1 Shoveler 6 Teals 2 Gadwalls - both broods still present, one down to 8 juvs and the other still 2 juvs. 1 Green Sandpiper 1 Common Snipe 5 Lapwings 2 Little Ringed Plovers 2 Grasshopper Warblers 1 Reed Warbler 1 Sedge Warbler 1 Treecreeper
Plenty of Green Sandpiper activity with at least five birds coming and going in between the showers. Looked like they were coming from behind the third pool.
Highlight though had to be the Grasshopper Warbler which was singing from the top of the highest bush in the area providing probably the best and certainly the lengthiest views of this species for me in the county!
Also
4 Teal Family of 4+ Whitethroats 1-2 Yellow Wagtail over Plus most of previously reported
-- Edited by Karen Foulkes on Monday 11th of July 2011 12:57:27 PM
5 Green Sandpipers 2 Black Tailed Godwits 1 C Snipe (first time here for me) 1 L Egret (stopped off for 10 mins) 1 L Grebe 1 Sparrowhawk over (plus breakfast) 2 L Ringed plover. 1 Cormorant over Sedge Warbler, Whitethroat, Reed Bunting.
Met Alan who did a better job than me of counting the Sandpipers.
-- Edited by Steve Smith on Sunday 10th of July 2011 06:02:20 PM
Heron Swallows Gadwalls Little Ringed Plover Lapwings Canada Geese Snipe Green Sanpipers (at least 6) Black Headed Gulls Moorhens Coots Magpies Wood Pigeons House Martins Teal (1) Whitethroats Blackbirds Jay House Sparrows
09/07/2011 - A good arrival of sandpipers in particular this morning:
1 Gadwall - plus 2 juvs still, the other brood of 11 has completely vanished! 2 Teals 1 Wood Sandpiper 5 Green Sandpipers 2 Common Sandpipers 1 Common Snipe 4 Black-tailed Godwits 6 Lapwings 1 Stock Dove 1 Grey Wagtail 2 Pied Wagtails - plus juvs
I set off on my bike to go to carrington moss to try and photograph the yellow wags, but arrived and found i'd left my camera battery at home. Sugar. Still, had a good hour's birding at the sewage world. This produced:
2 Teal 2 Green Sandpiper 1 Common Sandpiper 4 Lapwing 2 young Moorhen 1 leucitic Black Headed Gull?
In the gathering gloom this evening at 21.15 - 4 Green Sandpipers and 1 Common Sandpiper "bobbing" along and as to be expected at that time, lots of midges and other winged horrors
2 Green Sandpipers present early this morning, but flew off North about 9:30. Oystercatcher, Lapwings, Sedge Warblers (very close), Reed warblers and lots of Whitethroats and Reed Buntings. Meadow Pipit on fence near 3rd pool. Scruffy looking Buzzard over. Great Spotted Woodpecker in trees by horse fields near stables.
SS
-- Edited by Steve Smith on Sunday 3rd of July 2011 10:03:46 PM
6 Green Sandpiper this morning. 4 flew off high east at 09.29, the other 2 later flew and landed out of sight behind the 3rd pool. 1 Snipe 1 Oystercatcher 1 Grasshopper Warbler reeling pair Bullfinch 1 Sparrowhawk
-- Edited by Pete Hines on Wednesday 29th of June 2011 01:42:31 PM
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No Wood Sandpiper for me (again), but 2 Green Sandpipers were county firsts for me. 1 Snipe 1 Yellow Wagtail 3 Sedge Warblers 2 Lesser Whitethroats 2 Kestrels 2 Oystercatchers 2 Stock Doves 1 Reed Warbler (heard only)
The changing numbers of Wood & Green Sands being reported really accentuates the need (or rather desire) for better viewing of the other pools here....
8.10am Quick 5 mins check on way to work this morning: 1 Wood Sandpiper 2 Green Sandpiper
5.00-5.45pm Longer check on way home revealed only 2 Green Sandpipers. No sign of any Wood Sands Also the leusistic BH Gull 2 LBB Gulls swooping down looking for a meal before BH Gulls chased them off.
