tits. No Woodpeckers.
On/around the lakes - 2 female Mallards with 6 and 2 ducklings respectively, pair of Coot with 5 young, pair of Tufted Duck, 2 juvenile Grey Herons and a pair of Little Grebes.
Flying over - a very brief glimpse of a Sparrowhawk that looked like it was carrying prey, pair of Goldfinches and a handful of Lesser Black-backed Gulls.
8 Blue Tit 2 Bullfinch (1M 1F) 1 Jay 2 Treecreepers 1 Wren 1 Female Chaffinch possibly nestbuilding Several Chiffchaff Several Coal Tit And the usuals
Nearby David Lewis rec had an unidentifiable number of Starling which were feeding before being scattered by nagging Thrushes and Magpies. I see good numbers in all local parks (In reference to the 'Where have all the Starlings gone' thread)
1 Mistlethrush Sev. Song thrush, Coal Tit, Blue Tit, Great Tit, Robin and Wren. 1 Nuthatch Plus usual suspects
On the lake: 4 Herons, 4 Tufted Ducks (2m, 2 f) lots of Coots plus young, but no Moorhen! Very aggressive bunch of Canada Geese here who follow you like a herd of cattle - people don't get it into their heads that they're not to be fed as I saw some feeding them today.
An owl called from inside the woods, but only briefly.
At 1.00 pm there were exactly 14 Waxwings seemingly feeding on buds and fly-catching in a single tree right next to the main car park. On return to the car at around 2.00 pm this had increased to a conservative count of at least 50 birds, spread and moving between several of the trees in the same general area.
Also c20 Tufted Duck (plenty of "nervous giggle" display calling and some much sharper and louder calls - possibly from a female?), 1 Little Grebe and 12 Grey Heron.
Some extraordinary vocalisations from a Carrion Crow - hard to describe really but like a cross between a baby crying and a cat miaowing!!
On the lake - c40 Tufted Duck and 1 Little Grebe amongst the usual suspects.
In the woodlands - 1 Treecreeper, 1 Nuthatch, 1 Great Spotted Woodpecker drumming. 2 Mistle Thrush and 3 Song Thrush (2 seemingly together) and 1 singing in the distance. A pair of Carrion Crows apparently engaged in courtship activities - 1 moving along a grass verge and picking up twigs on 2 different occasions, which it then dropped, as the other one bounded closely alongside, putting its full weight into cawing loudly whilst the other was "twigging". A nice sight.
Hi first time of reporting,,, all birds visiting my garden between 8am to 3.15pm: 19 Dec 2010 4 starlings, 8+ house sparrows, 2 male blackbirds, 2 robins(fighting), 1 nut hatch, 1 great spotted woodpecker 8am, 4 blue tit, 1 coal tit, 2 great tits, 1 collard dove, 2 feral pigeons, 1 dunnock,
16 Goosander. I watched one for a good while trying to swallow a fish which appeared to be far too large for it to manage. In the end I was really surprised to watch as a Coot approached and took the fish away from the Goosander , which made a very half-hearted attempt to recover it but quickly gave up when the Coot "snarled" at it! The Coot then spent a few minutes pecking forcefully at the fish but eventually gave up as well.
Also - 12 Coot, 11 Tufted Duck and 1 Grey Heron.
In the surrounding woodland - 2+ Siskin, 6 Lesser Redpoll, 2 Nuthatch, 1 Treecreeper, 1 Great Spotted Woodpecker, 2 Goldcrest and 1 Jay.
Did my second and final breeding season Timed Tetrad Visit (TTV) for the BTO and GM atlas projects for the 2 by 2 km square that is SD80R Boggart Hole Clough this morning. Apart from the clough woodland, the lake and a smallish area of open rough grassland this is generally quite a built-up suburban area to survey.
37 species recorded today, compared to 40 on the earlier visit on 12th April 2010.
A major surprise and the main highlight was coming across a species that I have not even recorded in this square before - Reed Bunting - and then to be able to confirm breeding, with both adults watched carrying food into a low level nest site. A single independent juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker was seen and a male Blackcap was feeding at least 1 begging, wing-shivering juvenile. Also Little Grebe, Stock Dove, Nuthatch, Grey Heron and Goldcrest. About 150 Canada Geese around the lake. It was nice to see good numbers of House Sparrows and Starlings around the areas of housing.
