24th March, afternoon. Flock of fieldfares (about 100 perhaps - I'm no good at estimating flock size, I'm afraid) in field at Bockin. Landed briefly, took off again and flew around for while, landed again, but never settled for long.
26th March. 15.00 hours. A few lapwings in the fields just below the intake, calling and flight display. Pheasants (m and f) in the fields close to the road at Bockin, very active and vocal. Also a pair of mistle thrushes.
Royal George Mill + Manns: 17 Canada Geese 15 Mallard 4 Moorhen 2 Coot 108 Black-headed Gull (half a dozen with full hoodies) 1 Little Grebe (almost in breeding plumage) 1 (pinioned) Mute Swan (no Wood Ducks)
Hi Steve. Sadly not, as I only have a small camera, and it's not suitable for wildlife photography.
It was a good view, though (sat on the little island just beneath the road bridge you cross, turning about so both legs were seen clearly), and whilst obviously I can't say for sure, the orange, for example, looked very orange, rather than, say, a faded red, and the black didn't look faded at all.
As you say, even if this bird's not a record breaker, and assuming it is the 2007 ringed individual, it's a great age for what's a pretty small passerine! Fingers crossed it turns up again, and can be confirmed! :)
Oh, wow, that's brilliant, if the case! Thank you for the information, both. :)
Don't suppose you got a photo, Shannon? Some of these colour rings were a bit confusing and, as they are now quite old, may have faded or become discoloured.
Whether or not it's a record-breaker it must be getting a bit long in the tooth (beak?). Will have to pop up there with a scope and have a good look myself.
Dipper on the stream by the Kingfisher pub; colour ringed, right leg orange over grey, left leg black over orange.
You did well to record the ring colours, Shannon - it can be very tricky. Your bird is a local one and I think it's a female, probably ringed in 2007 - so getting on in years!
1530 - 1630 Tame Valley between St Mary's and Royal George 1 Dipper nr St Mary's 1 Kingfisher from Well-i-Hole bridge 2 Grey Herons 2 Coot and 1 Mute Swan on Royal George lodge 4 Goosander over 1 Cormorant over 1f Bullfinch
Those of us living in the eastern end of the county often regard those over in the Wigan area with envy - all those flashes and their water birds.
Now that the Tame has burst its banks and we have the worst flooding in living memory (according to the owner of Well-i-hole Farm) we have the wetlands, if not the same avifauna!
Saddleworth Cricket pitch and some nearby fields have sizable flocks of Mallard and Canada Geese - good numbers of Black-headed and Common Gulls also enjoying the conditions.
Pair of Dippers at Wrights Mill seem impressed with their new island in the river now that the water has subsided.
A tick in my Greenfield garden this pm 1m Blackcap Last time I had an overwintering Blackcap in my garden was when I was about 13 living in Middleton. That was a female.
1330 - 1500 3 Dippers - between R Tame/Chew Brook confluence and bowling green bridge 4 Bullfinch - on Gellfield Lane (2m and 2f in separate groups) 1f Sparrowhawk 8 Greenfinch, 6 Goldfinch, 4 Chaffinch Plenty of Blue, Great, Coal and Long-tailed Tits 2 Goldcrest
1430 - 1530 along Chew Brook, past Fletchers Mill to Dovestone dam, back via Tunstead 1 Buzzard (perched in tree below Hawkyard) 1m Sparrowhawk 1f Kestrel 26 Fieldfare 2 Redwing 1 Dipper (heard) Blue, Great, Long-tailed Tits 1 Great Spotted Woodpecker sev Goldcrests 2 Jays 1 Cormorant over
13:00 - 14:00 along Chew Brook/River Tame confluence 1 Dipper singing - near the bowling green footbridge 1 Grey Heron 1 Grey Wagtail 1 Pink-footed Goose south (single bird - odd) c50 mixed gulls, black-headed, common and lesser black-back (too wet to see much detail)
1330 - 1500 Greenfield to Royal George via River Tame and back via canal 1m Brambling - river end of Station Lane with Chaffinch and Goldfinch 1 Dipper from Well-i-Hole bridge 30+ Pied Wagtails with 6 White Wagtails behind Well-i-Hole Farm 1 Buzzard over Wharmton 3 Grey Herons 17 Moorhen Mixed tit flock (blue, great, coal long-tailed) plus 1 goldcrest 1 Mistle Thrush 2 Grey Wagtails 1 Mute Swan on Royal George lodge 1 Cormorant over sewage works Black-headed Gulls
1300 - 1500 Greenfield - Dovestones - Binn Green - along Chew Brook and River Tame Dipper singing c200m downstream from Chew Valley Rd bridge opposite Tesco 3 Kestrels 1 Buzzard 1 Grey Heron Grey Wagtail Goldcrests Blue, Great, Coal and Long-tailed Tits ... and a Cormorant flying NW over my house.
The Mute Swan with the red Darvic has gone (no response from the ringing group yet). The one remaining Mute Swan only has half its right wing so it won't be going anywhere - presumably another addition to Mr Wiggett's collection...
Friday 23/10/15 - Another tour of the valley and moorland fringes.
Only one Mute Swan on Royal George lodge today - couldn't get near enough to see if it was ringed. The red Darvic on last Sunday's bird seems to be from S Yorks.
12 Pied Wagtails on Greenfield cricket pitch today.
More bird activity along Intake Lane with 26 Fieldfare, 4 Mistle Thrushes, 2 Redwing and 20 Starling occasionally harassed by a Sparrowhawk. Kestrel was the only other raptor. 5 Red Grouse - 4 of which were sitting together on a drystone wall.
Kingfisher at Wrights Mill on the Mossley/Greenfield border.
This isn't so much a sighting as a non-sighting... Is it just me being unobservant, or have there been noticeably fewer hirundines around this "summer" ?
The usual pair of introduced Mute Swans were not to be seen. Have they regained the ability to fly? If so, has anyone seen a pair of "Polish" morph birds in the area?
4.15 pm, 23rd August. Grey wagtail (f or possibly a juvenile) in the road on Friezland Lane just above Scotts' mill. I see them regularly in the stream at Ladhill Lane bridge, and other stream locations in Uppermill and Delph, but this is the first I've seen a significant distance from water.
Fields between Bockin and the intake, 16.00 - 17.00 Pair of lapwings repeatedly mobbing a cock pheasant. I have to say it didn't seem all that perturbed... And presumably this is just territorial, as I don't imagine pheasants are any actual threat to eggs or hatchlings ? They then went on to mob another (solitary) lapwing.
A couple of Common Whitethroat singing at the back of the Royal George Mill. Near the railway line. I was beginning to wonder if they would ever arrive.
Yes, I saw my first swifts and first house martins yesterday, and my first apparently "local" swallow (as opposed to two flying through at speed a couple of weeks ago) during last week. All at Bockin (bottom of Friezland Lane, junction with Manchester Road). It seems late for the swallows and martins - sitting out the poor weather further south, perhaps ? Or have I just been unobservant ?
Ah, pheasants - yes, that could explain it.There's been a fair bit of noisy pheasant activity recently too, and I've seen them right down on the banking near the bottom of Friezland Lane.
They'll continue this sort of "display" flight for quite a while, Liz. Whilst they just raise one brood, they will relay if the first clutch is lost - to predators or farming activity - so this can extend the season. Those zooming aerobatics are also used to divert potential predators and I watched several last year at this site repeatedly dive-bombing a Pheasant.