Nice to meet James Walsh who had seen a Hobby over recycling centre.
2 wood sandpipers still present up til 9.30pm also 1 snipe gadwalls with chicks lapwings with chicks whitethroats, swifts, swallows, sand martins, garden warbler heard only grasshopper warbler heard only kestrel, small flock off around 50 starlings inc juvenilles + usual suspects very nice to meet nev wright,awesome pics you have.
1 wood sand still present 1230, showing much better than it was on thursday. I agree with henry, it'd be nice to see the sewage works as a nature reserve. Just add a hide inside that fence, give all the birder's the key and we'd be away! Nice to meet julian there too!
...and then there were none! I'm definitely in the right spot - look for the trampled vegetation. Anyway no sign in the last half hour. Onward and upward - off to check for Quail
Where did you view from Henry? We called on the way to Penny, but could not find anywhere to view, apart from the canal viaduct
Cheers
Geoff
Geoff I suspect that you were looking at Dunham Woodhouses sewage works from the canal behind Dunham Massey park .
Altrincham sewage works is at the end of Woodcote Road off Sinderland Road in Altrincham. You can park outside Woodcote Stables and walk past the horse paddocks to just beyond the lake on the right. The birds have been on the middle pool which is up the small hill, behind that first lake.
Thanks Sid. I will broach the subject gently next Friday
Cut my birding teeth here, well after its hayday but still a cracking site before all the fences went up.
Now the habitat is probably better than 30 years ago but the fences make it harder to work. Mind you, the danger of slipping through the crust of something unpleasant has gone!
When I win the lottery I'll be buying it, plus Birchmoss Covert and the land inbetween and making a resrve that will rival any in the area!
You'd be able to rename Birchmoss Covert as Rob's Small Wood.
It would be nice to see Trafford Council doing something with United Utilities to make this whole area into a nature reserve proper and restore a couple of the old settling beds for breeding and passage wader habitat amongst other things. The council's rhetoric is that they want to improve access to the area but from reading older documents it seems they have been saying this for a long while without any action. The nearby Danewell Wood is maturing nicely now so it just shows what can happen when they want it to.
Good luck with the lottery Rob, I like your plan! Henry.
Cut my birding teeth here, well after its hayday but still a cracking site before all the fences went up.
Now the habitat is probably better than 30 years ago but the fences make it harder to work. Mind you, the danger of slipping through the crust of something unpleasant has gone!
When I win the lottery I'll be buying it, plus Birchmoss Covert and the land inbetween and making a resrve that will rival any in the area!
And just to avoid further confusion and the disappointment of expecting something 'grander', the 'first lake' mentioned on this thread a couple of times is nothing more than a flooded sewage settling bed viewed through a chain link fence. Nice, you've got to love sewage farms
Ian I believe that the first pool on the right along the road from the riding school used to be a horse grazing paddock until the clay became "puddled" by constant use and now holds water. The fenced dry area to the left of this pool, on the other side of the lane was a settling bed. You only realise that the sewage farm exists when it gets a bit warm later in the summer so it's not too bad
And just to avoid further confusion and the disappointment of expecting something 'grander', the 'first lake' mentioned on this thread a couple of times is nothing more than a flooded sewage settling bed viewed through a chain link fence. Nice, you've got to love sewage farms
Where did you view from Henry? We called on the way to Penny, but could not find anywhere to view, apart from the canal viaduct
Cheers
Geoff
Geoff I suspect that you were looking at Dunham Woodhouses sewage works from the canal behind Dunham Massey park .
Altrincham sewage works is at the end of Woodcote Road off Sinderland Road in Altrincham. You can park outside Woodcote Stables and walk past the horse paddocks to just beyond the lake on the right. The birds have been on the middle pool which is up the small hill, behind that first lake.