A flock of about c10 Mistle Thrush, including some long since fledged and now independent juveniles were also seen.
Spent a good few hours this morning around the Blackley area and although I didn't visit Boggart Hole Clough, I thought it better to post details of today's sightings on this thread rather than starting a new one. I actually visited Blackley Forest and Blackley Cemetery (there is some surprisingly good wildlife habitat in and around our larger GM cemeteries!) and had a few decent sightings which I thought might be worth reporting.
2 separate family parties of Goldfinch - 1 with a single young and another with 3 begging young. I also saw my first Bullfinch young of the year - alerted to their presence by their begging calls. We all know how difficult it is to see adult Bullfinches at the best of times and when they have young they seem to be even more elusive - I briefly caught sight, after a considerable wait, of a single begging juvenile, although from the calls being made I would suspect there were at least 2.
2 juvenile Great Spotted Woodpeckers were seen and also 2 juvenile Mistle Thrush. One juvenile Mistle Thrush was remarkably bold and I watched it seemingly harassing/intimidating a male Blackbird that was collecting food. It seemed to have the ploy of getting quite close to the adult Blackbird, which then seemed to get a bit nervous and lose its "bottle" and drop the food it was carrying, which the juvenile Mistle Thrush then picked up! This happened on 2 occasions. 2 fledged Magpies were seen and 2 Cormorants flew over. 3 Goldcrest were singing in different areas and all four tit species had family parties of begging young - including Coal Tit. The variety and maturity of evergreen conifers in the cemetery seemingly provides good opportunities for both Goldcrest and Coal Tit?
Talking of Coal Tits....... this again is another species where plenty more confirmed breeding records for the current atlas projects would be most welcome! At the half way stage of the current BTO/GM 2007-2011 breeding atlas projects, breeding had been proven in just 33 of the tetrads in our recording area. At the conclusion of the our last atlas project - Breeding Birds in Greater Manchester (BBGM) - 1979 to 1983, it had been confirmed in a total of 84 tetrads......in percentage terms the current total is only 39% of the BBGM figure.....but surely this species is now more numerous than it was nearly three decades ago? Or isn't it?
In the earlier part of the year Coal Tits can sometimes be observed nest building in locations that some might regard as surprisingly close to human activity. The more easily observable nests are sometimes quite close to ground level and I watched nest building in an ornamental rockery at the edge of a quiet side road in Fairfield, Bury on 5th April and also in a stone wall around the busy entrance to a small primary school in Milnrow on 9th May! Naturally, not all nests are successful but re-visiting some of these earlier sites where nest building was observed may be rewarded with the sight of adults carrying food into the nest - use code FF for atlas purposes (adults carrying food or removing a faecal sac from the nest) - and as the young mature in the nest and approach their fledging date they can also sometimes be heard begging in the nest and breeding could be confirmed with the code NY (nest with young seen or heard). Like many species though they usually have one particular phase of their breeding cycle when it becomes a little easier to confirm breeding. Like the other tit species it is relatively easy to confirm breeding around this time of the year, when the young emerge from their nests and initially follow the adults around in tight-knit family parties and can be heard and seen begging to be fed. The young of each of our four tit species all have not too dissimilar begging calls but thankfully are sufficiently different enough to be able to pick up on the presence of the individual species concerned. Sightings of recently-fledged family parties for atlas reporting should be recorded with code FL (recently fledged young or downy young observed).
Please report all sightings for confirmed breeding for Coal Tit for the remainder of the current breeding season and also for the last breeding season (yes, we are running out of time to get the data we need!) of the current atlas projects, namely April to July inclusive 2011. These will help fill out our current atlas database and should indicate whether this species has increased or decreased (or possibly stayed at the same levels!) since BBGM. To input your records please visit http://www.bto.org/birdatlas/index.htm
Finally, please don't forget to include the relevant 2 letter confirmed breeding code - this is most important and must be input for the record to logged and to be countable!!
I did one today, too, in Newtown, Wigan (which does have some good pools) and found it devoid of finches compared with the first winter visit - just one solitary Goldfinch near the JJB stadium where no Ravens today. Good counts of House Sparrows at feeding stations provided by kindly householders - 44 at one such.
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Judith Smith
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Lightshaw hall Flash is sacrosanct - NO paths please!
This morning I did my second winter timed tetrad visit (TTV) for the 2007 - 2011 BTO Atlas project for the 2km by 2 km square SD80R - which includes Boggart Hole Clough. 35 species logged - exactly the same number on my first visit on 9/11/09 - although the species recorded were not the same on both visits.
The lake at Boggart Hole was still two-thirds frozen and didn't have a great deal on the small area of open water other than - 23 Mallard, 17 Coots and 12 Tufted Duck. A single Grey Heron sat in an old nest was an early returner to the small heronry here. 4 Nuthatch were seen - including two birds singing loudly against each other. There was a small mobile flock of c12 Siskin and there were two small flocks of Redwing totalling c25 birds.
What was really noticeable was that when I did my first TTV on 9/11/09 - ie. - before the big freeze that numbers of certain species were much higher than on the visit today. For example on 9/11/09 - 18 Wrens were logged in a 2 hour visit and just 3 today. For Robin - 27 logged on 9/11/09 and just 5 today. Goldcrest is usually guaranteed in one area of the park but there was no sight or sound today. The same route was taken on both visits and although it is not wise to draw conclusions from 2 short snapshot surveys, it was all too depressingly and worryingly quiet. Also makes estimating population levels of some species occupying the square a little difficult!
Mid-afternoon - visited primarlily to have a look at the small heronry - appeared to be only two birds in attendance at one nest, which was a bit disappointing.
Otherwise not a lot to report - 18 (12 males) Tufted Duck, 1 Great Crested Grebe and a Nuthatch was singing.
11 Goosander (2 males), c10 Siskin, 3 Mistle Thrush - 1 trying to defend a hawthorn tree from several Blackbirds, 1 Treecreeper, 1 Jay, 2 Bullfinch, 4 Tufted Duck, 1 Grey Wagtail.
Very, very pleased to see signs up around the lake asking members of the public not to feed bread to the Canada Geese. There is no doubt this species is a major nuisance here - I counted 19 nests around the lake on 24th April 2008 and there was a creche of at least 31 goslings of varying sizes seen on 21st May '08. Most of the reasons given for not feeding the geese seemed more than fair enough - severe disturbance to other nesting waterbirds, the mess they make etc but also because apparently they "snap off the heads of baby ducks"
Hi Bill, You are almost certainly not imagining hearing Siskins. Two flew over the car park at Watergrove yesterday evening, identified on call, heading north-east. There is clearly some movement taking place at the moment as a Brambling was seen in the plantations on Sat a.m. and possibly up to 8 flew north high up last Friday. Only one was positively identified on flight call. First Wheatear (a pair) of the year at Watergrove on Monday and first Swallow today.
Steve
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The Watergrove Skyline (January 2010) - before desecration.
A flightly, vocal flock of c30 Lesser Redpoll, amongst which were approx c5 Goldfinch. In a different part of the park - a small flock (c10) - of birds seen only in flight but which were heard and which sounded like Siskins. I haven't seen any of these (and I can't recall seeing any recent postings of sightings on the forum) for a few weeks now - so I have been wondering ever since if I have imagined (or mis-identified) them!!
Also slightly unexpected was the sighting of a Stock Dove - a second (partially hidden bird) was close by and the song of this species was heard. I had always considered this species to be one associated with a more rural setting?
Nuthatch, Treecreeper & Chifffchaff all recorded singing. Two Mistle Thrushes fought briefly and 2 Woodpigeons were still attempting to batter the other into submission after 5 minutes of skirmishing!
I had a terrific 20 mins or so watching the antics of at least 4 Nuthatches - there might even have been 5 or as many as 6 birds involved. They had congregated in one area of the woodland and were extremely vocal and two birds - presumably 2 males - spent at least a minute fighting - they even appeared to be entangled at one stage and were "twirling about" in mid-air and plummeted downwards before breaking off the dispute. There was also lots of exaggerated "stabbing" of tree branches and wing-flickering (presumably forms of display). All-in-all a great spectacle!
Also present - although not seen - a "drumming" woodpecker and a Jay.